Elok, welcome back. You've sometimes said that transhumanism sounds like a religion to you. I've disagreed with that but I don't think I ever got into why. This post by some dude gets at part of my reasons. I am short on time and not in a long-essay-producing mood, so that will have to do for sparking discussion at the moment. Also anyone can participate in this thread. Also for the love of god if this thread somehow becomes about Trump/feminism/who-am-I-kidding-I-mean-Kid-****fest-stuff then I will... err... just become even more sullen and only post to tell you how ****ty my romantic life is. Take that.
Most relevant bit:
Most relevant bit:
But all of this stuff about stereotypes and art and insularity sounds a little like religion but even more like culture, or at least subculture.
The difference between “religion” and “culture” has always been pretty vague. Shinto is the best example; it’s less a coherent metaphysical narrative than a bunch of things Japanese people do and a repository for Japanese traditions and rituals. A quick look at Hinduism reveals that they have no idea what gods they believe in, it’s a bunch of different religions stuck together under one umbrella, but the point is that it’s the sort of thing Indian people do and a repository of Indian traditions. Even though Jews have a pretty coherent religion, the line between “Jewish culture” and “Jewish religion” is equally fuzzy. Religion as distinct from culture seems like a pretty Western phenomenon, the result of a triumphant Christianity colonizing cultures it never originated from, ending out with the modern conception of culture as ethnic food + silly costumes.
The difference between “religion” and “culture” has always been pretty vague. Shinto is the best example; it’s less a coherent metaphysical narrative than a bunch of things Japanese people do and a repository for Japanese traditions and rituals. A quick look at Hinduism reveals that they have no idea what gods they believe in, it’s a bunch of different religions stuck together under one umbrella, but the point is that it’s the sort of thing Indian people do and a repository of Indian traditions. Even though Jews have a pretty coherent religion, the line between “Jewish culture” and “Jewish religion” is equally fuzzy. Religion as distinct from culture seems like a pretty Western phenomenon, the result of a triumphant Christianity colonizing cultures it never originated from, ending out with the modern conception of culture as ethnic food + silly costumes.
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