True points. But religion is a supercharger to dehumanization. It's far easier to say "God hates them", than have to justify your conflict based on a number of seemingly logical grounds.BjornP wrote: ↑Tue May 22, 2018 12:30 pmWrong. Your "feelz" may say that only religion can drum up million man armies, but history, ALL of history proves you wrong. Nearly all wars fought in the history of the planet have been non-religious in motivation. The religious ones have been more dramatic, surely, and more prone to great prose and heroic epics, but they've not been most numerous. The genocides of the Mongols were not religious, not even ethnic, and their victims were primarily civilians who did not make any political decisions for themselves. Yet they were one of history's greatest mass murderers.GrumpyCatFace wrote: ↑Tue May 22, 2018 12:01 pm
Based on my understanding of humanity.
But the ability to drum up million-man armies is directly proportional to the amount of religious motivation you can leverage against your society. The only other way that happens is through complete demonization of The Other, fear of imminent attack, or fear of scarcity. The tribe itself must be threatened somehow. It's historically been far, far too easy to mix God and State into a recruiting/motivational tool, for great evil.
The demonization of the Other you speak of, requires no religious component, at all. Never had. Racism isn't religious, wanting to destroy your enemies city, rape their children, sell them into slavery, has required no other competent than them not submitting to you.
And how on EARTH was the mongol conquest not ethnic?? Think about that for a minute.
Hardly. The vast majority of the Constitution could be logically justified without any influence from religion or superstition."Any action without a rational basis", huh? That's pretty much your entire Constitution, and certainly your Bill of Rights, then. If you discard all the things in your society that has "no rational basis" as superstition, GCF, it's not just religion you'd have to wave goodbye to. Art. Music. Most forms of modern food. Designed clothes. Customized cars and other forms of transportation... Soooooo much of it that goes beyond, or that's opposed to, an "action with a basis in rationality"."Is religion/spirituality only superstition?"
Organized religion is most certainly superstition. Any action without a rational basis is superstition.
I'd never oppose anyone's right to believe in the invisible spaghetti monster, so long as it doesn't infringe on others. But that infringement has been inherent in organized religion, throughout time.
Art, music, and food are most certainly rational things, though. They are expressions of higher thought, not superstition - though religion was the only allowable inspiration for a long, long time in Western society.
I'll grant you that I could have worded it better (as usual) - "any action based on the supernatural"