One example is meditation. It was developed in Buddhism, migrated around the world, and now can be completely divorced from the religion that developed it.
I have used it at points in my life and I find it very calming and focusing. Awhile ago I ran into this article in the L.A. Times about meditation led by a former Buddhist nun. The local museum here offers it unguided except for downloadable tracks to help you destress at the end of the week.
I'm an art lover, and I can get into a trance state at a concert or at a museum just from the art. I can also meditate without tibetan chimes or an mp3 over earbuds. This makes me think that meditation and the resulting feelings could have come about without religion, but without neuroscience people wouldn't understand their illusory mental state.
So... religion may have invented meditation, or at least developed it, but it's all-natural and would probably have been discovered at some point anyway. We discovered mind-altering drugs all over the world. We would have discovered mind-altering practices, too. Not to mention, it's possible to have a mental state that feels divine in many different cultures, with many different deities messing with the brain. If there were one true deity, wouldn't everyone have the same interpretation of their weird neurological states?
And speaking of art, if not for religion, would we have Bach's B Minor Mass? What about the Sistene Chapel?
Because I'm an art and music lover, this has been lobbed at me by believers more often than any other "argument." Or perhaps "jabbed" would be the better word, since it is usually said with an implied "Touché." I try very hard not to sigh before I point out that Bach also composed the Brandenburg concertos and the Mona Lisa is not a religious painting (not by Michelangelo, but still... )
In the past, artists did not have the artistic freedom that they do now. Michelangelo and Bach had employers, and they had specific job duties. In some eras, artists worked on commission, but they didn't have a free hand then, either. They were the best of their generations, so they had employers or patrons with the means to give them a broad canvas so the products were pretty spectacular. Michelangelo had many "canvases" and Bach had fine singers and instrumentalists to work with. But Michelangelo didn't have the freedom to paint pagan stories at the Vatican and Bach couldn't tamper with the words of the Mass. So the argument falls apart because of patronage. You can turn it around and say something like this: "Without the greediness of The Church, the best artists of Western Europe would have had the freedom to execute their own vision rather pander in religious sentiment."
The ultimate utility of religion is social control, especially supposed control of supposed morality. This one gets trotted out often in the letters to the editor in the local paper, and probably all over the country. A favorite version is: "Since they took God out of the schools there's been a decline in morality and society's going to hell in a handbasket." Not to mention, Newtown happened because God was expelled. There are a lot of problems with this, but foremost is that there are two Biblical moralities: in the Old Testament, God punishes the whole species, or a whole country, or a whole city, based on what only some people are doing. This terrifies the "good" people who think the rest of us are going to get them into trouble with their brutish sky daddy. In the New Testament, morality is a total mess, because salvation is based not on works, but on belief, but the main idea is forgiveness. Except in old-fashioned Catholicism, anything can be forgiven, including murder (but not butt-sex!)
Fear of the wrath of the invisible sky-daddy does seem to help some people stay on the "right" side, but only because their beliefs in the supernatural have been a crutch preventing them from developing their natural moral muscle. Those in the middle, a.k.a. those the Devil and God are battling for, will be influenced by whatever social force is most important to them, regardless of their religion.
So.... does the utility of a religion make any difference in whether it should be followed? If you think that atheists should join a church even though they don't believe in any of the tenets, then maybe yes (though I strongly disagree on that point) But if you think that the utility of religion is some kind of proof that atheists should believe in that religion, then the answer is NO! It's just proof that money, power, and human evolution can sometimes result in something useful. It's not proof of the supernatural.
3 comments:
For anything that anyone says religion was good for .....??
I can show you at least 4 other points that makes religion a living hell. The so called 'community' of the church is also a delusion as you must really toe the party line to get (maybe) any needed support. If the religious community is so good then give up welfare & SS; good luck with that.
Most of this religious art was financed by rich patrons.
One of my saddest days as an architect was when I realized that the production of great works of art by a society was virtually directly proportional to its unequal distribution of resources. When the rich are allowed to become very rich, they have more money to spend on things like the Medici Chapel or the works of Bach. Not really that much comfort to the rest of the people, really.
I agree on both your points. Art is great. But if you have to tolerate genocide, slavery and bigotry to have a Sistene chapel, then uhh no thanks.
I'm one of those geeks who took as many pictures *of* the Louvre as of the art inside it! We conveniently forget about the poor who didn't have those resources. Nobody travels halfway around the world to see shacks and shantytowns.
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