Or you could accept the fact that I've said about 4 times that is not what I am saying...
I do have the advantage of knowing what the intent behind my world is though...
I said 'plenty of irreligious folk', not specifically "you" or "all irreligious folk". You have assumed the rest and again didn't accept my clarification about how I view religious/irreligious distinction.
See the troubles of seeing the world 'objectively'? To some extent, we all get attached to our misunderstandings and faulty reasoning and don't change them in light of new evidence
Because raising children from an 'objective' perspective is not possible, and if it were would be an awful way to raise a kid. You use fictions to instil values and create group membership.
You distinguished between the physical and the social worlds before, it's the social world that relies on fictions, and these influence your perception to the extent that you can't see the world 'objectively'.
Our cognitive processes are warped by strong beliefs, and we can lose the ability to perform basic cognitive functions when doing so would show us we are wrong. Just look at political debates, where people look at the same facts and draw opposite conclusions while believing they are being perfectly fair minded and the opposition hideously biased.
So a child can naturally work out there is an apple in a bowl, but modern systems of values, rights, etc. evolved from the collective human experience over millennia and are conditioned into people rather than being the result of their 'objective' experience. The apple is 'objective' reality, the cultural systems are based on fictions.
Functionally, the gods are really part of the social reality rather than the physical reality.
The main difference is that I see cultures as being based on stories that are not objectively true (All human life is intrinsically valuable; a human life means more than a pigs life; we have a responsibility to all of Humanity and to the planet; Humanity will gradually progress into a kinder and more gentle species; we have the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness). I see gods as part of this area of 'reality'.
You seem to be focused on the physical existence of gods, which I think is to misunderstand the role of gods in human thought.
Sometimes it's important to be 'objectively' correct, other times it doesn't matter.
Utility sometimes aligns with being objectively correct and at other times it doesn't or may even go against it.
It's important to be objectively correct when building a plane (objectivity aligns with utility)
If a child gets happiness from believing in Santa, it doesn't matter if they are objectively wrong (doesn't align)
When devising a moral code, I'd prefer something that takes the edge off our animalistic tendencies (objectivity reduces utility)
My view is that humans are only intermittently rational and expecting a world based on reason is thus highly irrational. Traditions are distilled human experience, and usually have a higher 'rationality' even if they appear irrational on the surface.
Which links to the idea of
Chesterton's Fence which relates to reform/removal of that which already exists:
There exists in such a case a certain institution or law; let us say, for the sake of simplicity, a fence or gate erected across a road. The more modern type of reformer goes gaily up to it and says, ‘I don’t see the use of this; let us clear it away.’ To which the more intelligent type of reformer will do well to answer: ‘If you don’t see the use of it, I certainly won’t let you clear it away. Go away and think. Then, when you can come back and tell me that you do see the use of it, I may allow you to destroy it.’
As such we should have some degree of bias towards tradition, although this doesn't mean blind adherence or the rejection of change. Just a healthy scepticism.
Alternatively Michael Oakeshott on Rationalism:
There are some minds which give us the sense that they have passed through an elaborate education which was designed to initiate them into the traditions and achievements of their civilization; the immediate impression we have of them is an impression of cultivation, of the enjoyment of an inheritance.
But this is not so with the mind of the Rationalist, which impresses us as, at best, a finely-tempered, neutral instrument, as a well-trained rather than as an educated mind. Intellectually, his ambition is not so much to share the experience of the race as to be demonstrably a self-made man. And this gives to his intellectual and practical activities an almost preternatural deliberateness and self consciousness, depriving them of any element of passivity, removing from them all sense of rhythm and continuity and dissolving them into a succession of climacterics, each to be surmounted by a tour de raison...
With an almost poetic fancy, he strives to live each day as if it were his first... His mind has no atmosphere, no changes of season and temperature; his intellectual processes, so far as possible, are insulated from all external influence and go on in the void. And having cut himself off from the traditional knowledge of his society, and denied the value of any education more extensive than a training in a technique of analysis, he is apt to attribute to mankind a necessary inexperience in all the critical moments of life, and if he were more self-critical he might begin to wonder how the race had ever succeeded in surviving.
Thank you for the conversation