Today I'm happy about......
Moderator: Zulus Thousand of em
-
- Immortal
- Posts: 19597
- Joined: Wed Mar 09, 2005 8:49 am
- Location: N Wales, but close enough to Chester I can pretend I'm in England
- Contact:
Re: Today I'm happy about......
I have Stalin at between 20-26million & Mao at 40million. Which are you thinking of Worthy ?Worthy4England wrote:Weren't the two largest killing wars ever fought diddly squat to do with religion?Prufrock wrote: It's harder to persuade people to kill indiscriminately without that tool.
They didn't persuade folks, they just went for conscription.
Not advocating mass-murder as an entirely positive experience, of course, but it had its moments.
"I understand you are a very good footballer" ... "I try".
"I understand you are a very good footballer" ... "I try".
- Worthy4England
- Immortal
- Posts: 34744
- Joined: Wed May 16, 2007 6:45 pm
Re: Today I'm happy about......
They're as good as any - you could pitch WW2 @ 60/70m and WW1 @ 40m - hmmmm maybe they're casualties.bobo the clown wrote:I have Stalin at between 20-26million & Mao at 40million. Which are you thinking of Worthy ?Worthy4England wrote:Weren't the two largest killing wars ever fought diddly squat to do with religion?Prufrock wrote: It's harder to persuade people to kill indiscriminately without that tool.
They didn't persuade folks, they just went for conscription.
Point is, it sorta puts Crusades in the shade a bit. Minor ruck.
Re: Today I'm happy about......
not that this sounds very "happy" anymore! - but there is a list of conflicts/genocides by death-toll (in as much as any of these estimates can be entirely accurate) here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wa ... death_toll
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wa ... death_toll
Re: Today I'm happy about......
thebish wrote:foodbanks... hospices... world development aid agencies...Prufrock wrote:One thing I have struggled with is that studies consistently show religious people give more money to charity. I don't think this is even remotely enough to win religion its place in my own utopia, but it does seem fair to mention.
either way - it's a bit of a pointless "what if" - because (it seems to me) that religion (in the widest sense of the word) does seem to have been part of what it means to be human - some might protest that they live quite well without it - but in most cases I suspect they will have some kind of a thing in life that functions in some of the same ways...
you can't abolish or ban or eradicate something that humans seem to need/want/be-drawn-to-invent on some kind of a deep level...
violence/warfare/general horribleness is part of the human condition - there are lots of vehicles that can accomodate those things - religion is one (a powerful one, granted) of many...
you don't need anything recognisably religious to make humans to appalling things to each other... sadly it is all too easy, hard as it is for humans to accept that...
I find your second point really interesting; I read one of Mary Karr's autobiographies recently in which she talked about her conversion to Catholocism which happened through her treatment for alcoholism following the twelve-step programme. She started a non-believer but was persuaded to 'try' prayer anyway and eventually found her way to faith. Other recovering addicts who didn't go as far as religious conversion have talked about the benefits of 'externalising' (for want of a less wanky word) their hopes and regrets. I think that's also with the benefit psychiatric treatment can have. I don't think it's a benefit you need religion for, more a happy side-effect but I agree that 'need' is part of the human condition.
In a world that has decided
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
- Montreal Wanderer
- Immortal
- Posts: 12948
- Joined: Thu May 26, 2005 12:45 am
- Location: Montreal, Canada
Re: Today I'm happy about......
Are you sure you don't mean Philip the Fair of France?TANGODANCER wrote:Whilst not disagreeing with most of your post, the above is blatantly wrong (IMO). Religion is what teaches/defines morality, and what has kept control of it by reminding people from an early age of what is right and wrong. You may claim to know these things automatically, but that's the differences between a religious believer (me) and a stated atheist (you). We break rules and the Commandments because we are human and mortal; believers accept the wrongs and repent hoping for redemption, atheists just don't believe they need to because God and heaven don't exist. Thus it will ever be. No point arguing further. See you at the pearly gates...Prufrock wrote:
Personally, I think we'd be better off, but I don't think it's clear cut. Getting rid of religion would get rid of some bad things, but also indisputably some good too. I'm quite happy to reject any half-baked nonsense about needing religion for morality. This is clearly nonsense. One thing I have struggled with is that studies consistently show religious people give more money to charity. I don't think this is even remotely enough to win religion its place in my own utopia, but it does seem fair to mention.![]()
Just a closer: Phillip of Spain eventually owed the said Templars so much money that, even though they had fought and died on his behalf he persuaded the then Pope they were to be declared blasphemers and all their fortune and lands confiscated, and the order disbanded. He did that just so he could get his hands on their money. So much for what God willed.
"If you cannot answer a man's argument, all it not lost; you can still call him vile names. " Elbert Hubbard.
Re: Today I'm happy about......
There are plenty of Atheists who live 'moral' lives. The argument that they only do so because they have inherited Judeo-Christian customs is patently a nonsense, because those same morals existed before Christianity and Judaism.TANGODANCER wrote:Whilst not disagreeing with most of your post, the above is blatantly wrong (IMO). Religion is what teaches/defines morality, and what has kept control of it by reminding people from an early age of what is right and wrong. You may claim to know these things automatically, but that's the differences between a religious believer (me) and a stated atheist (you). We break rules and the Commandments because we are human and mortal; believers accept the wrongs and repent hoping for redemption, atheists just don't believe they need to because God and heaven don't exist. Thus it will ever be. No point arguing further. See you at the pearly gates...Prufrock wrote:
Personally, I think we'd be better off, but I don't think it's clear cut. Getting rid of religion would get rid of some bad things, but also indisputably some good too. I'm quite happy to reject any half-baked nonsense about needing religion for morality. This is clearly nonsense. One thing I have struggled with is that studies consistently show religious people give more money to charity. I don't think this is even remotely enough to win religion its place in my own utopia, but it does seem fair to mention.![]()
Just a closer: Phillip of Spain eventually owed the said Templars so much money that, even though they had fought and died on his behalf he persuaded the then Pope they were to be declared blasphemers and all their fortune and lands confiscated, and the order disbanded. He did that just so he could get his hands on their money. So much for what God willed.
That's without considering the idea that a morality which exists only to please a supernatural being, and avoid his rancour, is no morality at all.
In a world that has decided
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
Re: Today I'm happy about......
indeed - basically what I said above...Prufrock wrote:There are plenty of Atheists who live 'moral' lives. The argument that they only do so because they have inherited Judeo-Christian customs is patently a nonsense, because those same morals existed before Christianity and Judaism.TANGODANCER wrote:Whilst not disagreeing with most of your post, the above is blatantly wrong (IMO). Religion is what teaches/defines morality, and what has kept control of it by reminding people from an early age of what is right and wrong. You may claim to know these things automatically, but that's the differences between a religious believer (me) and a stated atheist (you). We break rules and the Commandments because we are human and mortal; believers accept the wrongs and repent hoping for redemption, atheists just don't believe they need to because God and heaven don't exist. Thus it will ever be. No point arguing further. See you at the pearly gates...Prufrock wrote:
Personally, I think we'd be better off, but I don't think it's clear cut. Getting rid of religion would get rid of some bad things, but also indisputably some good too. I'm quite happy to reject any half-baked nonsense about needing religion for morality. This is clearly nonsense. One thing I have struggled with is that studies consistently show religious people give more money to charity. I don't think this is even remotely enough to win religion its place in my own utopia, but it does seem fair to mention.![]()
Just a closer: Phillip of Spain eventually owed the said Templars so much money that, even though they had fought and died on his behalf he persuaded the then Pope they were to be declared blasphemers and all their fortune and lands confiscated, and the order disbanded. He did that just so he could get his hands on their money. So much for what God willed.
That's without considering the idea that a morality which exists only to please a supernatural being, and avoid his rancour, is no morality at all.
Re: Today I'm happy about......
I feel like I answered your question before you'd even asked itWorthy4England wrote:Weren't the two largest killing wars ever fought diddly squat to do with religion?Prufrock wrote: It's harder to persuade people to kill indiscriminately without that tool.
They didn't persuade folks, they just went for conscription.

"It's harder to persuade people to kill indiscriminately without that tool.It's not impossible, it might sometimes not even be hard, but it is harder."
In a world that has decided
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
Re: Today I'm happy about......
So you did, you got cut off the 'other people have replied to this thread' bit by the turn of the page.thebish wrote:indeed - basically what I said above...Prufrock wrote:There are plenty of Atheists who live 'moral' lives. The argument that they only do so because they have inherited Judeo-Christian customs is patently a nonsense, because those same morals existed before Christianity and Judaism.TANGODANCER wrote:Whilst not disagreeing with most of your post, the above is blatantly wrong (IMO). Religion is what teaches/defines morality, and what has kept control of it by reminding people from an early age of what is right and wrong. You may claim to know these things automatically, but that's the differences between a religious believer (me) and a stated atheist (you). We break rules and the Commandments because we are human and mortal; believers accept the wrongs and repent hoping for redemption, atheists just don't believe they need to because God and heaven don't exist. Thus it will ever be. No point arguing further. See you at the pearly gates...Prufrock wrote:
Personally, I think we'd be better off, but I don't think it's clear cut. Getting rid of religion would get rid of some bad things, but also indisputably some good too. I'm quite happy to reject any half-baked nonsense about needing religion for morality. This is clearly nonsense. One thing I have struggled with is that studies consistently show religious people give more money to charity. I don't think this is even remotely enough to win religion its place in my own utopia, but it does seem fair to mention.![]()
Just a closer: Phillip of Spain eventually owed the said Templars so much money that, even though they had fought and died on his behalf he persuaded the then Pope they were to be declared blasphemers and all their fortune and lands confiscated, and the order disbanded. He did that just so he could get his hands on their money. So much for what God willed.
That's without considering the idea that a morality which exists only to please a supernatural being, and avoid his rancour, is no morality at all.
In a world that has decided
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
Re: Today I'm happy about......
hmmm... how on earth can you even begin to make any kind of judgement about whether it was easier to persuade people in the crusades to kill people than it was to persuade people in the 1st or 2nd world war to kill people.Prufrock wrote:I feel like I answered your question before you'd even asked itWorthy4England wrote:Weren't the two largest killing wars ever fought diddly squat to do with religion?Prufrock wrote: It's harder to persuade people to kill indiscriminately without that tool.
They didn't persuade folks, they just went for conscription.
"It's harder to persuade people to kill indiscriminately without that tool.It's not impossible, it might sometimes not even be hard, but it is harder."
you can SAY it's harder - but on what basis do you say that? is it just a vague "I reckon"?
Re: Today I'm happy about......
Eh? I'm not drawing that comparison.
My point is that religion is a tool by which you can persuade someone to kill someone. Take that tool away and it's harder. I'm not comparing specific conflicts, rather a single situation where you wanted to persuade someone to kill someone else for your own means, and the ease with which you could do that with religion as a possible tool, and without. If you have, for example's sake, 9 ways to do something, and then someone takes one away meaning you only have 8 ways to do it, I think it can be described as being 'harder'.
Worthy then mentioned WWs 1 and 2 as examples where religion wasn't used.
Fine, but as I said, I didn't even say it would be hard without religion, just relatively more difficult. I'm not comparing WWs 1+2 with the crusdades, but comparing WWs 1+2 with a scenario where you can persuade the men fighting in WWs 1+2 that a god in which they believe wants them to kill the other side. I think it'd be easier to get them to fight in the second example.
My point is that religion is a tool by which you can persuade someone to kill someone. Take that tool away and it's harder. I'm not comparing specific conflicts, rather a single situation where you wanted to persuade someone to kill someone else for your own means, and the ease with which you could do that with religion as a possible tool, and without. If you have, for example's sake, 9 ways to do something, and then someone takes one away meaning you only have 8 ways to do it, I think it can be described as being 'harder'.
Worthy then mentioned WWs 1 and 2 as examples where religion wasn't used.
Fine, but as I said, I didn't even say it would be hard without religion, just relatively more difficult. I'm not comparing WWs 1+2 with the crusdades, but comparing WWs 1+2 with a scenario where you can persuade the men fighting in WWs 1+2 that a god in which they believe wants them to kill the other side. I think it'd be easier to get them to fight in the second example.
Last edited by Prufrock on Thu Jul 03, 2014 4:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
In a world that has decided
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
- Worthy4England
- Immortal
- Posts: 34744
- Joined: Wed May 16, 2007 6:45 pm
Re: Today I'm happy about......
Yeah Prufrock just vague...thebish wrote:hmmm... how on earth can you even begin to make any kind of judgement about whether it was easier to persuade people in the crusades to kill people than it was to persuade people in the 1st or 2nd world war to kill people.Prufrock wrote:I feel like I answered your question before you'd even asked itWorthy4England wrote:Weren't the two largest killing wars ever fought diddly squat to do with religion?Prufrock wrote: It's harder to persuade people to kill indiscriminately without that tool.
They didn't persuade folks, they just went for conscription.
"It's harder to persuade people to kill indiscriminately without that tool.It's not impossible, it might sometimes not even be hard, but it is harder."
you can SAY it's harder - but on what basis do you say that? is it just a vague "I reckon"?
I reckon it's much easier to go for conscription.
Re: Today I'm happy about......
In fairness, I think it's a bit much to expect me to have replied in anything other than vague terms to a point you hadn't made yet
!

In a world that has decided
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
Re: Today I'm happy about......
i still don't see how you are making that judgement... it has seemed easy enough in so many conflict/genocide situations across history to make the addition or deletion of religion as a factor to be pretty much irrelevant to it's "ease".Prufrock wrote:Eh? I'm not drawing that comparison.
My point is that religion is a tool by which you can persuade someone to kill someone. Take that tool away and it's harder. I'm not comparing specific conflicts, rather a single situation where you wanted to persuade someone to kill someone else for your own means, and the ease with which you could do that with religion as a possible tool, and without. If you have, for example's sake, 9 ways to do something, and then someone takes one away meaning you only have 8 ways to do it, I think it can be described as being 'harder'.
Worthy then mentioned WWs 1 and 2 as examples where religion wasn't used.
Fine, but as I said, I didn't even say it would be hard without religion, just relatively more difficult. I'm not comparing WWs 1+2 with the crusdades, but comparing WWs 1+2 with a scenario where you can persuade the men fighting in WWs 1+2 that a god in which they believe wants them to kill the other side. I think it'd be easier to get them to fight in the second example.
your "tool" rationale is like saying here are LOADS of phillips screwdrivers - any number of which could tackle that screw... now - I'll take one away - so it is now MUCH harder for you to tackle that screw.. except - it's not.
- Worthy4England
- Immortal
- Posts: 34744
- Joined: Wed May 16, 2007 6:45 pm
Re: Today I'm happy about......
I don't need to make a point, for me to believe you understand the point I haven't made. Now you're just trying to wriggle out of it.Prufrock wrote:In fairness, I think it's a bit much to expect me to have replied in anything other than vague terms to a point you hadn't made yet!
Re: Today I'm happy about......
It's not though, because the other tools to make people kill other people (politics, money, revenge) don't work in the same way as religion. To stretch the analogy, politics wouldn't be another phillips screwdriver, it would be a saw. Great if the job you need is cutting wood, not so much if it's screwing in a screw.thebish wrote:i still don't see how you are making that judgement... it has seemed easy enough in so many conflict/genocide situations across history to make the addition or deletion of religion as a factor to be pretty much irrelevant to it's "ease".Prufrock wrote:Eh? I'm not drawing that comparison.
My point is that religion is a tool by which you can persuade someone to kill someone. Take that tool away and it's harder. I'm not comparing specific conflicts, rather a single situation where you wanted to persuade someone to kill someone else for your own means, and the ease with which you could do that with religion as a possible tool, and without. If you have, for example's sake, 9 ways to do something, and then someone takes one away meaning you only have 8 ways to do it, I think it can be described as being 'harder'.
Worthy then mentioned WWs 1 and 2 as examples where religion wasn't used.
Fine, but as I said, I didn't even say it would be hard without religion, just relatively more difficult. I'm not comparing WWs 1+2 with the crusdades, but comparing WWs 1+2 with a scenario where you can persuade the men fighting in WWs 1+2 that a god in which they believe wants them to kill the other side. I think it'd be easier to get them to fight in the second example.
your "tool" rationale is like saying here are LOADS of phillips screwdrivers - any number of which could tackle that screw... now - I'll take one away - so it is now MUCH harder for you to tackle that screw.. except - it's not.
Wars don't come about in stock patterns. No matter how much you tried, you couldn't really use religion as a tool to make fighting the second world war easier, it doesn't fit the narrative (your screwdriver won't help you with this task, which is removing a nail). A jihad against the west? Boom, get in that rawlplug. Take religion away, it's harder to fight that war.
In a world that has decided
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
Re: Today I'm happy about......
I think this may be all my own fault, but I'm confused!Worthy4England wrote:I don't need to make a point, for me to believe you understand the point I haven't made. Now you're just trying to wriggle out of it.Prufrock wrote:In fairness, I think it's a bit much to expect me to have replied in anything other than vague terms to a point you hadn't made yet!
Last edited by Prufrock on Thu Jul 03, 2014 5:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
In a world that has decided
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
-
- Immortal
- Posts: 10572
- Joined: Fri Jun 10, 2005 2:51 pm
- Location: Up above the streets and houses
Re: Today I'm happy about......
You two don't half talk some bollocks.Prufrock wrote:It's not though, because the other tools to make people kill other people (politics, money, revenge) don't work in the same way as religion. To stretch the analogy, politics wouldn't be another phillips screwdriver, it would be a saw. Great if the job you need is cutting wood, not so much if it's screwing in a screw.thebish wrote:i still don't see how you are making that judgement... it has seemed easy enough in so many conflict/genocide situations across history to make the addition or deletion of religion as a factor to be pretty much irrelevant to it's "ease".Prufrock wrote:Eh? I'm not drawing that comparison.
My point is that religion is a tool by which you can persuade someone to kill someone. Take that tool away and it's harder. I'm not comparing specific conflicts, rather a single situation where you wanted to persuade someone to kill someone else for your own means, and the ease with which you could do that with religion as a possible tool, and without. If you have, for example's sake, 9 ways to do something, and then someone takes one away meaning you only have 8 ways to do it, I think it can be described as being 'harder'.
Worthy then mentioned WWs 1 and 2 as examples where religion wasn't used.
Fine, but as I said, I didn't even say it would be hard without religion, just relatively more difficult. I'm not comparing WWs 1+2 with the crusdades, but comparing WWs 1+2 with a scenario where you can persuade the men fighting in WWs 1+2 that a god in which they believe wants them to kill the other side. I think it'd be easier to get them to fight in the second example.
your "tool" rationale is like saying here are LOADS of phillips screwdrivers - any number of which could tackle that screw... now - I'll take one away - so it is now MUCH harder for you to tackle that screw.. except - it's not.
Wars don't come about in stock patterns. No matter how much you tried, you couldn't really use religion as a tool to make fighting the second world war easier, it doesn't fit the narrative (your screwdriver won't help you with this task, which is removing a nail). A jihad against the west? Boom, get in that rawlplug. Take religion away, it's harder to fight that war.
Businesswoman of the year.
- Worthy4England
- Immortal
- Posts: 34744
- Joined: Wed May 16, 2007 6:45 pm
Re: Today I'm happy about......
Prufrock wrote:I think this may be all my won fault, but I'm confused!Worthy4England wrote:I don't need to make a point, for me to believe you understand the point I haven't made. Now you're just trying to wriggle out of it.Prufrock wrote:In fairness, I think it's a bit much to expect me to have replied in anything other than vague terms to a point you hadn't made yet!

Good, just sign here, and we're done.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 25 guests