waitasec
Veteran Member
I don't think that there is a simple way to judge religious belief, but what tipped me to the "more harm" side was the main argument made by Sam Harris in The End of Faith. His argument was that we have reached an era in which weapons of mass destruction render deranged, deluded, or angry individuals far more dangerous than they ever were in the past. A relatively small group of fanatics can gain enough destructive force to commit acts of barbarism that were extremely difficult to carry out on such a large scale in earlier eras. While religious belief is in no sense a mental disorder or abnormal for our species, it does promote authoritarian moral codes that sometimes go viral in populations that are under pressure. So I see the potential danger from extremist and factionalized religious beliefs beginning to outweigh whatever benefits it brings to society as a whole.
What are its benefits? I think that religion has always been woven into the fabric of a culture. It has quite often been the social welfare system for societies. However, secular governments have come to replace some of the religious infrastructure for social welfare with more reliable systems. Government cannot fully replace all of the important ceremonial functions that religions support--e.g. funerals, marriages, births, rites of passage...
well said ( as always )
9/11 was what did it for me...not islamaphobia inasmuch as it was a reminder when witnessing 1st hand how the power of religious belief can make decent human beings do hideous things in the name of religion...anyone who opens a history book would clearly see that this is not new