this post was submitted on 01 Feb 2024
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[–] ulkesh 23 points 9 months ago (2 children)

Who am I?

Ulkesh

What do I believe?

Objective, scientifically peer-reviewed facts.

I mean they didn’t need a whole article for this.

[–] agegamon 7 points 9 months ago

The title is pure clickbait lol. It's like "who could these mysterious people be???" meanwhile hey it's just some good old regular folks.

In all seriousness I am glad more people are doing their best to be reasonable and put science first. It's heartwarming to see.

[–] Moira_Mayhem 5 points 9 months ago (4 children)

Serious question: What do you do when your perceptions and experience contradicts the results of supposedly objective, scientifically peer-reviewed facts?

Do you assume your perceptions are wrong, or do you assume that the supposed 'objective truth' you know to be incorrect?

[–] NattyNatty2x4 14 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

You're gonna have to give us some examples. If this is just some 'well I didn't see anyone die from covid' shit, then yes, your perceptions would be wrong. It'd be like scooping a handful of water out of the ocean and declaring whales aren't real because you don't see any

[–] blindsight 13 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Not OP, but I'm a gnostic atheist, so I'll give you my perspective:

The question you're asking doesn't make sense in my worldview. The idea of a supernatural cause doesn't even enter into my consciousness as an option. If my understanding of something does not match evidence, then either my understanding is incomplete, my understanding is incorrect, or the evidence wasn't measured/understood correctly.

More broadly, when science can't explain a phenomenon, that's the interesting part! It's at the edges of our understanding that scientific progress is made. In some cases, that's just because a system is so complex that we can't (yet) model the whole system, like nutrition research, or climate science, or understanding cognition. In other cases, it's because models made at one scale don't work at another, like quantum physics or what happened right after the Big Bang.

Reality is everything, so it's all that I consider. Non-reality based ideas are fiction—lots of fun, but not relevant to my decision making or worldview.

[–] Moira_Mayhem 3 points 9 months ago (3 children)

The question you’re asking doesn’t make sense in my worldview

Then your worldview is flawed as science is not yet a complete understanding of everything. I am not invoking the supernatural at any point in my arguments and the fact that you think I am says more about you than it does me.

I am speaking about experiential truth that contradicts current scientific consensus pointing to the fact that current scientific consensus is incomplete. Not trying at all to invoke the supernatural.

Reality is everything, so it’s all that I consider.

How sophomoric and full of yourself you seem.

Can you show me a molecule of empathy? What is the atomic weight of democracy? What standard scale do we measure the love of a mother for her children?

Human thought has created conceptual realities that affect our lives just as surely as gravity. Money, fairness, hope for the future, the concept of states and nations, all of these things are not 'reality', they are not inherent in the structure of the universe and do not obey the laws of physics as we understand them.

Look I get it, you're all doped up on the heady ferment of casting off religious shackles, and you feel that this bright new world absent of supernatural entities is the 'clear eyed vision' of objective truth that Sagan spoke about.

I hate to tell you this but your fanatical adherence to atheism has blinded you to the fact that other things exist that do not adhere to your estimation of reality.

And lastly: 'gnostic atheist' is a funny title, considering that we have yet to gain complete understanding of the universe so 'knowing' that the supernatural doesn't exist is kind of impossible.

You are just another worshiper of scientism, blind to everything that doesn't have spin or mass.

[–] Gaywallet 15 points 9 months ago (1 children)

It's pretty clear to me that you have a strong emotional reason to be replying to everyone who's talking about science in this thread with at least a healthy bit of skepticism. There's absolutely nothing wrong with that, and I wholeheartedly agree that we should be skeptical about claims which outweigh evidence available in science. I also think that it's good and cool to talk about all the things that we can't explain with science and to revel in and appreciate their beauty.

But at the same time, you're hyper engaged here with people and pushing a really strong narrative in a way that at times feels dismissive and uses some strong language (blinded you, funny title, arrogance, self-satisfied, etc) to paint pictures that aren't necessarily reflective of the world as it exists but perhaps more reflective of the world as you've experienced it. It's not exactly good faith to treat others this way and some folks have already reported your comments as being a bit aggressive and in general not nice.

It might be a good idea for you to either disengage with this thread, or work on softening your language and asking more questions rather than making strong statements about others.

[–] Moira_Mayhem 1 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (2 children)

It’s pretty clear to me that you have a strong emotional reason to be replying to everyone who’s talking about science in this thread

Not really, as mentioned I'm a STEM major that uses the scientific method on a near daily basis. Any assumptions say a lot more about you than me.

I've already mentioned that, proving that you don't really want conversation and just enjoy seeing your posts on the internet.

more reflective of the world as you’ve experienced it.

Yes, that is the ENTIRE purpose of my post, personal experience trumps peer reviewed study. Not sure why you seem to think this is a negative.

It’s not exactly good faith

Not a single reply, including yours, has been in good faith and most of you didn't even bother reading more than one or two sentences before you started replying.

your comments as being a bit aggressive and in general not nice.

Yes they are. I am both aggressive and a not nice person in general (it's medical: EDS) that has been treated exceedingly not nice in this thread and I am responding as such. Are you going to now have the arrogance to tell me I need to change who I am to communicate on beehaw? I see you're flying your admin flag in this thread so I'm interpreting this entire reply as an implied threat.

It might be a good idea for you to either disengage with this thread

It might be a good idea for you to get bent six ways from Sunday, then establish a research foundation staffed with the world's most brilliant bentologists in order to research new and interesting ways to get bent in. Then do them.

All at once.

[–] Gaywallet 12 points 9 months ago

Our only rule here is to be nice. We expect people to treat others with a modicum of good faith. I'm only stepping in here because your comment was reported, assuming I'm here because I have the 'arrogance to tell you that you need to change who you are' is not good faith, and the reality is that this is a shared space and if you're not able to follow the rules you do either need to change or we'll show you the door.

I'm going to give you a temporary ban for a week to give you some space to cool off. If you're not able to treat others nicely around here, it's just simply not going to be a good fit for you.

[–] Kwakigra 11 points 9 months ago

As someone else who is not naturally kind, you may want to use your self-awareness about why you're losing it right now to redirect your aggression to something inanimate or if you have to make someone suffer right now there are plenty of people on Reddit and 4chan who really need to be torn into. Attacking people here is going to be something you'll regret when this episode passes. I know it's unsolicited and I would not appreciate being told this while I'm taking on all challengers in a fury but I would want to be told if I were in your place.

[–] Kwakigra 13 points 9 months ago

Although I think you should seriously chill with the condescending tone you used to reply to @blindsight here, this is a conversation that interests me.

The nature of objective reality, if it exists, is extremely tricky and oftentimes incomprehensible to our human minds. We are only capable of experiencing reality as filtered by our senses and limited faculties. While an individual perspective is functionally the same as all of reality from that person's point of view, it may or may not contain all of what is objective reality. Although unlikely in my opinion, it is possible that the only thing that exists in the universe is a mind (my mind from my perspective and your mind from your perspective) whose moment to moment perceptions constitute all of reality. It is similarly possible that I'm a brain in a jar stimulated to make me perceive a reality which is not occurring outside of the limits of my brain causing it to be impossible for me to ever become aware of an objective reality which exists beyond what I'm being made to experience. Although these scenarios are each possible, it is not possible for someone in either scenario to ever know for sure if those are correct explanations. Since non-disprovable claims are infinite (you can't disprove my claim that I am an undercover norse deity using a magical disguise to appear to be a regular human commenter) I don't think it is useful or productive for any of my desires if I considered them other than for entertainment purposes.

Although acknowledging that there is no possible way for me to know if what I experience has any relation to objective reality, there are things which I can learn and do which are practical to me which are consistent in my perception of “reality.” I am (actually) a human who needs things such as food, water, shelter, companionship, etc. To be comfortable, I have to do things with my community to make sure these human standards are met so we can have some degree of satisfaction. Tools help us to accommodate these practical concerns. Some tools are physical, while others are ideas. Humans have always needed plans and cutting tools.

For us to most effectively pursue our needs and desires through the use of tools, better tools yield better results. Better understanding of meteorology has had a direct practical effect on the average person's ability to survive severe weather and natural disasters. More abstractly, the study of physics has been related to advancements in safety and efficiency of tools we need to get what we need.

Because we desire better tools, a systemic approach to the pursuit of knowledge which is constantly advancing is very useful. Empirical philosophy is based on using evidence to disprove hypotheses and claims, with those which have not been disproven being considered most likely to be true. This is in contrast to earlier approaches which considered primarily direct sensory experience and intuition. Nothing in Science is assumed to be true other than as the most practical basis upon which to build further claims and hypotheses. The reason we use the scientific method instead of other historical epistemological approaches is because the scientific method yields results which are more useful to pursue our needs and desires. Ideas which are counter-intuitive to us but borne out by evidence may now possibly be applied to create tools and ideas which an intuitive approach would lack all the necessary considerations to replicate. We would not be able to use meteorology to increase our ability to survive without having used the scientific method. No faith in any claim is necessary in science, and science itself would not function without the skepticism to doubt conclusions which are considered most likely.

Although my biases are with empiricism and the scientific method because I have found these approaches to be most useful for my purposes and understanding, I also appreciate scientific anarchy. Based on my knowledge, nature, and nurture I find my epistemology to be fine by my own standards. This does not mean I can ever be certain that this approach is the "best" approach for every application.

It's likely that many things I consider true for practical purposes would be considered hopelessly primitive in a few centuries. By my own approach, it could possibly be disproven that empiricism is the most practical framework for me to know the things I need to pursue my needs and desires. While my belief system allows for no true beliefs, I believe for almost all practical purposes the empirical and scientific approach to the pursuit of knowledge is the best approach and that belief may be altered by evidence. This is not the same as faith that the claims made as a product of science are "objectively" true, or that science (or any possible approach) could ever establish "objective" truth. Although nothing we know may be considered as “fact,” in my opinion those ideas which have not been disproven by science are more useful to consider as “fact” than “facts” established through less rigorous or more traditional methods.

[–] blindsight 3 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

I'll admit I did read between the lines in your comment. I see I was incorrect that you were alluding to the supernatural in your parent post.

Regardless, all the topics you're talking about can be investigated scientifically. Human cognition is an incredibly complex system, as is human psychology. At the macro scale, economics and politics are similarly complex systems.

Regardless, the explanations for all of human psychology comes from biological origins, which can be studied scientifically. We have uncovered some (partial) "truths" about all of the above, but complex systems require complex models and detailed observations, so of course science doesn't have a definitive answer to everything.

Still, I reject that the social sciences should be dismissed as "un-scientific" just because they aren't concrete. (Not saying that's what you're saying, btw, just rejecting the absolute stance along that spectrum.)

As for all comments on my belief system, that's fine that my beliefs don't make sense to you. I am comfortable with my gnosticism and I'm not trying to convert anyone.

[–] ulkesh 8 points 9 months ago (1 children)

I live my life by facts and evidence and I am not reliant solely on my own experiential evidence.

If I come across something that seems to contradict what I believe to be a fact, I research it (to the best of my ability) to see if it’s just me who is wrong.

Of course, I am human, and fallable, and my emotions certainly can get in the way. But I try to be aware of them so I can put them into perspective.

Beyond that, I would need specific examples to address, as I’ve never had any experience that I can recall which contradicted anything already explained by science.

[–] Moira_Mayhem 2 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (2 children)

But what in the cases where you are not equipped or educated enough to perform the research properly?

This is especially relevant in the field of medicine and nutrition as we have so much more to learn about biology and chemistry and those are subjects almost no layman has the resources or knowledge to study. .

The example I gave to the original top of this thread was the keto diet.

If you found that by eating very few carbs you lost significantly more weight WITHOUT reducing your caloric intake, would you have the biological and chemical knowledge to research this in a meaningful way?

Yet you would have had the physical experience of losing the weight, you would KNOW it works because it worked for you.

[–] ulkesh 6 points 9 months ago

That's the beauty of science, I don't have to experience something to believe it to be factual, and if I experience something that I don't understand, I can work to find out without having to immediately believe something is objectively factual or not. I'm okay with not knowing until I find out. That's the problem with religionists, they require answers but substitute superstition and "faith" in place of actual provable fact. The point of science is the endless pursuit of objective discovery and fact.

All this to say, I do not buy into the premise that I must make a belief in something just because I experience it.

[–] ramble81@lemm.ee 5 points 9 months ago

That’s where you learn to leverage experts and their findings. No one can learn every field themselves, but what I can learn is how to spot fake experts and fake reviews regardless of field, which helps direct that.

[–] agegamon 5 points 9 months ago (1 children)

"supposedly objective, scientifically peer-reviewed facts" "supposed 'objective truth'"

  1. Please provide some specific examples. Anyone who paints science in such a negative light, as you have, usually has a specific personal example of where their feelings or internalized nonscientific beliefs conflicted with reality and became an issue for that person. If you are not being a troll, please follow through with the conversation sincerely.

  2. Perception is inherently flawed and for all intents and purposes cannot be as correct as objective, peer-reviewed science. The scientific method exists in large part to remove hand-waving guesswork and pure fictitious nonsense that is speculated from direct perception from our understanding of everything. Being sceptical of our perception and feelings is critically important, arguably even more important than being critical of scientific work.

A great example is a feather falling slower than a bowling ball in atmosphere. Your first perception would not lead you to understand the science of gravity as we now know it thanks to rigorous scientific proof. It would lead you astray, as it has lead many people astray before and today.

[–] Moira_Mayhem 3 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Anyone who paints science in such a negative light, as you have

I think you may have some deep-seated issues, I'm a STEM major. Science is pretty awesome, just not the end-all be-all of human experience.

Please provide some specific examples.

Ok. So in the mid-90s the scientific consensus for weight loss was simple: You must maintain a calorie deficit, this is the only way to lose weight.

If you went to your doctor and asked 'How do I lose weight without burning more calories than I consume', you would be told it is impossible, against the laws of thermodynamics, and if such a method could be found it would probably involve drugs with strong side effects.

This is not true.

And we've known its not true for a while now, but 'scientific consensus' refused to acknowledge results that disproved the earlier stated 'peer reviewed facts'.

You can (easily) lose weight on a low carb diet (keto) even if you exceed your calorie consumption by 1000kcal or more (I was intaking 4500-5000 kcal of food a day and lost over 80 lbs in a pace of two years.

The thing is, scientific consensus is JUST NOW starting to catch up with this, and NOW there are peer-reviewed studies showing losing weight on keto doesn't require a caloric deficit.

This illustrates my point: There is an arrogance in academia that precludes so many things based on assumptions.

That isn't even touching the current Reproducibility Crisis that is calling into question decades of supposed 'objectively peer reviewed' results.

Perception is inherently flawed and for all intents and purposes cannot be as correct as objective,

I'm sorry but going from 290 to 210lbs in a years time isn't a flaw in perception.

. The scientific method exists in large part to remove hand-waving guesswork and pure fictitious nonsense

Up until basically only five years ago, nearly all medical professionals called weight loss without caloric deficit pure fictitious nonsense. I think this proves that just because a bunch of out of touch researchers, self-satisfied in their academic prestige, declare something fictitious nonsense that it does not automatically mean that it actually is.

A great example is a feather falling slower than a bowling ball in atmosphere. Your first perception would not lead you to understand the science of gravity as we now know it thanks to rigorous scientific proof.

I sincerely disagree. Everyone on the planet will tell you that the feather will fall slower in atmosphere.

I think you are trying to reference the same experiment in a vacuum.

But I'm getting the impression you are less a practitioner of science than you are a religious fanatic with science as your god.

[–] agegamon 7 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

I appreciate 90% of your comment. *I thought it was a wall of text at first but a fantastic example of science being misapplied, and I appreciate it. Thank you for following through.

Part of what science purists need to understand is that current science can be - and sometimes is - completely incorrect.

I will also point out, however, that one anecdote does not discredit my original argument. Yes perception is important but the human condition is inherently flawed. Your perception is not perfect, no matter if it ultimately is "right" or "wrong." We must be critical and question results. I am glad in this case that losing weight is possible without a calorie deficit (and in fact am doing it myself through the same method you mentioned!). But that doesn't mean our perception is somehow better than the scientific method. It means - as you rightly pointed out - that science was not being practiced by those doctors, et al, who said it was "impossible."

You misunderstood my point about perception and the feather/bowling ball, though I see what you mean and am not upset about that. Yes, basically all people will tell you that the feather falls slower. However, does that mean that gravity affects the feather less? If a person didn't already have modern science/knowledge to tell them how gravity and air resistance, fluid mechanics, yadda yadda work, a person might come to the wrong conclusion - as many did before - which is that gravity affects heavy things more. It's completely nonsense, as you and I know. But we know that because of that objective, thoroughly reviewed science.

The jibe about science as my "god" is personally insulting but understandable for you to make, especially since I have zero patience with trolls and will immediately discredit and block them. I will not argue with you if you want to discredit me in a similar way, I simply want people to not be idiots and want them to use science rather than regurgitating the same horseshit that they "feel" is right.

[–] Plume 17 points 9 months ago (2 children)

I'm not religious. I believe the universe is an accident, and we are a consequence of its randomness. We exist not for a higher purpose, we just exist because stuff happened and we came out of it, like the rest of the universe. Life is random. Nothing is written, none of it is happening for a reason. It's all chaos and we're part of it.

We were cells in the ocean, which, the ocean by itself was already a miracle so big it's basically a mathematical impossibility. And from these cells, we eventually became these weird, mostly hairless apes that are so smart that they can think about the fact that they're on a giant ball lost in space, moving at ludicrous speed through the vastness of space, kept alive by a giant ball of fire that will give them cancer if they bask in it's glory for too long or make them blind if they look at it too long.

It's absolute chaos. And I find all of this to be oddly comforting. I even find it to be beautiful in it's own way. Life is amazing because it's all an accident, it's all random and it's astonoshing to see the results. But I also get how absolutely terrifying what I just said could be to a lot of people.

[–] remington 14 points 9 months ago (2 children)

I came out of and abandoned the evangelical Christianity that I was raised in. However, I did NOT throw the baby out with the bathwater. I went on to critically examine the Judaic-Christian tradition further. 20 years I spent studying academic biblical scholarship and founded Ask Bible Scholars and AskBibleScholars.com.

In the middle of this adventure, I discovered the Jewish philosopher Abraham Joshua Heschel. One of his best books, in my opinion, is entitled God in Search of Man : A Philosophy of Judaism.

Here are some quotes from said work:

Theology starts with dogmas. Philosophy sees the problem first; theology has the answer in advance. Philosophy is a kind of thinking that has a beginning but no end; the problems outlive all solutions.

We teach children how to measure and weigh, but fail to teach them how to revere, how to sense wonder and awe. Modern man fell into the trap of believing all enigmas can be solved and wonder is a form of ignorance. Mankind will not perish for want of information, but for want of appreciation.

What is, is more than what you see; we are unable to attain insight into the ultimate meaning and purpose of things. We live on the fringe of reality and hardly know how to reach the core. Inaccessible to us are the insights into the nature of ultimate reality. Even what is revealed is incomplete and in disguise.

Awe is an act of insight into a meaning greater than ourselves. Knowledge is fostered by curiosity; wisdom is fostered by awe. Awe is the awareness of transcendent meaning; loss of awe is a great blockage to insight.

"The ineffable" is a synonym for hidden meaning rather than for absence of meaning, a dimension so real and sublime that it stuns our ability to adore it. All creative thinking comes out of an encounter with the unknown. It is a fact of profound significance that we can sense more than we can say.

The world as scrutinized and depicted by science is but a thin surface of the profoundly unknown.

Accidents happen and, at the same time, I will embrace the ineffable.

[–] Overzeetop 4 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Would, uh, that be God's ineffable plan? (with apologies to Pratchett and Gaiman)

[–] remington 3 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

No, it's taken from the Heschel quote in my OP...here it is again:

“The ineffable” is a synonym for hidden meaning rather than for absence of meaning, a dimension so real and sublime that it stuns our ability to adore it.

[–] Vodulas 1 points 9 months ago

I think that was a Good Omens reference

[–] Vodulas 3 points 9 months ago

A couple of these quotes come off as pretty condescending. I'm not sure if that is because of lack of context, or just a general failing of the author to see outside their worldview.

This seems to the worst offender.

We teach children how to measure and weigh, but fail to teach them how to revere, how to sense wonder and awe. Modern man fell into the trap of believing all enigmas can be solved and wonder is a form of ignorance. Mankind will not perish for want of information, but for want of appreciation.

So many people around me have an appreciation for life and pass on wonder to their children. I think it is even more prevalent in my non-religious friends.

The rest of them are not as bad, but still don't sit right with me.

What is, is more than what you see; we are unable to attain insight into the ultimate meaning and purpose of things. We live on the fringe of reality and hardly know how to reach the core. Inaccessible to us are the insights into the nature of ultimate reality.

The author may not realize it, but this is a situation they supposed the answer in advance as they criticized in the first quote. They pre-supposed the existence of an ultimate meaning or that there is an ultimate reality beyond our current understanding.

Even what is revealed is incomplete and in disguise.

I am not sure what they mean by this. Are they claiming there is a supernatural element to everything?

Awe is an act of insight into a meaning greater than ourselves. Knowledge is fostered by curiosity; wisdom is fostered by awe. Awe is the awareness of transcendent meaning; loss of awe is a great blockage to insight.

“The ineffable” is a synonym for hidden meaning rather than for absence of meaning, a dimension so real and sublime that it stuns our ability to adore it. All creative thinking comes out of an encounter with the unknown.

These are both just kind of word salad that is trying to be deep. I could see if it was meant to be poetry, but if it is meant to be philosophy it kind of fails.

It is a fact of profound significance that we can sense more than we can say.

This is a very bold claim. What exactly is it that we can sense but not vocalize?

The world as scrutinized and depicted by science is but a thin surface of the profoundly unknown.

This is the entire basis of science. Science wants to find out the unknown. It is based in curiosity.

I am not trying to criticize belief. As long as your beliefs don't infringe on other people's lives, I am a-ok with them. What I am criticizing is the author's view on non-spiritually minded folks. The quotes presented here make it seem like those of us that aren't spiritual lack an awe for the world around us, lack curiosity, and lack creativity. That is condescending as hell.

Like I said, I may be missing context, but the quotes as presented rub me the wrong way.

[–] MangoKangaroo 10 points 9 months ago

So the saying goes, "relax, nothing is under control."

[–] Visikde 9 points 9 months ago

Religion at it's best is about community. The rituals, the stories, are content/entertainment, extended games of telephone. Selling a product that can't possibly be vetted, the "afterlife". People get to like what they like, religion is not for me

I don't believe anything, I know some things, I'll guess at others. I'm aware when I'm pulling it out my arse :D Every question doesn't have to have an answer.

Keep it simple.
There is only one meaningful moral tenet, don't be a dick. Don't do things to others you wouldn't want to have happen to you.
Now I can craft an engaging narrative justifying all manner of bad behavior but, I know better, we all do. Even those with reduced empathy know better.
Don't Be a Dick!

[–] ReallyKinda@kbin.social 9 points 9 months ago (2 children)

It’s interesting to me that less people are religious but moral absolutism seems to be on the rise.

[–] Moira_Mayhem 7 points 9 months ago

That's only because the ruling emperors of moral absolutism are so fuckdamn lound and persistent.

It creates the illusion that there are so many more of them than there actually are.

Do you remember the Westboro Baptist Church from a few years back? Constantly all over the media shouting their bigoted hate?

Yeah, it was a group of less than 100 people doing it mainly as a source of income.

But they managed to get themselves in front of every camera for like 5 years in a row. Turns out they didn't even really believe their hatespeech and just found that suing people who tried to interfere with their horrid protests was super profitable.

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 3 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

It is interesting.

I think it's because the people who don't have anything except moral absolutism are noticing that their group is dwindling, so they're getting louder because they are afraid.

[–] Kwakigra 9 points 9 months ago

I grew up going to church and identifying myself as religious but I actually have never been. I was not popular in church and was never really included in anything unless I went out of my way to try to include myself in things. In hindsight it was obvious to others that I didn't belong. I was trying to be religious while they found what the church provided naturally appealing. They felt something from church while I felt nothing. I wasn't getting anything from or providing anything to the church experience. When I stopped going no one noticed or said anything about it if they did.

I didn't stop being religious after I stopped going to church. I had known from the sermons that when the preacher quoted the bible it was always completely removed of the context of the passage to mean something entirely different than what it meant in the bible (I knew because I looked the quotes up in the bible provided in front of me during the sermon). I figured that churches were a kind of con-job and not the real religion, so I read the bible myself. If I ran my own church it would be nothing more or less than me reading the beatitudes out loud from start to finish every week and my Bible would cut everything else out. Christ-like to my own satisfaction since I was living by Jesus's explicit instructions I continued to claim Christianity and even considered myself a better Christian than almost any other since my religion was unfiltered and uncompromised.

Over the years I grew out of this seriously misled attitude. I still like the beatitudes and consider them highly influential on my present values, but I no longer feel the need to attach that to a religious identity. I realized that if I had to try so hard to be religious while getting nothing out of it, it probably wasn't for me. Right now I consider religion like alcohol. Fine for most people, some people are highly prone to abusing it and should avoid it, and some people just don't find it appealing at all. If I didn't like to drink it wouldn't make sense for me to spend all my time around people who like to drink while poorly pretending I'm getting drunk with them. Anyone who gets what they need from religion and doesn't make their faith a problem for other people is fine with me, I just have different ways I prefer to spend my time.

[–] autumn 7 points 9 months ago

i’m not religious, but boy howdy do i love a good secular ritual! i’ve been celebrating the equinoxes, solstices, and cross-quarters with bonfires recently. it’s a nice way to observe the passage of time. i also draw a tarot card once a day to reflect on, and an oracle card once a week.

a friend of my hosts full moon parties, which i also love.

[–] autotldr@lemmings.world 2 points 9 months ago

🤖 I'm a bot that provides automatic summaries for articles:

Click here to see the summaryA report released Wednesday on the “nones” finds that they are diverse, young, left-leaning and may offer clues to the future of making meaning in a secularizing country.

The report, from the Pew Research Center, is one of the biggest yet on the nones, and it adds detail to this constituency that has been growing across a wide variety of demographic categories, including age, race, political leaning and education level.

Pew asked about various civic metrics, including whether respondents had volunteered in the past year, had voted in recent midterm elections or follow public affairs closely.

Along with the Pew report, other research and books over the past couple of years have found that the nones are more of a bellwether or a canary in the coal mine — depending on the point of view — than a cohesive group coalescing around a new belief system.

Another recent book about the nones is “Nonverts: The Making of Ex-Christian America,” by Stephen Bullivant, a professor of theology and the sociology of religion at St. Mary’s University in London.

Cragun said he subscribes to a theory of Swiss sociologist Jörg Stolz that a key driving force behind religion’s decline is “the culmination of growing autonomy in society.


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[–] Haagel@lemmings.world 1 points 9 months ago