Religion is from the dark ages. It does nothing and makes things worse for humanity. Just because you believe in an invisible man in the sky does not make it true.
In the bible "the most high god" lived on a mountain and the mythical Moses went up there to see him. Wrap that around into the Christian fundamentalists of today.
Once the old weirdo in robes (moses) left, the people rejoiced and a wild orgy ensued.
There is a lesson to be learned here, ditch the religious leaders, and let the party begin!
Religion is of course not from the dark ages. Unless you meant that metaphorically, in which case you might also be able to see that an invisible man in the sky could also be intended metaphorically. Welcome to the place where we argue with invisible men and women on the internet!
Religious people are a product the Dark Ages.
@barjoe
Religious people existed a long time before the dark ages...
βThe phrase βDark Ageβ itself derives from the Latin saeculum obscurum, originally applied by Caesar Baronius in 1602 when he referred to a tumultuous period in the 10th and 11th centuries. The concept thus came to characterize the entire Middle Ages as a time of intellectual darkness in Europe between the fall of Rome and the Renaissance. This became especially popular during the 18th-century Age of Enlightenment.
As the accomplishments of the era came to be better understood in the 19th and 20th centuries, scholars began restricting the βDark Agesβ appellation to the Early Middle Ages (c. 5thβ10th century), and now scholars also reject its usage in this period. The majority of modern scholars avoid the term altogether owing to its negative connotations, finding it misleading and inaccurate.β
@barjoe
βJust-soβ stories are simplistic explanations. Becoming familiar with the relevant history and science is time-consuming, and sometimes challenging to our comfortable assumptions, but never simplistic.
βOnce a being evolved with enough thought to contemplate their existence and fear of mortality, they invented simplistic explanationsβ is a βjust-soβ story. Another simplistic explanation.
The hard-won anthropological data tell a much more complex and nuanced story.
@barjoe
Those statements are highly correlated to isolated parts of the truth, which is much larger and not at all simple. The notion of a deity did come from humans, but it was probably mostly not βcontrivedβ ( planned ). It was most likely bioculturally evolved as an emergent property of our species, and thereby accomplished with little conscious knowledge of its implications.
Many phenomena that we refer to as supernatural are actually natural phenomena. What exists only in peopleβs minds is incomplete or inaccurate explanations of natural phenomena they donβt understand. One example being the idea that religions are about the supernatural. Religions are primarily about biology.
@skado Evolutionary Mismatch is what you want to talk about. The OP wanted to speak about how religion made things worse for humanity. One example is religion promoting large families among less educated people. That would be an example of evolutionary mismatch, so religion has not counter-balanced that.
@barjoe
Evolutionary mismatch is what causes species extinction. If it werenβt for religion we would be extinct now. Thatβs not religion making things worse, in the net effect. The invention of agriculture was what allowed people to have large families. They didnβt need religion to tell them it was ok to copulate (I promise).
@barjoe
Works the same with any species, humans included.
[foodsystemprimer.org]