Beliefs in things like Gods develop in a very messy, haphazard way.
There's no single motivation to it.
Even a particular individual will have multiple reasons for believing in something like a God.
And certainly different individuals will have different reasons, different motivations.
Separation is a dreamed state by the dreamed individual. There is no separation, only what is. And there is no individual, it it illusory. What keeps what is hidden is the attempt by the so called individual to “make things better” or achieve something. Thus, the need for Gods, Gurus, and various con men. — Mtherapist67
I disagree as I see religions as con games and they are usually well thought out. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
You can see it that way, but it's ridiculous to. It's basically positing religion as a conspiracy theory. — Terrapin Station
No. It is just showing how all that is said of supernatural invisible gods is B.S. and lies. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I'm an atheist. I agree that none of the claims are true. But there's not at all a single reason or motivation for the claims being made. — Terrapin Station
I would guess custom and parenting would be.Would insecurity be the main cause of our creating and adoring evil gods? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Humans are the most insecure animals on the planet. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Our selfish gene?The root of our selfish gene creates insecurity, which feeds our tribal nature; — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Great, so not an insecurity based one.feeding our desire to join religions and other tribes. This we should see as a loving gesture. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
How did you measure that one? — Coben
Great, so not an insecurity based one. — Coben
I just listened to experts who point out that we have to be cared for for the longest time of all animals when born by our mothers. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
That helplessness causes our insecurity and dependence on the tribe. That same insecurity is what has us default to cooperation instead of competition. Cooperation is a better survival strategy than competition. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
If you seem to missing a lot of "ifs". — Arne
It has nothing to do with the babies feelings of security and that baby deer will be on guard from moment one. — Coben
And they are very cooperative, more so than us. — Coben
Sigh. No. You're making stuff up. 1) there is no way to measure insecurity. 2) Babies are held and do not realize there are predators, while at the same the baby deer is already scarnning for threats and partially responsible. Human babies and young children and not responsible are not scanning for predators, few in the west ever have to run from a predator.It has everything to do with the fact you point out.
A deer can escape on it's own quite quickly, while humans cannot for the longest time and that is why we are so insecure and why we are hard wired to cooperate when possible. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
1) there is no particular gene for insecurity. 2) other animals have even more reason to be insecure and in fact this is why they are born ready to run, rather than being able to do nothing while others keep an eye out for their safety.The root of our selfish gene creates insecurity — Gnostic Christian Bishop
and the sad thing is, you will deny that this statement is silly and not backed up by science, even though your argument is fine without it. People get so defensive about their polemic, everything must be true. And that is a sign of a denied insecurity.Humans are the most insecure animals on the planet. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
2) other animals have even more reason to be insecure and in fact this is why they are born ready to run, — Coben
People get so defensive about their polemic, everything must be true. And that is a sign of a denied insecurity. — Coben
Man is not inherently selfish or insecure. — Tzeentch
There are a number of fairly common misundertandings of evolutionary theory in this. As I like Sushi pointed out you are confusing Dawkins metaphor about DNA and assuming this means we are selfish. But since we are social mammals, you simply cannot summarize us this way or say that selfishness drives us. In fact, if we assume that Dawkins was utterly correct, it means that people will act unselfishly in the extreme if they identify with others - because they will treat others they identify with as having similar genes. And since humans are able to identify over racial and even species boundaries this can lead to all sorts of compassion and selflessness. And that's if Dawkins is accepted as correct for using this metaphor. It is however controversial.Our main evolutionary driver is our selfish gene. If you do not agree, then tell us what you think is driving us all to try to be the fittest of our species if not that selfish desire. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
You’re talking rubbish. We’re overly optimistic, rather short-sighted and not very capable of picturing abstract probabilities - such as exponential growth and simple logical problems (for the later we are better at this if the problem is framed in an actual lived event).
I assume you’re taking the title from Dawkins book completely out of context? He has actually stated himself - explicitly - that he never meant humans are ‘selfish’. — I like sushi
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