The Reasons Behind Following a Religion

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In summary: But do you believe in turtles?I think the creator made turtles, but that was yet another by-product of the ultimate objective of kitty-cat making. Turbo and I are split on the reason for humans. I say by-product, he says slave race for the...
  • #36
"He said that even he always thought that cats landed like that out of conservation of angular momentum (as is the common belief). He eventually realized that upon actually thinking about it, that that explanation was impossible."

Friend needs more actual thinkin'. It's a true. :tongue2:
 
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  • #37
drankin said:
Sure, but is it not a fact that most of the human race is religious in one form or another?

No. It's a fact that most of the human race self-identifies as religious. I am not entirely convinced that most people aren't simply going along with it because not to do so invites scorn and even persecution, depending upon where they live. People are social animals and have a natural desire to be seen as "normal" and to fit in and will, frequently, misrepresent themselves in order to do so.
 
  • #38
jamesb-uk said:
What is the main reason you follow a religion? (not open to athiests please)
I don't follow a religion and don't have a concept of a God that is restricted to any religion. I do have faith in God. When times are good it makes them better. When times are unbearable it makes them bearable. It gives significance to the universe and all its parts.
 
  • #39
"92 percent of Americans believe in God or a universal spirit."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/story/2008/06/23/ST2008062300818.html" [Broken]
 
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  • #40
DaveC426913 said:
It is. But I too am dubious that this is something selected for. It would have to be shown that it is genetically inheritable, not just socially.

We call that "memes"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meme
It's a theory...
 
  • #41
I am an atheist ..
Religion for me is a like a law ..it keeps men neutral to the surroundings ..and also is a escape way of reality ..

These paradox is one thing faith should question .

"If God can do everything can he make a stone so heavy that even he himself cannot carry"
 
  • #42
jamesb-uk said:
What is the main reason you follow a religion? (not open to athiests please)

ANTBLE989 said:
I am an atheist ..

Bzzzzt!
 
  • #43
I'm a seruhpeylinist. I believe that Sarah Palin is an annoying idiot.
 
  • #44
protonchain said:
I'm a seruhpeylinist. I believe that Sarah Palin is an annoying idiot.

Praise the palin.
 
  • #45
Suffer the Palin.
 
  • #46
my god is a just god.

sarah-palin-gun.jpg


So I see were all in agreement, yes?...yes? (points gun around the room).
 
  • #47
wildman said:
As Richard Dawkins pointed out in his book "The God Delusion", religion has positive survival value. In other words it is selected for by natural selection. I would say that given the almost universal nature of religion, Dawkins in his book greatly understated how strongly it is selected for. Religion contributes greatly to the survival of individuals and societies (otherwise it wouldn't be strongly selected for!). As such it can hardly be passed off easily.

Ignoring for a moment that different cultures will have different ideas of what it means to be religious, and granting that everyone who identifies as religious is actually religious (and not just "going along with it so people will be nice to them"), and assuming that a person's "religiosity" is the result of heritable traits, which have been selected for (which for an atheist, they would have to be, since there is no soul/god, just evolution), you still cannot conclude that religion itself is beneficial to survival. For example, the tendency to anthropomorphise the world around us probably served primitive man well, as he watches for danger from all sides. Many religions are essentially the anthropomorphization of the universe itself, or are derived from such an idea. In much the same way that humans evolving a taste for sweets eating berries and fruits, doesn't mean eating a bag of table sugar is beneficial to survival, the fact that we have evolved a tendency towards religion doesn't mean religion is beneficial to survival. Further, whether it is beneficial to survival or not has no bearing on it's truth.

To the OP:

I was raised with a non-practising religious mother, and an atheist father. Neither of them tried to force me to accept their beliefs, or to indoctrinate me. They taught me thinking and reasoning skills, and applying those I realized that all modern religions (which I am familiar with) are so riddled with contradictions and nonsense that no rational thinking person would join/remain.
 
  • #48
As Ed Witten was writing the final word in the latest paper he was about to post on arXiv, God suddently appeared before his eyes and, behold, told "Very well Ed, now you hide".
 
  • #49
Why would god create parasitic wasps?

 
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  • #50
waht said:
Why would god create parasitic wasps?



@above/general:
Does a religion necessarily need to have a god?
Or , do you need to believe in god to "follow a religion"? (Some people believe in god but intentionally/intentionally choose not to follow other parts of the religion because of their self interests/personal beliefs)

I am not sure why god need to be brought into discuss religions.
 
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  • #51
waht said:
Why would god create parasitic wasps?

Don't you know what he did to poor Job? God's a bastard.
 
  • #52
waht said:
Why would god create parasitic wasps?



Never understood why people think God should spend all his days coddling and wet-nursing people. Or why, if he does not, that makes him mean.
 
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  • #53
NeoDevin said:
They taught me thinking and reasoning skills, and applying those I realized that all modern religions (which I am familiar with) are so riddled with contradictions and nonsense that no rational thinking person would join/remain.

My experience has been that people who make such statements understand very little about religion. Generally they are speaking out of ignorance and bias.

You said yourself that you weren't actually raised to be religious, and your mother didn't even practice, so how much could you really know? How much time have you spent praying?

If you have never lived it, then by definition you are clueless.
 
  • #54
This all reminds me a bit of the people we get here who have decided that physics is all wrong. They looked it over and made up their minds.
 
  • #55
Ivan Seeking said:
My experience has been that people who make such statements understand very little about religion. Generally they are speaking out of ignorance and bias.

You said yourself that you weren't actually raised to be religious, and your mother didn't even practice, so how much could you really know? How much time have you spent praying?

If you have never lived it, then by definition you are clueless.
I was raised by a devoutly religious mother, I attended church every Sunday, special service every saturday evening, religious school every saturday morning. We observed all religious days. By the time I was 8 I had serious doubts that what I was being taught was not all the work of men. I could not imagine that the being they described could have mandated such atrocities and have all of the worst of human failings. When I was 11 I told my mother that I could no longer attend church as I had come to the conclusion that it was bogus. I had actually researched and written a comparitive analysis of the largest religions as a basis for my decision. :tongue:

People that have left religion because they don't need it or see a point to it have valid opinions.
 
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  • #56
You don't have to have tried everything to have an informed opinion about it Ivan. Granted there are the over zealous ignoramuses that spend any opportunity they get blindly attacking something, but that is not usually the case for the majority of people.
 
  • #57
Ivan Seeking said:
If you have never lived it, then by definition you are clueless.

well, that's the main point of agnostics/atheists against religion's after life theory.
 
  • #58
Ivan Seeking said:
How much time have you spent praying?

How much time have you spent talking to yourself, out loud, alone? The jury is in on prayer studies, no matter which Big-Man believers claim to be talking to.

Ivan Seeking said:
If you have never lived it, then by definition you are clueless.

Even non-religious people have the ability for empathy, I mean, I know they are baby-eating Satan worshipers and all, but they are still human. :wink:

If someone is not schizophrenic, then of course they can not really know what it is like to suffer in that way, but that does not mean that they can not grasp some aspect of the experience.

We all suffer from more or less of the same kind of qualia, which is precisely why I can imagine exactly what it would be like to be fully immersed in a given cult or conspiracy theory; and why I can also accurately communicate with you all about it. On the other hand, it is much more difficult to imagine myself as, say, a fish.
 
  • #59
Ivan Seeking said:
My experience has been that people who make such statements understand very little about religion. Generally they are speaking out of ignorance and bias.

You said yourself that you weren't actually raised to be religious, and your mother didn't even practice, so how much could you really know? How much time have you spent praying?

If you have never lived it, then by definition you are clueless.

One doesn't need to spend time praying, bloodletting, or taking human/animal sacrifices to come to the conclusion that none of those religious practices work.

Aren't we getting a bit off topic here? The OP asked what reasons believers believed, but we're making comments such as:

Why would god create parasitic wasps?

Don't you know what he did to poor Job? God's a bastard.

If you have never lived it, then by definition you are clueless.

etc...

I understand many of these comments were made in jest, but one's religion (or lack of) can be a big part of who he or she is, so the person won't easily be able to hold off replying (I couldn't even help myself!). Being an atheist/non-theist/antitheist/agnostic/etc... I love a religion bashing joke as much as the next guy, but this isn't the thread to shout out contradictions/bad things in someone's religion. I sincerely want to hear why people actually believe. I don't want to see the thread get locked because we started a poo-flinging war, or pissed off a religious moderator.
 
  • #60
jamesb-uk said:
What is the main reason you follow a religion? (not open to athiests please)

0-5 years: Agnostic
6-14: Catholic
15-current: Atheist

But recently I read about Humanism (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanism) and now I think my religion was/is humanism in all these years. Apparently, humanism also has many subcategories, which I haven't gone through yet. Most probably, I should be a fit on one of the categories.
 
  • #61
jobyts said:
0-5 years: Agnostic
6-14: Catholic
15-current: Atheist

But recently I read about Humanism (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanism) and now I think my religion was/is humanism in all these years. Apparently, humanism also has many subcategories, which I haven't gone through yet. Most probably, I should be a fit on one of the categories.

Can you claim Humanism is religious? That really goes to the definition of religion, which hasn't been established here.
 
  • #62
Pupil said:
Can you claim Humanism is religious? That really goes to the definition of religion, which hasn't been established here.

Probably not. My views in general seem to be coherent with humanism. Even if it there is an organized humanistic religion, I wouldn't probably join it. I do not enjoy the herd mentality.
 
  • #63
I believe in my non-God because that makes sense to me and my sense of morality. :smile:
 
  • #64
Its funny that people seem to ascribe all of their negative (and sometimes uninformed) opinions to the religious as a whole instead of believing that many of them may well be intelligent and thoughtful individuals.

Pupil said:
One doesn't need to spend time praying, bloodletting, or taking human/animal sacrifices to come to the conclusion that none of those religious practices work.
Prayer obviously does not work? Do you even know what prayer is?
I have met few other than children that truly believe all you have to do is pray for something and God will bring it to you if you're good, as if God is like Santa Claus or something and all you have to do is be a good little boy or girl to get your presents. To the vast majority of the religious prayer is a sort of meditation. A way to look for understanding. If you have never prayed or never prayed properly then how can you really know whether or not it 'works'?

I am not religious, never have been, and have never prayed by the way.
 
  • #65
Interesting - I was just reading the spirited (no pun intended) debate in another thread on the several possible interpretations of Quantum Mechanics.

I think we all try to make sense of the world around us. We find a model that seems to 'fit' with the bulk of the data to which we have access. We 'tweek' the theory and our interpretation of it as we encounter new data and new situations. Our new experiences may give new insights into our current model, or they may cause us to question how/if our current model applies, but in rare cases, our experiences may cause us to completely abandon an old model in favor of a new one. I think this applies equally to believers and non-believers.

Personally, I follow a specific religion because I believe it to be true. I have come to that conclusion mostly through trial-and-error and personal experience. I have had my share of 'tweeks' and adjustments in my personal model of the universe. I have also had one life-altering paradigm shift.
 
  • #66
JazzFusion said:
I think we all try to make sense of the world around us. We find a model that seems to 'fit' with the bulk of the data to which we have access.

This is exactly where a lot of problems arise. Why is it that people feel that a model of reality that fits with their own personal experiences is any sort of argument for universal validity? What reliable data does your every day non-scientist have access to? Why is it that almost no care is taken as to the viability of the history/foundations/claims of the many religious "models" of reality? Why are people so willing to take any information at all from anyone or anything on faith? Why do people put so much stock into ideas that make them feel good?

Is the motivation for evidence-free belief really to "make sense of the world around us"?

Why is having faith considered, almost universally, as a good thing? It seems to me to be an asinine stamp of our lowly origins.
 
  • #67
TheStatutoryApe said:
Its funny that people seem to ascribe all of their negative (and sometimes uninformed) opinions to the religious as a whole instead of believing that many of them may well be intelligent and thoughtful individuals.
People stereotype all the time for almost any ideal. The same could be said for political views, occupation, etc, not just religion. It's sad but true.

TheStatutoryApe said:
Prayer obviously does not work? Do you even know what prayer is?
I take the definition of prayer to be what most of the praying individuals define it to be:

- the act of communicating with a deity (especially as a petition or in adoration or contrition or thanksgiving)

- reverent petition to a deity

- someone who prays to God

- A practice of communicating with one's God

etc...

(Source www.google.com define:prayer)

If you define it to be something else, you better say so. And yes, prayer obviously does not work. Why? Personal experience, reasoned argument, and scientific studies.

TheStatutoryApe said:
I have met few other than children that truly believe all you have to do is pray for something and God will bring it to you if you're good, as if God is like Santa Claus or something and all you have to do is be a good little boy or girl to get your presents. To the vast majority of the religious prayer is a sort of meditation. A way to look for understanding. If you have never prayed or never prayed properly then how can you really know whether or not it 'works'?

I am not religious, never have been, and have never prayed by the way.
If one accepts the premise that there are no deities, then it follows that praying does not work (and that's without the studies or personal experience).
 
  • #68
Pupil said:
If you define it to be something else, you better say so.
I was raised in a catholic family. The priest who taught us made it pretty clear that a prayer was NOT communicating with an individual deity. He insisted that prayers for our individual good were selfish and pointless. A prayer as defined by him was the concentration of the praying person on positive thinking towards general situations or other group of people. This to my understanding is NOT meditation, but already closer than what you define. I guess I was lucky. I practiced meditation even long after I grew out of my child christianity.
 
  • #69
BTW, I love my faith. It may be a complete figment of my imagination, a total illusion, but so what? It gives me more peace of mind than anything. It gives me a moral compass, direction, purpose, a sense that my life doesn't end here on earth. A sense of companionship where I would otherwise be lonely. I sense of community and brotherhood with those that share my faith. If it all turns out to be a farse, which I doubt completely, I've lost nothing but I've gained a fulfilling life that was meaningful to me and the community I've shared my faith with. I would argue that having a faith has been an evolutionary development that is hardwired into our nature. That would at least explain why so many have a faith no matter how "developed" we think we are. Why bash it. If it's not for you, then don't partake.

I think it's amazing how people can sustain themselves on shear "faith" alone against all obvious odds. Nothing to do with a religion. But it's the same mental muscle we all have.
Human beings are simply an incredible species capable of accomplishing things with nothing but faith in an idea that is not a reality until they make it so. It's the same thing people apply to their "religion". It becomes a reality to them that they live by though there is nothing tangible to an outside observer to support it. It's a human capacity we have always had. I find it a fascinating facet of being human.
 
  • #70
humanino said:
positive thinking towards general situations or other group of people.

This seems to me to be an almost word-for-word definition of optimistic thinking.

I suppose you can define prayer that way if that's what you want, but it'll confuse a lot fewer people if you didn't.
 
<h2>1. What is the purpose of following a religion?</h2><p>The purpose of following a religion varies among individuals, but generally it is to find meaning and purpose in life, to connect with a higher power or deity, to seek guidance and moral values, and to find a sense of community and belonging.</p><h2>2. Are there any scientific explanations for why people follow a religion?</h2><p>There is ongoing research on the psychological and sociological factors that may influence religious beliefs and practices. Some studies suggest that religious beliefs may have evolved as a way for humans to cope with uncertainty and to promote cooperation and social cohesion.</p><h2>3. Do religious beliefs impact behavior and decision-making?</h2><p>Yes, religious beliefs can play a significant role in shaping an individual's behavior and decision-making. For example, certain religions may have specific guidelines or moral codes that followers are expected to adhere to, and these may influence their choices and actions.</p><h2>4. Can following a religion have positive or negative effects on mental health?</h2><p>There is evidence to suggest that religious beliefs and practices can have both positive and negative effects on mental health. On one hand, religion can provide a sense of purpose and support, which can improve overall well-being. On the other hand, strict adherence to religious rules and beliefs can also lead to feelings of guilt, anxiety, and intolerance.</p><h2>5. Are there any benefits to following a religion from an evolutionary perspective?</h2><p>Some researchers propose that religious beliefs and practices may have provided evolutionary advantages to early humans, such as promoting cooperation and group cohesion, providing comfort and hope in times of hardship, and reducing stress and anxiety. However, this is still a topic of debate and further research is needed.</p>

1. What is the purpose of following a religion?

The purpose of following a religion varies among individuals, but generally it is to find meaning and purpose in life, to connect with a higher power or deity, to seek guidance and moral values, and to find a sense of community and belonging.

2. Are there any scientific explanations for why people follow a religion?

There is ongoing research on the psychological and sociological factors that may influence religious beliefs and practices. Some studies suggest that religious beliefs may have evolved as a way for humans to cope with uncertainty and to promote cooperation and social cohesion.

3. Do religious beliefs impact behavior and decision-making?

Yes, religious beliefs can play a significant role in shaping an individual's behavior and decision-making. For example, certain religions may have specific guidelines or moral codes that followers are expected to adhere to, and these may influence their choices and actions.

4. Can following a religion have positive or negative effects on mental health?

There is evidence to suggest that religious beliefs and practices can have both positive and negative effects on mental health. On one hand, religion can provide a sense of purpose and support, which can improve overall well-being. On the other hand, strict adherence to religious rules and beliefs can also lead to feelings of guilt, anxiety, and intolerance.

5. Are there any benefits to following a religion from an evolutionary perspective?

Some researchers propose that religious beliefs and practices may have provided evolutionary advantages to early humans, such as promoting cooperation and group cohesion, providing comfort and hope in times of hardship, and reducing stress and anxiety. However, this is still a topic of debate and further research is needed.

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