by ralfy » Mon 11 Apr 2016, 20:48:18
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There is no real difference. We forget how not normal it is to have an assumption of stability and a long healthy life. Normal in the time of Buddha was plagues, crop failures, starvation, wars, etc. There was not much of a global distribution of goods or services, no antibiotics, no vaccinations, not much sanitation, etc. Normal was quite impermanent. It wasn't hard for most folks back then to understand the impermanent nature of being when mortality rates where high. If limits of growth and human overshoot bring back the historical norm of living with uncertainties then right there we have a starting point of a new cultural orientation.
Something related. Technology has promised a better future, this concept of progress. We have several generations now praying to the technology god that space colonization is just around the bend, that science will cure all disease, etc. etc.
Clearly we are approaching some correction in this blind faith in technology.
Religions, born in the past in these uncertain times when we did not dominate the material world with technology, still had this concept of progress and something better but it was in the form of heaven or enlightenment, the coming of the messiah, etc.
This concept of something better coming whether it be technology or religious, seems to be pretty deep in the collective hard wired psyche of humans.
When the limits of growth and the consequences of human overshoot no longer enable society to have such blind faith in a technological world of progress, where does a society then turn to in order to gets its fix on something better coming in the future? Will not the pendulum swing once again toward spiritual pursuits, ones relationship with god or with our mother earth? And if this takes place in a trashed biosphere then certainly the healing of nature and existing in harmony with nature has a very good chance of being an integral part these spiritual pursuits.
It is important to clarify one thing. I am not advocating this. This is not something I want. I am a secular atheist. Period. Ennui for example thinks I am inventing this narrative as some way to sugar coat and cope with the hard times coming. What I am stating here has nothing to do with that. It just seems logical that a reduction in material dominance through consequences leaves a society no choice but to pursue a more spiritual path.
Clearly all of the existing religions we have today laid down their foundation of thought during a time when humans lived within carrying capacity and the biosphere was an invisible whole that did not make itself known because we hadn’t yet trashed it. No surprise that not a single religion on the planet today has tenants around caring for our planet and not breeding or consuming beyond its carrying capacity. A healthy biosphere is an invisible one as it was in the times when all our great religions were formed. No script was wasted on caring for something that was not even seen!
This time around it will be different. Our biosphere will be visible in its stressed state due to the imbalances we caused. It is therefore quite logical that a society moving toward more spiritual pursuits as a result of the failure of materialism will now include a more comprehensive dogma that includes caring for our mother earth.
I think this is very likely…… not because I want it to be so
Since there was no "global distribution" then, then there is obviously a "real difference," unless one can assume that the population then was as large as it is today, and that there is another land that the human race can occupy once the planet can no longer sustain it.
Also, wasn't Buddhism itself a "new cultural orientation"? And what happened after that emerged?
In addition, isn't industrial civilization itself a "new cultural orientation"? And isn't the idea of hope in technology and progress the opposite of being a "doomer"?
Aren't ideas of heaven, enlightenment, etc., some of which are found in philosophies like Buddhism also cultural orientations? And didn't ideas of "mother Earth" and spirituality from the pre-Axial age serve as some of the bases for mainstream religions of subsequent periods?