@ragwort saidShorter version:
I think the topic is really about the mechanics of group psychology and the ideas and beliefs that drive it.
I am willing to accept that the topic is "really about the mechanics of group psychology and the ideas and beliefs" only if those "mechanics" have been turned into actual rules that group members actually have to obey, as with something like religion.
@ragwort said... And we all know why slavery was easy to justify for people:
@FMF
It appears he made those remarks in relation to using religion to justify slavery but I'm not convinced that he has applied the same rigour to that pronouncement as he might to his particle physics. If there is such a thing as good and bad people rather than just people who can act either way, then there are all sorts of social narratives, not just religious ones, that can be used as justification for bad behaviour in otherwise good people.
At first, it was a better fate than what awaited most people who were POWs or starving on the street in the days before welfare and charity.
Later, it really wasn't that much of a worst fate than those who were poor their whole lives...
And, of course, there was always a buck to be made and a shortage of labor...
Imagine thinking of yourself as an "intellectual" who understands things but you look at slavery in the 19th century and think "Aw, yes, religion must've done this! They're the ones to blame!"
Some serious eyerolling is in order.
@fmf saidWell there you are then! 😁
Shorter version:
I am willing to accept that the topic is "really about the mechanics of group psychology and the ideas and beliefs" only if those "mechanics" have been turned into actual rules that group members actually have to obey, as with something like religion.
I don't think it needs as much as a written rule before pressure to conform to group's ideal - or act with bravado to show one's dedicated support for an idea - might drift towards doing bad things. Religion is only one supplier of these group ideals.
@philokalia saidThere could have been one of the Ten Commandments that said something along the lines of 'Let market forces do its thing by all means, and pay the poor and unfortunate as little as you possibly can if you want to, but thou shalt not own human beings as chattel.' However, despite Weinberg's objection to slavery seemingly being the topic that triggered his quote, this need not become yet another thread about slavery.
... And we all know why slavery was easy to justify for people:
At first, it was a better fate than what awaited most people who were POWs or starving on the street in the days before welfare and charity.
Later, it really wasn't that much of a worst fate than those who were poor their whole lives...
And, of course, there was always a buck to be made and a shortage of labor...
@ragwort saidI may well be an agnostic atheist and an ex-believer who lacks belief in supernatural causality and divine beings - but I still do acknowledge that religious belief is, for many adherents, an ideology [definitions, rules, obligation, hopes & fears, identity & purpose] that is on 'steroids', as it were, and so is elevated to a different plane of psychological imperatives than most other ideologies. And, this is the right forum on which to ponder this. [I can's see or use emojis with my browser]
I don't think it needs as much as a written rule before pressure to conform to group's ideal - or act with bravado to show one's dedicated support for an idea - might drift towards doing bad things. Religion is only one supplier of these group ideals.
-Removed-I don't feel the need to approach this through analogies. From page 1: A devout Muslim man, for instance, might ostensibly be a "good" man - in a range of ways - in terms of family responsibility, contribution to the community, with charitable acts etc. but he might also engage in domestic abuse or FMG and do so - or believe he is doing so - in accordance with his religion.
@fmf saidIt was a smiley.
I may well be an agnostic atheist and an ex-believer who lacks belief in supernatural causality and divine beings - but I still do acknowledge that religious belief is, for many adherents, an ideology [definitions, rules, obligation, hopes & fears, identity & purpose] that is on 'steroids', as it were, and so is elevated to a different plane of psychological imperatives than most ...[text shortened]... s. And, this is the right forum on which to ponder this. [I can's see or use emojis with my browser]
I can't see why a specifically religious ideology should necessarily differ in its psychological imperatives to a secular one. To my mind there is just as much zeal in an animal rights protestor at Brightlingsea docks, anti-nuclear weapons protestor at Faslane or Greenham Common, or a Suffragette at a horse race, none of whom were above carrying out criminal acts or put their lives at risk in response to their beliefs. If you believe that religion is man-made then it can only be psychology at work - and there should be sufficient examples in the secular world to show that.
@fmf saidDid you mean FGM? Just asking to clarify. I agree with your post.
I don't feel the need to approach this through analogies. From page 1: A devout Muslim man, for instance, might ostensibly be a "good" man - in a range of ways - in terms of family responsibility, contribution to the community, with charitable acts etc. but he might also engage in domestic abuse or FMG and do so - or believe he is doing so - in accordance with his religion.
@ragwort saidI understand exactly what you mean but it is not how I see it. I think the fact that there are perceived wishes or instructions [laws] laid down by an external supernatural creator being who stands guard at the gateway to some sort of eternal life - rather than mere matters of personal conscience shaped by secular nurture - makes too much difference to be to too casually lumped together too. [No emoji called for -except perhaps due to the word "casually".]
I can't see why a specifically religious ideology should necessarily differ in its psychological imperatives to a secular one.
@fmf saidThe line "...good people to do evil...", assumes there are those that are good, good compared to what, just those that do a lot of evil? Are these good people good all of the time which would make them good? I think that statement assumes all people don't fit in both groups from time to time, doing good, and doing evil.
With or without religion, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil; but for good people to do evil — that takes religion. ~ Steven Weinberg
Is there some truth in this?