Copernicus
Industrial Strength Linguist
We usually think of totalitarianism as a type of government that tries to regulate the totality of the individual lives of its citizens. If a totalitarian government decides that everyone should have purple toenails, then it tries to make everyone paint their toenails purple. That's the law. Totalitarianism was a label first coined to describe Italian fascism, but most of us now associate it with Communist governments such as those in the Soviet Union, China, and Cambodia. Because those governments were driven by a political doctrine that endorsed atheism, they tried to make all of their citizens adopt atheism. It is not uncommon in this forum to see complaints about past atrocities associated with religion, and they are often met with complaints about atrocities associated with atheism. Sometimes the "atheist atrocities" are alleged to have higher body counts than all religious atrocities in the past (which I suppose serves as a sense of pride for some people of faith ).
The question I raise here is whether religion ought not to be considered a totalitarian system. If so, is that a bad thing? The argument that it is, is simply that religions do try to regulate the totality of the believer's life. If one's preferred deity wants you to have purple toenails, you may end up eternally regretting it if you don't get out the purple nail paint and get to work.** Like a totalitarian government, religion can be more or less benign or tolerant in its policies. Nevertheless, it retains the power to control any aspect of life it deems fitting.
I do think of religion as a totalitarian system, although we now live in an age where secularism has driven a wedge between government and religion in many regions of the world. One of the biggest similarities I see between political totalitarianism and religious totalitarianism is that both try to define righteous behavior. Religions traditionally do that by imposing a set of moral rules or restrictions on adherents. Totalitarian governments don't just pass laws, they make those laws govern at the level that religion regulates personal conduct. In the Soviet Union, attending a Communist Party meeting was not unlike attending a revival meeting, complete with confessions of sin (called "samokritika" or "self-criticism") and exhortations of glory to the Party. The faces of local and national Communist leaders would appear as icons on public buildings and in parades. One could be asked to become a martyr for the people, or even to commit acts against strangers that you would not otherwise commit.
**I'm deliberately using a silly example, but I did that for totalitarian governments, too. If you didn't complain then, don't complain now.
The question I raise here is whether religion ought not to be considered a totalitarian system. If so, is that a bad thing? The argument that it is, is simply that religions do try to regulate the totality of the believer's life. If one's preferred deity wants you to have purple toenails, you may end up eternally regretting it if you don't get out the purple nail paint and get to work.** Like a totalitarian government, religion can be more or less benign or tolerant in its policies. Nevertheless, it retains the power to control any aspect of life it deems fitting.
I do think of religion as a totalitarian system, although we now live in an age where secularism has driven a wedge between government and religion in many regions of the world. One of the biggest similarities I see between political totalitarianism and religious totalitarianism is that both try to define righteous behavior. Religions traditionally do that by imposing a set of moral rules or restrictions on adherents. Totalitarian governments don't just pass laws, they make those laws govern at the level that religion regulates personal conduct. In the Soviet Union, attending a Communist Party meeting was not unlike attending a revival meeting, complete with confessions of sin (called "samokritika" or "self-criticism") and exhortations of glory to the Party. The faces of local and national Communist leaders would appear as icons on public buildings and in parades. One could be asked to become a martyr for the people, or even to commit acts against strangers that you would not otherwise commit.
**I'm deliberately using a silly example, but I did that for totalitarian governments, too. If you didn't complain then, don't complain now.