Re: Query to bananabrain (part 1)
I'd be interested in a BB story as well.
Assumptions being what they are I always assumed by his comments and way he was born into his given religion. With his knowledge and passion it sounds like he was raised in a conservative household. I'll be so surprised to learn his exploration of other religions and conversion to Judaism.
I suppose it's possible he may have been referring in a more general way to a road that led to his acquiring belief in general rather than the road that led to his specifically adopting Judaism(?). Whichever, I do hope this monster multiple post of my own may prove a "welcome mat" that is effective enough in showing BB that there's no reason to hold back on his own story as well.
So here goes on my own reflections which have more to do with the process of evaluation that led to my crediting the essential idea of deity itself as valid rather than any path leading to a specific religion. For most of my adult life, I was an agnostic, and I guess there were times when I would have described myself as an unequivocal atheist instead. At the same time, I've always been an avid (read "compulsive"!
reader of anything and everything I cold lay my hands on, whether it's to do with music history, theater history, political history, cultural history, religious history -- you name it. And in addition, although I freely admit there have been times when I've despaired of ever getting my pea brain around the simplest mathematical propositions or scientific theorems, that hasn't stopped me from stubbornly attempting to understand as much as I could in various writings from certain scientists like ....... the two Stephens, for instance (i.e., Jay Gould and Hawking
.
As a long-time skeptic, I was always fascinated by evolution (still am), and I've always taken the process of socialization of certain species as being central to humanity's own biological evolution. Some make a false (IMO) distinction between civilization versus nature (or biology). But being civilized is part of being socialized and being socialized is intrinsic to who/what we are -- naturally -- as a species, IMO. Consequently, while beavers may have a natural drive to erect dams, ants to erect anthills, bees to erect beehives -- etc. -- humans erect families, villages, towns, counties, states, nations and empires. Yes, that does constitute civilization, but it also constitutes nature -- our nature.
In a few of his books, Stephen Jay Gould traces the environmental pressures that make certain species evolve to a point where behavioral characteristics are as intrinsic to their physical being as the number of legs and/or tentacles they have! That is a part of evolution. It combines physical characteristics with the survival of the fittest. Both patterns of behavior and physical change over many generations are equally reflective of the evolutionary process.
When it comes to the behavior patterns, urges to eat, have sex, etc., may well be tied to species survival, of course, but socialization -- = interdependent cohesion -- seems just as crucial. No? Isn't forging many links with others a critical component of making one's own existence viable? Intuiting how best to interact with one's whole environment does involve intuiting how best to interact with others. Consequently, empathy toward others is just as critical to evolution as procreation, etc.? All cohesive structures, from humble villages to sprawling global alliances, seem reflective of a socialized empathy that is just as biological/natural as any other drive. So history’s written paper trail seems crucial in unveiling humanity's critical leaps forward in its growing sensitivity toward the "other", culminating in the fusion of whole communities.
My father was a skeptic, but as a professional historian (unlike myself) he was too strict with his discipline not to see that the religious pioneers (much less so their bloodthirsty followers!) frequently "evolved" (used as an active verb) the cultural conscience of those around them to a greater sensitivity for the left-out, the helpless, the unassimilated, the trashed, the down-and-out, the widow, the orphan, the wanderer, the homeless, the poor -- the "outsiders", in other words. To those in certain cultures not yet "evolved" by these religious pioneers, there seemed no pragmatic reason for caring for such "strays". It took the religious pioneers like Buddha and Jesus and others to legitimize the "fanciful notion" that ........... Hey, such "strays" are humans too -- Duh.
In addition, it's not just a case of some pathbreaker who happens to be good. It's even more than that: It's a case of the pathbreaker being both good
and an "Original"!
There is a whole related part to this equation that is just as important as any egalitarian innovations in and of themselves, but one can't properly address this whole riddle without first showing certain additional aspects to it that may not be immediately apparent. There is also the ultimate teaser as to how (most of) our brains may be wired.
I've decided to provide here two different lists, showing a contrast that has teased me considerably through the years. I've already referred to this contrast in very general terms in other posts on this board, but it may be time now to put some flesh and bones on that list, so others can judge its significance for themselves.
So here we go <wiping sweat off brow>:
The first of the two lists shows many path-breaking and entirely original spins on social/cultural ethics that have emerged from founding pioneers who have, in the process, founded new theistic creeds alongside their contextually welcome moral values --
(values that, as we'll see, have precious little to do with so-called "sin", really [ultimately, a red herring anyway, and fostered more by followers obsessed with exceptionalism than by the initial pioneers]) --
those initial pioneering moral values from the initial founders consisting primarily of salutary puncturing of socially thoughtless attitudes denying the humanity of all social misfits. These thoughtless attitudes are replaced by these pioneers with a constructive sense of responsibility instead by all and for all without exception ("I'll scratch your back, you scratch mine"). All well and good, but why must the most far-reaching and original spinners on such social responsibility always bring in some brand new (and countercultural and initially nonconformist) theistic creed along with their independent social conscience?
Whatever each pioneer's individual faults -- and a few of them certainly have their individual personal flaws, no question -- each one has shown clear originality for their time and place and culture in that they introduce, without prior precedent
1. the centrality of peace as the spine to all social values (Lugal-Shag-Egur of 3rd-century-B.C.E. Sumeria -- and he also introduces the worship of a new deity, Ningirsu, who's conceived as a powerful god who safeguards all peace treaties);
2. the establishment of protections for the treatment of the socially downscale and the introduction of the concept "freedom" ["amagi" in Sumerian] (Urukagina, the Sumerian reformer -- and he also reconceives Ningirsu as the safeguard of the widow and the orphan [the first known use of this turn of phrase], thus instituting a new form of worship);
3. the notion that those who are afflicted and oppressed deserve the most respect and consideration of all (the writers of Exodus -- and they also introduce the worship of a new god, Yahweh, who has "surely seen the affliction of my people .. and have heard their cry .. And I am come down to deliver them" -- in salutary contrast to most other gods of that period who usually safeguarded the mighty instead);
4. the fundamental concept of Yin and Yang (the writer of the I Ching [thought by some to be a certain Wen Wang] -- and this text also introduces something called "Tian" [loose translation: "Heaven"] as a metaphysical bulwark of all that is and therefore worthy of worship);
5. the first conscientiously designed Constitution in the Western tradition, instituted as the Constitution of Orchomenus (Hesiod, nicknamed "hearth-founder" for his groundbreaking constitution -- and he also introduces into literature the classic picture of the cosmos as conceived in ancient Greek tradition, in his epic Theogony, with its pantheon of gods like Zeus, Hera, Aphrodite, and so on);
6. the establishment of conventional wisdom as automatically suspect and the powerful's use of the jackboot (so to speak) as intrinsically antithetical to all nature (the writer of the Tao-te-king, sometimes called Lao-Tzu -- and this text also introduces a new form of worship, Taoism, which worships the Dao as "the mystical source and ideal of all existence: it is unseen, but not transcendent, immensely powerful yet supremely humble, being the root of all things");
7. the utter repudiation of any and all violence whatsoever and a rejection of a caste system and of any system that imposes any types of discriminatory levels on the human family at all (the originator of the sermons in the Digha-Nikaya, usually taken to be Buddha -- and these sermons also reconceive a new Brahma, a deity now free of anger, pure of mind, free of malice, without wealth and free of worldly cares, capable of union with all those who "regard all with mind set free, and deep-felt pity, ... sympathy, ... equanimity");
8. the primacy of reining in the arrogance and violence of those in power, advocating a new-minted reciprocal and considerate reform in political life instead, eventually inspiring from the grave the extraordinarily peaceful and stable culture of the Han dynasty (Confucius -- and he also introduced the concept that all moral strength comes ultimately from "Tian", a new wrinkle on the "Tian" of the I Ching);
9. ethics itself as the most important element in humanity's existence, together with a claimed capacity for anyone, from freeman to slave, to grasp it and master it better through continually sharpening self-knowledge (Socrates -- and he also introduced his conviction that he could sometimes hear God's own voice, when being dissuaded from a course of action that would not be right);
10. service to all and living purely for others, even loving one's enemies (the writers of the Synoptic Gospels, in describing Jesus Christ -- and these texts also introduce a new Yahweh, who is merciful and loving and veneration of whom constitutes a new form of worship);
11. the primacy of negotiating peace with one's enemies on their own turf, going in unarmed at great personal risk, just in order to construct a peaceful existence for all peoples in the region, and the instituting of an automatic gift to the poor from all citizens (Mohammed, a reformed raider -- and he also introduces a new god, Allah, who must be worshiped five times a day); and
12. a nuts-and-bolts path to total world peace in our modern world, and the first conception, within a semi-political context, of our globe as a single village long before other politicians ever took up this idea (Bahá’u’lláh -- and he also re-introduces the modern world to a then-new conception of deity as the inspirer of a sequence of "messengers", and therefore worthy of a new form of worship, Bahai).
Such figures play critical roles in prodding us toward an increasingly inclusive ethic.