Augustus
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As as add on to the thread "How well does religion work as a social glue uniting people politically and socially?"
One common argument is that religions create in/out groups and are thus divisive which, taken in a vacuum, is factually correct.
In a more practical sense though, unity is not our natural state, we are divided along multiple different aspects of identity. For something to be divisive, it would therefore really need to be more divisive than one or more practical alternatives.
Are there any ideologies, worldview, religions, etc. that do not create in/out groups? How practical are these in terms of uniting people politically and socially? What would make diverse peoples and cultures adopt such an ideology in large enough numbers to erase divisions?
Thoughts?
One common argument is that religions create in/out groups and are thus divisive which, taken in a vacuum, is factually correct.
In a more practical sense though, unity is not our natural state, we are divided along multiple different aspects of identity. For something to be divisive, it would therefore really need to be more divisive than one or more practical alternatives.
Are there any ideologies, worldview, religions, etc. that do not create in/out groups? How practical are these in terms of uniting people politically and socially? What would make diverse peoples and cultures adopt such an ideology in large enough numbers to erase divisions?
Thoughts?