brianshapiro
King
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2003
- Messages
- 775
ombak said:Us vs. them is wrongheaded in that it oversimplifies things and, as I stated, allows people to engage in cruelty towards others. It paints the world in black and white and says "they're different". And once the others are different, you're slidng down a slippery slope that ends somewhere around "subhumans who should be eliminated".
I don't believe any religion calls for this. But it is a pretty easy way to get people into this mentality. And yes, I know other ideologies can do this just as well.Like? Shellfish (today)? Pork (today)?
On some level us vs them does exist, even if not on every level, and its stupid to deny it. Yes, you are boxing in a number of people with a description of being 'us vs them' yourself, grouping a number of ways of thinking as being 'different'. You are painting a number of people with the belief that they are right over others as being 'different' and belonging and completely and totally confined to some degraded form of 'us vs them' thinking. People too easily make caricatures of people who believe in religion. Religous people have free thought like everyone else, they aren't brainwashed sheep, and if they believed there was a problem in their religion they would reject it. Which has happened in history, ie. the Reformation. Just because you talk about rejecting what you call some us vs them mentality don't pretend you aren't doing the same kind of divisions. At some level these divisons are meaningful.
Its not just that other ideologies do this---all ideologies do this, including ideologies that seem to want to condemn this. For instance, if you talk to a Taoist they will imply that one person doesn't have truth over another, but at the same time try to push the idea that one person is certainly wiser than another. (As if these are different things.) Of course this is a reduction of what Taoism is, but so are the common interpretations of Western philosophy or Christianity reductions. It doesn't stop millions of people who believe in Taoism from being arrogant and thinking they are wiser. Which is essentially, no different.
My point was about how us vs them thinking exists because of real, practical cultural and political divisions. Like between the West today and Islamic fundamentalists, which has as much to do with politics and economics as religion, though they are connected. I don't think the problems will be solved with either the Western model completely winning, or the fundamentalists winning. I don't think the Cold War was a complete victory for capitalism either (Western Europe and the United States became welfare states). But it doesn't mean things will just be just the same if people stop fighting. Conflicts throughout history have been what have created broader progress, all great social progress has resulted from war. Conflicts happen because they need to occur to reshape social boundaries and resolve real social problems.
There was a 19th century western philosopher who criticized mysticism including Eastern religions, arguing that they prevented social progress, limiting only a few people to be enlightened, while the society just ossified; believing Western philosopy's goal was democratization, and that Christianity as a religion was best aligned with philosophy. With democratization comes revolution, the assertion of force, which is bloody.
And I made a point that the East even with religions like Buddhism hasn't been free from these sort of divisions and conflicts, they've just been focused in different ways; in ancient times, both feudal warfare and conflict with the Mongols, and in modern times, with Communism.
When religions are fundamentalist they work by focusing on one fundamental truth of life---that there are sometimes things more important than material, ephemeral, or temporary matters like death and suffering. When that happens wars become justifiable. But its almost never disconnected from politics or real concerns. The challenge of christianity to the Roman Empire, the 100 years war, the 30 years war, the crusades, the modern war on terrorism all have political, social, and cultural aspects to them.
---The best example of when it started to become disconnected is in the Byzantine Empire, which was so completely dependant on doctrine, both religious and based on Roman law, that there were wars over minor aspects of theology. But even in this case, it was because the society only survived through this mode of bureaucracy, and it was that bureaucracy that kept alive many ancient documents and artifacts---later captured by Muslims, and only later plundered by western Crusaders. Which again, makes it meaningful.
Kosher laws are not the most relevant aspect of Judaism, and would never lead to a war. As much as they are important in Islam, its because Islam historically is making a stand for the concept of fundamentalism, and is holding value to each and every one of its traditions. As much as they are relevant in Judaism they're an extension of Kabbalistic thought. Like doctrine in the Byzantine Empire, their literal nature might not be very important practically, but the meaning behind them may be. There is a lot of theology that is hanging around also, that is not completely relevant. I think its hanging around because there is one aspect of our society which involves a rejection of religion and/or tradition and leads to a lack of understanding of the value or basis of the tradition. This both leads to opponents of religious values, and people who support them stupidly without a complete understanding. Even though prohibitions over eating pork may not seem necessary anymore there are more permanent aspects of the human condition represented in religious thought, like sexuality. This is a large part of the liberal-conservative divide in the world. When that is resolved, I doubt prohibitions against eating pork will stay around.
So my feeling on this, as I've stated, is that it is a misunderstanding of history to say there didn't need to be us vs them thinking, or that traditions that aren't useful in any way at all stay around. Today its of political importance that even otherwise useless traditions stay around. Not only for religions---for ethnic groups--ie take Kwanzaa and the attempt to reinvent black culture; or the preservation of Hawaiian and native American languages