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Gullibilty

Discussions related to the physiological and psychological effects of peak oil on our members and future generations.

Gullibilty

Unread postby rogerhb » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 16:13:09

Religions claim that faith is a virtue.

Why is being gullible considered good and in whose interests?
"Complex problems have simple, easy to understand, wrong answers." - Henry Louis Mencken
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby Ayame » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 16:41:46

People being gulliable is seen as good by people who can exploit the gullability to their advantage.

From the lucifer principle:

There were four tribes. Three tribes worked hard but the the most influencial tribe was the shaman tribe who sat on their rear ends all day long but wanted for nothing. They got everything they needed in return for their blessings which every other tribe had to get to be successful in their endeavours (or so they believed).

that's how I roughly remember the story.
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby Ludi » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 16:46:32

There's never been anything remotely like the "shaman tribe" because that's not how tribes work.
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby ohanian » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 17:38:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', 'R')eligions claim that faith is a virtue.

Why is being gullible considered good and in whose interests?


What's next?
Conman claims that trust is a virtue?
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby Stratovarius » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 17:39:56

rogerhb

Almost nobody in the modern western world seems to examine their "faith" anymore. The reason so many people are, say, Christians, is that those around them are since birth. We're creatures of imitation, we can't survive without it.

Many may for a second examine their faith, but refuse to question it out of fear. Read the bible. God is the most hateful being in existence. He threatens people with an eternity of hell and smites those unwilling to have "faith" in him. Judge not lest ye be judged huh? Hypocrites...I hate 'em.

Sorry, I offended someone, but that is not my intent.

Anyway, I didn't really address the question. A surprising amount of people believe that morality can only be derived from religion or holy texts etc. In a lot of religions, it instructs you to have faith in _______. Therefore, people think faith is moral.

Of course, half the people in America don't know a damn thing about the religion they claim to adhere to and strut their shit and hold their chins high everywhere thinking they are superior to others who do not claim to the religion they hold.

Judeo-Christian principles seem to value gullibility.
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby Ludi » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 17:50:45

Eh, I think the threat of Hell is over-rated. Jesus died to save all people, so, theoretically, no-one will go to hell, unless Jesus does not have much power after all....

If you're hoping to get folks to examine thier faith, just about the worst way is to start screaming about how hateful God is and how close-minded Christians are.
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby rogerhb » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 17:53:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ohanian', 'C')onman claims that trust is a virtue?


Miitaries operate on trust derived from competence. Subordinates must trust their superiors. The soldier must believe that his superior is looking after his interests in addition to the mission.

It is the society that benefits through being defended.
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby NEOPO » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 19:04:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', 'E')h, I think the threat of Hell is over-rated. Jesus died to save all people, so, theoretically, no-one will go to hell, unless Jesus does not have much power after all....

If you're hoping to get folks to examine thier faith, just about the worst way is to start screaming about how hateful God is and how close-minded Christians are.


Screaming? ;-)

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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby Ludi » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 20:08:54

Well, not really screaming, I know. Just the "Hypocrites... I hate em" bit...

:P

Organized religion is a great way to, well, organize people, which is why orthodox Christianity developed. It was a terrific way to consolidate power at a critical time at the end of the Roman Empire, when everything was falling to pieces. Without the development of orthodox Christianity, history as we know it would have been very different.

If you examine orthodox Christianity and the Church, you see clearly they have almost nothing to do with what Jesus is recorded as teaching, and in many ways are directly in conflict with what he is recorded as saying on specific points. But that didn't stop the Church! And still hasn't stopped it, for that matter, in spite of the fact that anyone who wants to can read what Jesus taught and read about the history of the Church and form their own opinions. Relatively few seem to have done so, as orthodox Christianity is thriving worldwide.
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby Stratovarius » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 21:05:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', 'E')h, I think the threat of Hell is over-rated. Jesus died to save all people, so, theoretically, no-one will go to hell, unless Jesus does not have much power after all....

If you're hoping to get folks to examine thier faith, just about the worst way is to start screaming about how hateful God is and how close-minded Christians are.


Nah, a lot of people on here seem to lack belief, so I'm not preaching. Just venting. Maybe spark some things up for discussion.
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby KhanCEO » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 21:10:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ayame', 'P')eople being gulliable is seen as good by people who can exploit the gullability to their advantage.

From the lucifer principle:

There were four tribes. Three tribes worked hard but the the most influencial tribe was the shaman tribe who sat on their rear ends all day long but wanted for nothing. They got everything they needed in return for their blessings which every other tribe had to get to be successful in their endeavours (or so they believed).

that's how I roughly remember the story.


I should start my own religion. Just to see how far it goes.
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby JPL » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 22:03:31

Interesting discussion. Supposing you (or I) had come to this group with an aim of confessing that, they had experienced an in-explicable sequence of dreams about 'The Future'.

Just suppose they kept him (or her) awake at night with the same vision and, supposing, the message was all about Peak Oil (and associated stuff).

Supposing there was something there that some of us really need to know - like some evil, up-and-coming twist in the PO plot - would you then be interested then - in what the Shaman - or Woman - really wants to say - but they can't say it because of your negativity?

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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby NEOPO » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 22:24:48

There is no religion higher then truth.

Let it be spoken always.... in good times and in times of "negativity".

Like the discussion concerning the holocaust which is now illegal in 3 countries........
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby rogerhb » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 22:34:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JPL', 'S')upposing there was something there that some of us really need to know - like some evil, up-and-coming twist in the PO plot - would you then be interested then - in what the Shaman - or Woman - really wants to say - but they can't say it because of your negativity?


I would say, tell us the dream. Just because a story has been written as fiction does not mean that events similar cannot occur. Similarly just because a book is a text book does not mean the facts as reported are correct.

To me a dream is the brain sorting out ideas, the brain is wonderful at making connections. Some are sensible, some are not. Let the analytical side of the brain determine which is which.

But they are most certainly not predictions of the future, else I would have been wearing lead boots and chased through forests by strange monsters many times by now.
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby frankthetank » Fri 15 Dec 2006, 22:36:28

Khan-

I'll join if Porn is OK and i can still drink Rumple Minze...?

I view myself as a good moral, honest person, yet i know very little about any religion, and don't care to further my education in it either! I'd rather spend the time outdoors examing nature or playing with my wife :)
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby Laughs_Last » Sat 16 Dec 2006, 00:18:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('frankthetank', 'K')han-

I'll join if Porn is OK and i can still drink Rumple Minze...?

In Pastafarian theology, heaven has a beer volcano and a stripper factory.

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I suspect that people who hate religion itself have not seriously studied the theologies of the religions that they condemn. It is easier to find dumb adherents doing dumb things. This is most obvious when painting entire groups of religions with the same biblically-wide brush. Not all religions require faith or fear. Some religions insist on inquisitiveness.
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby rogerhb » Sat 16 Dec 2006, 00:46:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Laughs_Last', 'I')n Pastafarian theology, heaven has a beer volcano and a stripper factory.


:)
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Sat 16 Dec 2006, 04:12:53

The Sea of Faith
Was once, too, at the full, and round earth's shore
Lay like the folds of a bright girdle furl'd.
But now I only hear
Its melancholy, long, withdrawing roar,
Retreating, to the breath
Of the night-wind, down the vast edges drear
And naked shingles of the world.

-from Dover Beach, by Matthew Arnold

I don't have to believe the stories of the past to know there is mystery and beauty there. It helps to have some empathy and imagination to know, at least a little, what the world once was. And perhaps the easy living in this oil age has corroded some of the vital qualities that people of earlier ages possessed that gave their lives a meaning and depth that we can only look at uncomprehendingly. "vast edges drear and naked shingles of the world" says it well of our time. just who are the gullible ones?

Matthew Arnold at Project Gutenberg Dover Beach is about halfway down if you want to read it, it isn't very long. It was quoted in Ray Bradbury's book Fahrenheit 451.
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby Ayame » Sat 16 Dec 2006, 06:04:58

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', 'T')here's never been anything remotely like the "shaman tribe" because that's not how tribes work.


I'm sorry is there a rigid prediscribed formula for a tribe?

I went up and got the book just for you. The name of the tribe is Kurumba from the Nilgiri hills of India who 'made and raised almost nothing' compared to the other tribes.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lucifer Principle', 'B')ut of all four tribes the one with the greatest economic power was the Kurumba. Living in the jungle, the Kurumba did not raise wheat, did not make household utensils, and did not provide meat. They never even set forth to sell their wares; yet the work they offered brought the [others] trekking through the dense foligae to the Kurumba, begging for a service that was totally intagible, one whose value cannot even be proven to exist.
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Re: Gullibilty

Unread postby JPL » Sat 16 Dec 2006, 06:33:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JPL', 'S')upposing there was something there that some of us really need to know - like some evil, up-and-coming twist in the PO plot - would you then be interested then - in what the Shaman - or Woman - really wants to say - but they can't say it because of your negativity?


I would say, tell us the dream. Just because a story has been written as fiction does not mean that events similar cannot occur. Similarly just because a book is a text book does not mean the facts as reported are correct.

To me a dream is the brain sorting out ideas, the brain is wonderful at making connections. Some are sensible, some are not. Let the analytical side of the brain determine which is which.

But they are most certainly not predictions of the future, else I would have been wearing lead boots and chased through forests by strange monsters many times by now.


Yep good reply, but rationalise our dreams too much and we are done-for, because we loose the channel via which the gods might be talking to us.

Let me give an example. If I lived in a stone-age tribe, and I had a recurring dream about the water-hole drying up, I would go and talk to the shaman. He would then check his dreams, cast the bones or whatever, and if he deduced the gods were trying to tell us something, we'd be off straightaway and look for a new water hole.

These days we can go talk to our analyist but everything gets internalised and lost :o(

Anyhow, I'll get it off my chest. In my travels about the biosphere I keep (accidentally) meeting to people who have had the same dream. It's about a tidal wave sweeping over the land.

This guy savelivesinmay.com was so worried about the dream that he set up a web site to warn people. (Unfortunately he rationalised too much and mis-understood the content). The main value of that site IMHO was the 'dream diary' section (half way down the front page). Loads of people wrote in and they'd had the same dream too. Also mixed up with Peak Oil stuff although no-one on the site sounds like they are 'peak-aware'.

There. Anyone else had this one???

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