You ever just make up something with a such a complete straight face that your audience just eats it up? I seem to find myself doing this quite often... interesting, the fact that you can say the most complete foolishness in a certain manner and be taken, if not for an expert, then at least knowledgable.
So Laura asks me, during lunch, "Why do you think people believe in God or some higher authority?" I thought about it a second and replied
"I have two reasons:
1. The Psychological. Most people don't like being in control of their own lives. God is the fallback position, the entity that they can count on when they don't want to count on themselves.
2. 4+ billion years of evolution has taught us to be afraid, wary of our predators. Now obviously, humanity has gotten rid of all its predators and is now top dog. But... people, because of 4 billion years of conditioning... we're so used to the idea of predation that we've invented 'Gods' to act as our own predators to psychologically keep us in line. Oh, we made them a bit nicer than a pack of rabid dogs, but predators our Gods are."
Well... I had her with the psychological one, but when I got into the predator discussion I finally lost my audience. The line that really took it out of here was when I started talking about sheep and wolves and, waxing cheesed-up philosophical, said " 'As the sheep fears the wolf, the sheep also loves him. Such is the way with people and their Gods."
Hell, I lost it with that one.
So Laura asks me, during lunch, "Why do you think people believe in God or some higher authority?" I thought about it a second and replied
"I have two reasons:
1. The Psychological. Most people don't like being in control of their own lives. God is the fallback position, the entity that they can count on when they don't want to count on themselves.
2. 4+ billion years of evolution has taught us to be afraid, wary of our predators. Now obviously, humanity has gotten rid of all its predators and is now top dog. But... people, because of 4 billion years of conditioning... we're so used to the idea of predation that we've invented 'Gods' to act as our own predators to psychologically keep us in line. Oh, we made them a bit nicer than a pack of rabid dogs, but predators our Gods are."
Well... I had her with the psychological one, but when I got into the predator discussion I finally lost my audience. The line that really took it out of here was when I started talking about sheep and wolves and, waxing cheesed-up philosophical, said " 'As the sheep fears the wolf, the sheep also loves him. Such is the way with people and their Gods."
Hell, I lost it with that one.
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