The reason I believe that any religion that worships an external god and doctrine is necessarily based on false ideas, is that I know that there is no God "up there".
By which I mean the only thing I know about that's "up", or if I look up (with my eyes closed), is "in there", it's not "out there".
What I see out there is, however, because of what I'm made of - which is the same stuff, as far as I can tell.
And because of the way the stuff I got made out of "hangs together". It looks like a kind of "closed system" in some respects, but it isn't because I'm obliged - to be "open" to things like: oxygen; water; other kinds of 'chemicals' that I need to process (both externally and internally); other "people" and beings that are obviously obliged, as I am, to be "open", or to interface with, the external stuff.
Religion is essentially the militarisation of our rationale for that old chestnut: group cohesion; the finding and sharing of resources, and its counterpart - the seeing-off of any interlopers, who are not in the social group.
We tend to form groups, both geographically and sociologically - religions are an extension of the principle of diversity, and the need to find different ways to maintain the cohesive group activities that underline this. But we forget whose idea it was - we should not abstract the idea so far that it becomes externalised, and we then forget who we are, that our God is ourselves.
:m:
By which I mean the only thing I know about that's "up", or if I look up (with my eyes closed), is "in there", it's not "out there".
What I see out there is, however, because of what I'm made of - which is the same stuff, as far as I can tell.
And because of the way the stuff I got made out of "hangs together". It looks like a kind of "closed system" in some respects, but it isn't because I'm obliged - to be "open" to things like: oxygen; water; other kinds of 'chemicals' that I need to process (both externally and internally); other "people" and beings that are obviously obliged, as I am, to be "open", or to interface with, the external stuff.
Religion is essentially the militarisation of our rationale for that old chestnut: group cohesion; the finding and sharing of resources, and its counterpart - the seeing-off of any interlopers, who are not in the social group.
We tend to form groups, both geographically and sociologically - religions are an extension of the principle of diversity, and the need to find different ways to maintain the cohesive group activities that underline this. But we forget whose idea it was - we should not abstract the idea so far that it becomes externalised, and we then forget who we are, that our God is ourselves.
:m: