Age wrote: ↑Sun Aug 21, 2022 9:06 am
Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Aug 20, 2022 4:16 pm
I suppose that is what I am saying, or at least that people act upon their beliefs as if they were knowledge.
And this is WHY I question those with 'beliefs', 'WHY have or hold 'beliefs' in the beginning?'
After all they only get in the way and prevent and stop thee ACTUAL Truth from being REVEALED.
I am speculating that a propensity for having beliefs that do not have a rational justification is part of our psychological makeup. I find it conceivable that natural selection established this characteristic in us because it reinforces group identity and gives us a reason to interact with each other in a way that benefits the group as a whole. Although this feature of human psychology might seem out of place today, it may have been a great advantage in early, much more primitive, societies.
What 'beliefs' do new born and younger human beings 'invest in'?
WHY would some, supposed, 'innate tendency' to invest in the belief-system, supposedly, 'facilitate social cohesion'?
Babies are a blank slate, and young children will believe just about anything they are told. Children probably don’t actually “invest” in a set of beliefs so much as behave in accordance with the discipline imposed on them by adults. If particular beliefs are constantly reinforced in a child up to a certain age they become very firmly rooted, and capable of holding a dominant position over rationality in adulthood.
We know that there have been man made religious and ritualistic structures since before Stonehenge right up to modern day churches. When people are required to congregate for a common purpose and all sing from the same hymn sheet -so to speak- I can see how that would be conducive to social cohesion. Religion also gives people something to defend and fight for when under threat of attack from outsiders.
I would say the EXACT OPPOSITE could be argued to be True. That is; the DIFFERENT 'beliefs' that adult human beings have and HOLD ONTO is a huge cause of what 'creates or facilitates social conflict, discord, and/or dissension.
But it is only in relatively modern times that people have been allowed to hold varying religious beliefs, and in many parts of the world they are still not at liberty to deviate from the state prescribed religion. The fact that a society that contains differing religious groups tends to have more internal conflict perhaps adds weight to the argument that having only one set of shared beliefs within a given society is socially beneficial.
In the very earliest stages of human beings would there really have been a necessity to believe ANY 'thing'?
And, in the stages of evolution where 'you', posters, here are, what are the 'thing/s', which are 'essential' for 'you' to 'believe'?
For example, what is the 'same thing', which all of the members of the human species, in the days when this is being written, 'believe'?
And, if it was NOT essential for the tribe or society, in the days when this was being written, then WHY was it 'in the past', and at what point did it NOT become essential? Also, if it is an 'innate' tendency to 'invest in' the 'belief-system', then the 'belief-system' would exist ALWAYS, and would ALWAYS be 'needed'.
I am only putting forward a basic proposition here, and it is only my personal view of what might possibly be the case. I can’t answer these questions with any authority whatsoever. I will just make one point, though: It is my understanding that modern human beings are the same animal now (evolutionarily) as they were a couple of hundred thousand years ago. We have come a long way since then in terms of social evolution and acquisition of knowledge, so there are bound to be things in human nature that once served us well but have now become more of a hindrance to us.