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guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
Mon Jan 14, 2019, 06:29 PM Jan 2019

Why religion?


From the article:

The structural-functional approach to religion has its roots in Emile Durkheim’s work on religion. Durkheim argued that religion is, in a sense, the celebration and even (self-) worship of human society. Given this approach, Durkheim proposed that religion has three major functions in society: it provides social cohesion to help maintain social solidarity through shared rituals and beliefs, social control to enforce religious-based morals and norms to help maintain conformity and control in society, and it offers meaning and purpose to answer any existential questions.



To read more:

https://courses.lumenlearning.com/boundless-sociology/chapter/the-functionalist-perspective-on-religion/

I was first introduced to Durkheim in a theology course at University. One part of reading in theology is to examine the why of things.

Why do humans self-organize into tribes, groups, nations, and other groups?


Religion, like every other aspect of tribalism, has the function of furnishing a group identity. And, like all human organizations, hat group identity can and does lead to positive and negative behaviors.

So when I read a comment in the vein of: "if only we could eradicate religion", I wonder exactly what the commenter feels is the point that is being made.
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Why religion? (Original Post) guillaumeb Jan 2019 OP
Associating for common goals, identity and purpose are fine; however, doing so on the basis of fairy LongtimeAZDem Jan 2019 #1
Yet people have done exactly that for thousands of years. marylandblue Jan 2019 #3
Similar to the fairy tales that are a part of US history? guillaumeb Jan 2019 #6
The vast majority of humans have been wrong and continue edhopper Jan 2019 #19
Are you ever in that vast majority? guillaumeb Jan 2019 #28
At one time edhopper Jan 2019 #37
Bill Cosby and Lance Armstrong. guillaumeb Jan 2019 #38
I also thought edhopper Jan 2019 #39
Sadly, you are correct there. guillaumeb Jan 2019 #40
Lesson learned edhopper Jan 2019 #41
Durkheim is wrong. Cartoonist Jan 2019 #2
Yes he does assume a lot, but has he been proven wrong? marylandblue Jan 2019 #4
His reputation among sociologists will not suffer too much from your opinion. guillaumeb Jan 2019 #7
He makes the same mistake you do. Cartoonist Jan 2019 #13
Have you ever considered, for even a moment, guillaumeb Jan 2019 #30
And what reputation would that be? Act_of_Reparation Jan 2019 #24
He would be happy... Act_of_Reparation Jan 2019 #21
Ha! MineralMan Jan 2019 #22
Religion is a human response ismnotwasm Jan 2019 #5
First, what is the name of the book? Thank you in advance. guillaumeb Jan 2019 #8
Tribalism doesn't necessarily mean there is an "us" and an "other" and a need for dominance marylandblue Jan 2019 #9
I was speaking predominantly of humans. guillaumeb Jan 2019 #10
You mentioned primates, there are different types of primate groups and interactions marylandblue Jan 2019 #11
THere are complicating factors, guillaumeb Jan 2019 #26
It's actually a trilogy, the first book is called "Dawn" ismnotwasm Jan 2019 #14
Altrusim is also self-interest in the same manner that group altruism guillaumeb Jan 2019 #27
That's a two part question, but Butler only answers one part. Act_of_Reparation Jan 2019 #23
You know I think about that quite a lot ismnotwasm Jan 2019 #25
It comes down to two ways of looking at what makes society work. Do we need myths to hold us Nitram Jan 2019 #12
One simple question: who said "if only we could eradicate religion"? trotsky Jan 2019 #15
Who here has said "if only we could eradicate religion?" MineralMan Jan 2019 #16
Guillaumeb using a straw man? NO WAY!! n/t trotsky Jan 2019 #17
Well, I racked my brain, briefly, and tried to think of someone MineralMan Jan 2019 #18
Reboot and try again. guillaumeb Jan 2019 #29
I almost never take instructions from you, Guy. MineralMan Jan 2019 #31
Your loss. guillaumeb Jan 2019 #32
Oddly enough, I experience no sense of loss from MineralMan Jan 2019 #33
That is where the reflection and awareness enter. eom guillaumeb Jan 2019 #34
.. MineralMan Jan 2019 #35
POST EVIDENCE OF YOUR CLAIM. trotsky Jan 2019 #36
So their is a debate on whether edhopper Jan 2019 #20
Of course there is a debate. guillaumeb Jan 2019 #43
But what does it say edhopper Jan 2019 #52
Nothing, in my view. eom guillaumeb Jan 2019 #53
STILL waiting for evidence that someone here has said "if only we could eradicate religion". trotsky Jan 2019 #42
Maybe the point is "getting rid of tribes would be good" muriel_volestrangler Jan 2019 #44
And how exactly would we eliminate the human need for family? guillaumeb Jan 2019 #45
We'd realise that the tribe is not the equivalent of a family muriel_volestrangler Jan 2019 #46
That is the goal. guillaumeb Jan 2019 #47
Requires ... letting go of institutions that demand loyalty for the sake of belonging muriel_volestrangler Jan 2019 #48
National identity offers and demands similar things. guillaumeb Jan 2019 #49
national identity is not based on supernatural promises (or threats) muriel_volestrangler Jan 2019 #50
We both respond to and create our social and physical environment. guillaumeb Jan 2019 #51

LongtimeAZDem

(4,494 posts)
1. Associating for common goals, identity and purpose are fine; however, doing so on the basis of fairy
Mon Jan 14, 2019, 07:17 PM
Jan 2019

tales is silly at best.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
3. Yet people have done exactly that for thousands of years.
Mon Jan 14, 2019, 08:13 PM
Jan 2019

Humans are, after all, pretty silly creatures.

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
6. Similar to the fairy tales that are a part of US history?
Mon Jan 14, 2019, 10:17 PM
Jan 2019

Calling theism, something that the vast majority of humans associate with, defines the vast majority of humans as silly.

edhopper

(33,666 posts)
19. The vast majority of humans have been wrong and continue
Tue Jan 15, 2019, 11:29 AM
Jan 2019

to be wrong about many things. The vast majority of humans are silly about many things.

edhopper

(33,666 posts)
37. At one time
Tue Jan 15, 2019, 08:02 PM
Jan 2019

I believed in ghosts and UFOs and God.

At one time I thought Bill Cosby was a great guy and Lance Armstrong a great champion.

edhopper

(33,666 posts)
39. I also thought
Tue Jan 15, 2019, 09:04 PM
Jan 2019

that there was no way enough Americans would be dumb enough to support Donald Trump to make it a close election.

Wrong about that too.

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
40. Sadly, you are correct there.
Tue Jan 15, 2019, 09:06 PM
Jan 2019

Never underestimate the ability of the uninformed voter to make bad choices.

Cartoonist

(7,326 posts)
2. Durkheim is wrong.
Mon Jan 14, 2019, 07:25 PM
Jan 2019

He sure does assume a lot. I'm sure he's happy that his world is just the way he wants it.

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
7. His reputation among sociologists will not suffer too much from your opinion.
Mon Jan 14, 2019, 10:19 PM
Jan 2019

Some prefer to filter the world through their own cognitive biases.

Cartoonist

(7,326 posts)
13. He makes the same mistake you do.
Tue Jan 15, 2019, 06:57 AM
Jan 2019

The same mistake other sociologists make because they want to.

People get together in social groups because that's what people do. Just because they get together in their religious clubs doesn't prove God's existence. The local Star Wars club doesn't prove the existence of Yoda.

Religious sociologists of his stripe start with a conclusion and then try to justify it with anecdotal evidence.

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
30. Have you ever considered, for even a moment,
Tue Jan 15, 2019, 04:17 PM
Jan 2019

that you are mistaken?

This article deals with the "why" of religion, not the proof that religious feeling is provable or correct.

People band together because it is a literal necessity for mental and physical health.

ismnotwasm

(42,023 posts)
5. Religion is a human response
Mon Jan 14, 2019, 08:44 PM
Jan 2019

All arguments about the validity of deities aside, the forms of worship are entreaties, give me something, or take away something. The foundations of religion are answers to the “why” of how things are. When people group together, there is always, first, greater safety.

I’m a feminist so there is something in every single patriarchal religion that I find off putting, offensive, or terrifying. A better question to me is “Why, once we organize into tribes, groups, nations and other group, do we so quickly find enemies within and without?

My favorite quote from Sci-fi author Octavia Butler from one of her books is this one, and in her book, dooms mankind

Octavia E. Butler
“You are hierarchical. That's the older and more entrenched characteristic. We saw it in your closest animal relatives and in your most distant ones. It's a terrestrial characteristic. When human intelligence served it instead of guiding it, when human intelligence did not even acknowledge it as a problem, but took pride in it or did not notice it at all... That was like ignoring cancer


guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
8. First, what is the name of the book? Thank you in advance.
Mon Jan 14, 2019, 10:22 PM
Jan 2019

My view on tribalism is that a tribe defines "the other" as non members of the tribe. In the interest of social cohesion, there must be an "us" and an "other".

Tribalism is also seen among primates. Perhaps it is because tribalism is the figurative air that we breath.

And dominance is, in my view, a part of that tribalism.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
9. Tribalism doesn't necessarily mean there is an "us" and an "other" and a need for dominance
Mon Jan 14, 2019, 10:44 PM
Jan 2019

When two chimpanzee groups encounter each other, they go to war. When two bonobo groups encounter each other, they make love. Humans seem to do one or the other, depending on the situation.

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
10. I was speaking predominantly of humans.
Mon Jan 14, 2019, 10:47 PM
Jan 2019

What is a tribe but an "us"?

At the most basic level, a family group is a tribe. Humans do not personally relate to all humans.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
11. You mentioned primates, there are different types of primate groups and interactions
Mon Jan 14, 2019, 10:53 PM
Jan 2019

There are different types of human tribes and different types of human interactions. It's a lot more complicated and varied than a simple "us" vs. "them."

ismnotwasm

(42,023 posts)
14. It's actually a trilogy, the first book is called "Dawn"
Tue Jan 15, 2019, 10:15 AM
Jan 2019

Here is a pretty good review by another author

https://www.tor.com/2018/01/18/starting-with-the-womb-octavia-e-butlers-dawn/

I also think, and there is some evidence for this, that humans survived and thrived because of cooperation, in small family groups at first of course. We may have survived because of altruism — how did such a characteristic become not only entrenched, but admired?

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
27. Altrusim is also self-interest in the same manner that group altruism
Tue Jan 15, 2019, 04:10 PM
Jan 2019

is self-interest.

Thank you for the name. I will look for the book.

Act_of_Reparation

(9,116 posts)
23. That's a two part question, but Butler only answers one part.
Tue Jan 15, 2019, 01:02 PM
Jan 2019

Organization entails heirarchy, yes. Religious leaders no doubt realize they owe their wealth and power to the widespread belief that what they say is true; that if people start believing something else, they will lose that wealth and power.

But what those who don't materially profit from such organization? They are no less vociferous in their defense of the heirarchy than those at the top. In fact, the system is usually more detremental to them than beneficial, and they're usually the ones to "defend" the heirarchy with violence and atrocity. Look to the Peasant's Crusade of 1096 for a textbook example.

ismnotwasm

(42,023 posts)
25. You know I think about that quite a lot
Tue Jan 15, 2019, 03:13 PM
Jan 2019

Does organization HAVE to entail hierarchy? In her books, the aliens do not a a hierarchical culture but one of biological assimilation, obviously not something humans can do.

It’s can be an uncomfortable thought, actually, to NOT have the hierarchical standards we are used to. We seem to want a parent, or a boss, or an authority figure. Religion fits this role to a tee, and every religion has some sort of hierarchy, even the ones that claim they don’t.

Too often Revolution has stirred its..proletariat, if you will, and it’s impoverished among the people, manipulated them in order for reward. Not that true grassroots rebellion is any different.

The fights between Protestant and Catholics come to mind though. So much death and destruction.

Another sci-if author I adore is Roger Zelanzy, in his book “Lord of Light”—in this he creates Gods (based on Hindu mythology) that were once people, who deliberately keep humans technologically primitive, and so, easier to manipulate

Nitram

(22,965 posts)
12. It comes down to two ways of looking at what makes society work. Do we need myths to hold us
Tue Jan 15, 2019, 12:21 AM
Jan 2019

together, or would we do better to learn how to face the truth and come to terms with reality?

MineralMan

(146,351 posts)
16. Who here has said "if only we could eradicate religion?"
Tue Jan 15, 2019, 11:10 AM
Jan 2019

Personally, I don't care about religion, as long as it doesn't interfere with people's lives who don't follow it. What anyone believes with regard to such things is completely irrelevant. It is only actions that matter. Actions that attempt to impose religions beliefs on others are wrong. Such actions deny the individual right to believe whatever that individual believes regarding such things. Sadly, such actions are all too common in our society, so there's a need to point that out often.

I don't think there is anyone in this Group who wants to "eradicate religion." I think you have created a strawman to use in your argument.

You have posted a very brief quote from some theologian. Apparently, you think it has some significance. I think Durkheim gets the basic point wrong, but am not going to write an argument against that point of view today. I will simply say that religion reflects society, rather than the other way around. That is my understanding, after studying it for many years.

But, your strawman does not convince. I have not met such a person.

MineralMan

(146,351 posts)
18. Well, I racked my brain, briefly, and tried to think of someone
Tue Jan 15, 2019, 11:20 AM
Jan 2019

here who advocates the eradication of religion. Now, it's possible that someone might have done that at some point, but I can't remember such a thing.

Maybe our fellow Religion Group subscriber has simply thought he saw someone write something like that, or has projected that onto someone here. Still, it's an incautious thing to say, since it's not accurate.

I have a certain sympathy toward that poster. I see grasping at straws (or strawmen) as an act of quiet desperation. When faith is challenged in one's own mind, it can be frightening in some ways.

edhopper

(33,666 posts)
20. So their is a debate on whether
Tue Jan 15, 2019, 11:34 AM
Jan 2019

religion is a net plus or net negative for human society?

Does any of that show any support for the premise of any religion.

And if there is no basis for the religion, what does that say about the time and effort people put into it. Not to mention the actions taken on it's behalf.

trotsky

(49,533 posts)
42. STILL waiting for evidence that someone here has said "if only we could eradicate religion".
Wed Jan 16, 2019, 09:46 AM
Jan 2019

You have provided NONE. So far, it's a FALSE SMEAR.

https://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1218&pid=304549

Is lying a Christian value?

muriel_volestrangler

(101,412 posts)
46. We'd realise that the tribe is not the equivalent of a family
Wed Jan 16, 2019, 06:52 PM
Jan 2019

and that it's incorrect to say that eliminating one entity means eliminating all entities that have a bit of similarity to it.

Indeed, most of humanity doesn't live in tribes any more. Better communication and history-keeping enables different ways of living. Democracies, for instance.

Nationalism is another thing that's dangerous.

By an amazing coincidence, I was wondering if to post these Peter Gabriel lyrics, when my shuffling music chose it anyway, so I will:

Not One Of Us

It's only water
In a stranger's tear
Looks are deceptive
But distinctions are clear
A foreign body
And a foreign mind
Never welcome
In the land of the blind
You may look like we do
Talk like we do
But you know how it is
You're not one of us
...
There's safety in numbers
When you learn to divide
How can we be in
If there is no outside
All shades of opinion
Feed an open mind
But your values are twisted
Let us help you unwind

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
47. That is the goal.
Wed Jan 16, 2019, 06:57 PM
Jan 2019

And John Lennon's Imagine made a similar point.

But getting from here to there requires...... what?

muriel_volestrangler

(101,412 posts)
48. Requires ... letting go of institutions that demand loyalty for the sake of belonging
Wed Jan 16, 2019, 07:08 PM
Jan 2019

and which use supernatural promises, rather than reality, to justify their influence?

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
49. National identity offers and demands similar things.
Wed Jan 16, 2019, 07:13 PM
Jan 2019

My view is that this goal requires a basic restructuring of human behavior.

muriel_volestrangler

(101,412 posts)
50. national identity is not based on supernatural promises (or threats)
Wed Jan 16, 2019, 07:18 PM
Jan 2019

History is real. It may be imperfectly known, but that's better than "totally made up". The history of a nation can be used to judge it - what's worth continuing, what should change.

Human behaviour does change. We respond to our environment.

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
51. We both respond to and create our social and physical environment.
Wed Jan 16, 2019, 07:20 PM
Jan 2019

And if humans are still behaving as they did 5,000 years ago, that shows the difficulty facing us.

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