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Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why? (Read 5611 times)
B-dawg
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Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why?
Mar 25th, 2006 at 3:00am
 
According to a recent survey by the University of Minneapolis sociology department, atheists are now America's LEAST-trusted minority.
But why is this?
WHY does a belief in MAGIC make somebody more trustworthy???
I mean, there's lots of good reasons not to believe in magic. (The fact that there are no REAL wizards, for one - even though religious texts literally CRAWL with them. Elijah and Moses, anybody? I'm not talking about money-grubbing charlatans like Aleister Crowley here, BTW. His main talent appears to have been being photographed wearing funny hats..! AND if he was so great, why couldn't he FLY?)
Anybody here ever seen a walking corpse, or somebody throw a lightning bolt or fireball from their fingertips? Or even a talking jackass like Balaam owned? Religious texts (not limited to, but ESPECIALLY the Bible) are FULL of swords & sorcery that just doesn't seem to happen in the REAL world, or in any well-verified historical source (ancient OR modern.) So why does believing in stories with the approximate veracity and believability of Tolkien's phantasmagorias make one more trustworthy?
Seriously, folks. Can ANYONE give me a reason for this American mindset, which isn't some vague platitude or quotation of superstitious drivel? (Come on, you can do it..!)

B-man
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augoeideian
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Re: Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why?
Reply #1 - Mar 25th, 2006 at 5:59am
 
Hi Chumley  Smiley

Im glad you mentioned the name of Aleister Crowley - the Golden Dawn - the Beast.
This is a character that iam very cautious of and his name needs mentioning - this character hangs around and there is no Glory in his literature or ilk.

This is my opinion of his transgressions.


As to the mindset of a nation .. well i hear what you say .. our Real world, right now does not seem to have real magic in it at least in the outer mudane world unless it is looked for.  Why then should it be revered?

good question! i say we are in the Intellectual age possibly at the start of combining our intellect with our not so distant past Spiritual age.  So there is an earning for the Spirit to come to the front and people are intuitively tuning into the magic as a natural process.  What you think Chumley?

I say superstition must make way for the real thing.
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RyanParis
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Re: Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why?
Reply #2 - Mar 25th, 2006 at 6:37am
 
I don't believe there's anything "supernatural," but just things in Nature, other spirit dimensions and reality that we don't understand yet.
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DocM
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Re: Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why?
Reply #3 - Mar 25th, 2006 at 9:34am
 
I'm going to speak first here, although I know that Don would.  Brendan, people of faith should not be put down as those who believe in the unreal or imaginary.  I truly pity your interpretation of faith in God, as you take it so literally with literal interpretation of text and miracles - you miss the larger picture.

Atheists may be the least trusted simply because they are thought of believing in nothing.  This of course may or may not be true.  But he who believes in nothing, has no morals, no real reason to do anything.  True faith in God challanges us to aspire to a higher ideal.  To better ourselves and help others.  Forget the "sword and sorcery" aspect for a while. 

Belief in a higher power is not foolish.  How much does your own beliefs give you comfort during times of stress or tragedy?  Think about that.


Matthew
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B-dawg
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Re: Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why?
Reply #4 - Mar 25th, 2006 at 10:49am
 
*****************
Belief in a higher power is not foolish.  How much does your own beliefs give you comfort during times of stress or tragedy?
*****************
VERY LITTLE, I'll admit.
But at least I'm not retreating into a world
of fantasies, and maybe that's a comfort in
and of itself. I've lost friends and loved ones,
and I'd bet you dollars-to-doughnuts that I won't EVER see them again.
I could, of course, attempt to FORCE myself to
believe, with all my heart, that I WILL see them
again. But I could also force myself to believe in
the Easter Bunny, or devote all my time, my finances, and my life to becoming
an honest-to-goodness, lightning-bolt-throwing
wizard. Some people actually DO this! (Don't laugh here, but I DID know a
couple of guys in college who considered themselves "magical." One of them had a copy
of a book called "Initiation into Hermetics" which
he claimed would teach him to have ALL SORTS
of powers (levitation, ect.!) and another thought
he was a "healer" of some kind. So as you can see,
some people DO choose fantasy over reality. But
is that really any way to actually LIVE, Doc..?)
What's the point, in trying to BEAT yourself into
believing in something? (I think some people call
that "blind faith"...)

B-man
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B-dawg
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Re: Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why?
Reply #5 - Mar 25th, 2006 at 11:21am
 
*****************
Hi Chumley  Smiley

Im glad you mentioned the name of Aleister Crowley - the Golden Dawn - the Beast.
This is a character that iam very cautious of and his name needs mentioning - this character hangs around and there is no Glory in his literature or ilk.

This is my opinion of his transgressions.
*****************
Other than the fact that he was a self-deluded weirdo (and a self-aggrandizing liar to boot) what harm did the man do (outside of inspiring tens of thousands of people to waste their time reading his "literature"?)
You make him sound like somebody SIGNIFICANT. But if he was in any way important, how so?
What were his "transgressions"?

B-man
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Sasuke
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Re: Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why?
Reply #6 - Mar 26th, 2006 at 8:30pm
 
Heh, Crowley. Man, Good Omens was a great book. Everybody should read it, seriously, it's by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman.

Oh, yeah, on topic now.

Listen. The fact is, at least 80% of us on this board have gone through so much doubting and worrying and strife about what we personally believe that you throwing around a couple words like "make-believe" and "fantasies" is not going to make us change our minds. Sorry, guy.

As for your question, maybe people don't trust atheists as much as they should because a very select few of them insult their religious and moral beliefs that are the GROUND UPON WHICH THEY STAND ON THIS EARTH by calling them make-believe nonsense. Not that you would do something like that, right?

Speaking of which, if you don't even believe in an afterlife, and are unwilling to open your mind to the thought that OH MY GOD, YOU MIGHT BE MISINFORMED, why are you here? Are you here just to bring down those who are genuinely attempting to seek their personal truths?


ps: There are real wizards, and they practice magic. Can they throw fireballs and stuff? No, and not even they claim to be able to. But there are some branches of paganism in which followers call themselves witches and wizards. Thanks.
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B-dawg
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Re: Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why?
Reply #7 - Mar 26th, 2006 at 10:47pm
 
*****************
1.) Speaking of which, if you don't even believe in an afterlife, and are unwilling to open your mind to the thought that OH MY GOD, YOU MIGHT BE MISINFORMED, why are you here?
*****************
Good question.
All my life, I've been worried that my death might
NOT bring me unconscious oblivion. In fact, we now
have physicists who claim science will prove the existence of other dimensions within 10 years.
What might these "other dimensions" imply?
Perhaps I'm here, to assess the level of threat that I'm dealing with. If there IS a non-physical reality, and a "God" - then I'm NOT truly in control of my own destiny. SOMEONE ELSE IS. I happen to find that disturbing, I don't trust other people and never have. I prefer to rely on #1, I can always trust MYSELF not to f**k me over. So, you might say I'm here to "arm" myself against the "God and afterlife" possibility as best as I can. (Should "God" and the afterlife be scientifically DISPROVEN - a very unlikely prospect, BTW - I would frankly be happy with the development. But they won't be disproven, at least in my lifetime... so here I am!)

*****************
2.) Are you here just to bring down those who are genuinely attempting to seek their personal truths?
*****************
Not at all. Are you?
BTW, what is a personal "truth" (do you say there
is no objective reality then?) "Hypothesis" might
be more appropriate...

B-man
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augoeideian
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Re: Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why?
Reply #8 - Mar 27th, 2006 at 4:22am
 
Aleister Crowley is a good example of someone living in a fantasy world.  His fantasy world that he created and pulled alot of other people in to be used for his own vainty and fame.  He was a significant person because he was initiated into a high order and learned the Ways of the World, this is why his literature is powerful because he has lifted the Veil ... but he leans towards black magic for his own gain. As simple as that.  In his literature you will notice that he does not Glorify Christ or God - he in fact mocks it or twists it for his own purposes.

He does write about the Mysteries with authority and i know there are alot of people who look up to him .. this i know.

My opinion is caution must be used with his literature for the above reasons; he is a master of the dark arts.
This is a dellusional character.  This is fantasy in its true form.  That movie 'eyes wide shut' (Cruise and Kidman) smacks of Crowley.  

Again my opinion of Crowley as this issue is not spoken about to readily in these matters. And i would like to discuss it further.

True Love Honours its Creators.

************

Chumley ... there is Real True Magic in a blade of grass, in the stars in sky, in a new born baby, the migration path of butterflies .. you will see it if you want to look for it.

If the nature of the correspondence between the higher and lower is understood, then the spiritual may be read through its physical symbol.

Smiley May we be blessed with True Magic.

~~~~~~~~~~~

Yo RyanParis - your picture is radical dude.
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« Last Edit: Apr 10th, 2006 at 9:47am by augoeideian »  

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blink
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Re: Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why?
Reply #9 - Mar 27th, 2006 at 1:38pm
 
Hi chum,

Perhaps a belief in "magic" or whatever a person might want to label it simply inspires other people's trust because it implies that the "believer" actually has an ability to trust.  

To know that a person has the ability "to trust" may have an evolutionary advantage in that it creates a possible unconscious assumption by the other that the "believer" is one with whom a person might be able to gain a rapport, a give and take which might be useful or supportive in some way.  

Of course, this is a dry and humorless interpretation, but that is the manner in which the scientific community often feels compelled to reduce our most inspired and most complex experiences of life.

best to you as always, blink
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dave_a_mbs
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Re: Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why?
Reply #10 - Mar 27th, 2006 at 6:07pm
 
I recall a tale about Crowly and his friends regularly and adequately dosed themselves on heroin and cannabis, thus establishing a sense of the world in which mysticism might occur. They were attempting to perform a spell in which the odor of roses was one of the outcomes. At the crucial moment Crowly waved his hands and there was a huge Crash! The entire toilet assembly from the flat above them had come crashing down through the floor, to spill and distribute an odor, but not quite that of roses.

Why our culture is the way it is is because it feels good. When we are insecure, we tend to look for things that reduce stress.

That which reduces feelings of stress is a Negative Reinforcer.  Negative Reinforcers  reduce some sensation and make you feel better (aspirin removes headache). They differ from  Positive Reinforcers. Positive (it gives or increases something) Reinforcers Increase stimulus and give better feeling. (Win the Lottery, get a prize.)

Don't confuse negative reinforcers with punishers. Negative Punishers (take away pleasure, "You're grounded, can't go out.") and Positive Punishers (Give unpleasant feeling, Slap!)

Negative reinforcers are extremely powerful. Punishers tend to inhibit the last behavior, which is to doubt the religious system, while belief in someone else to save us reduces the stress of confusion and self doubt. As a result, we negatively reinforce the tendency toward creating or adopting some kind of organizational system to handle perplexing beliefs.

If you wear a hat to the races and win occasionally while losing many times, the power of winning will stick with you, while you'll generally forget the losses, because it is unpleasant (punishing) to recall them. Association with winning and the hat typically lead to  "My lucky hat", even though overall you're losing. This is human psychology. Thus, to the degree that an occasional word of Scripture makes you feel better, you'll tend to become a believer, and you'll put aside all the other areas of life in which Scriptures seem to be inadequate, because these are punishing in their nature.

In modern American life, the adrenaline rush available at a revival meeting, where we all receive "Salvation and Strawberry Fields Forever,  Amen"  is a fantastic positive reinforcer, and by removing our fears of the future, even if only for a moment, it is also a negative reinforcer.

To go the next step and be "reborn" adds a level of attainment, generally associated with the positive reinforcement of achievement of a light trance, which is also the positive reinforcere associated with Hindu and Buddhist revivalist experiences.  Major steps into trance are chanting, singing, dancing, meditating, sacramental drugs (wine, annointing oils, ganja, peyote, and such), all of which act mor or less the same way. Trance feels good and is a positive reinforcer, while pushing anxieties and confusion out of the mind is a negative reinforcer, so revivals hook lots of people.

This has nothing to do with the validity of Scripture. However, every major scientist either has a belief in a "Cause" of the universe, like my view of God which happens to be expressed as a statistical tendency, or the Big Bang, or its equivalent  (I'm not a member of the Big Bang Gang, I prefer a distributed mini-Bang model) where their faith begins with belief in an initial creation due to the Principles of Physics, so that the world is nice and orderly.

Beyond this, to actually go into trance and do spiritual work with the dead, or to meditate and attain any of the permanent levels of spiritual advancement such as satchitananda, quieting the mind,  sarvastarka samadhi etc, is also a powerful positive reinforcer, further creating belief in that associated religious system. However, here too we see the same psychological effect. If you started as a Hindu and reached a trance state, then it would tend to fixate your beliefs into Hinduism, ignoring inconsistencies. That's the same effect of reinforcement and psychology, not a product of the Hindu philosophical system. If you did it through drugs, then you might wind up viewing LSD as the Messiah (as many people proclaimed in the 1960 - 1970 era).

Atheists are professional doubters, Boat Rockers, Ripple Makers, and as such, they deny the sources of spiritual joy that reinforce others. Their beliefs tend to make True Believers feel upset and ill at ease, because they take away the comfortable feeling of knowing everything. (Feeling ill at ease is a positive punisher.) To a True Believer, it's rather like a political party that proclaims Tyranny to be the best path, and which would promptly be cast out of our system by dedicated believers in a Republican government.  (Casting them out gets rid of the annoyance and feels good, hence it is a negative reinforcer.)

So - to answer the question directly, we are superstitious because it seems to feel good, and allows us to not have to deal with things we fail to understand, and which bother us. It is a purely psychological phenomenon, based on the manner in which we handle reinforcers and punishers, and it has nothing at all to do with spirits, black flies, God, Satan, or the phases of the moon.

d
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B-dawg
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Re: Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why?
Reply #11 - Mar 28th, 2006 at 1:52am
 
I recall a tale about Crowly and his friends regularly and adequately dosed themselves on heroin and cannabis, thus establishing a sense of the world in which mysticism might occur. They were attempting to perform a spell in which the odor of roses was one of the outcomes. At the crucial moment Crowly waved his hands and there was a huge Crash! The entire toilet assembly from the flat above them had come crashing down through the floor, to spill and distribute an odor, but not quite that of roses.

Why our culture is the way it is is because it feels good. When we are insecure, we tend to look for things that reduce stress.

That which reduces feelings of stress is a Negative Reinforcer.  Negative Reinforcers  reduce some sensation and make you feel better (aspirin removes headache). They differ from  Positive Reinforcers. Positive (it gives or increases something) Reinforcers Increase stimulus and give better feeling. (Win the Lottery, get a prize.)

Don't confuse negative reinforcers with punishers. Negative Punishers (take away pleasure, "You're grounded, can't go out.") and Positive Punishers (Give unpleasant feeling, Slap!)

Negative reinforcers are extremely powerful. Punishers tend to inhibit the last behavior, which is to doubt the religious system, while belief in someone else to save us reduces the stress of confusion and self doubt. As a result, we negatively reinforce the tendency toward creating or adopting some kind of organizational system to handle perplexing beliefs.

If you wear a hat to the races and win occasionally while losing many times, the power of winning will stick with you, while you'll generally forget the losses, because it is unpleasant (punishing) to recall them. Association with winning and the hat typically lead to  "My lucky hat", even though overall you're losing. This is human psychology. Thus, to the degree that an occasional word of Scripture makes you feel better, you'll tend to become a believer, and you'll put aside all the other areas of life in which Scriptures seem to be inadequate, because these are punishing in their nature.

In modern American life, the adrenaline rush available at a revival meeting, where we all receive "Salvation and Strawberry Fields Forever,  Amen"  is a fantastic positive reinforcer, and by removing our fears of the future, even if only for a moment, it is also a negative reinforcer.

To go the next step and be "reborn" adds a level of attainment, generally associated with the positive reinforcement of achievement of a light trance, which is also the positive reinforcere associated with Hindu and Buddhist revivalist experiences.  Major steps into trance are chanting, singing, dancing, meditating, sacramental drugs (wine, annointing oils, ganja, peyote, and such), all of which act mor or less the same way. Trance feels good and is a positive reinforcer, while pushing anxieties and confusion out of the mind is a negative reinforcer, so revivals hook lots of people.

This has nothing to do with the validity of Scripture. However, every major scientist either has a belief in a "Cause" of the universe, like my view of God which happens to be expressed as a statistical tendency, or the Big Bang, or its equivalent  (I'm not a member of the Big Bang Gang, I prefer a distributed mini-Bang model) where their faith begins with belief in an initial creation due to the Principles of Physics, so that the world is nice and orderly.

Beyond this, to actually go into trance and do spiritual work with the dead, or to meditate and attain any of the permanent levels of spiritual advancement such as satchitananda, quieting the mind,  sarvastarka samadhi etc, is also a powerful positive reinforcer, further creating belief in that associated religious system. However, here too we see the same psychological effect. If you started as a Hindu and reached a trance state, then it would tend to fixate your beliefs into Hinduism, ignoring inconsistencies. That's the same effect of reinforcement and psychology, not a product of the Hindu philosophical system. If you did it through drugs, then you might wind up viewing LSD as the Messiah (as many people proclaimed in the 1960 - 1970 era).

Atheists are professional doubters, Boat Rockers, Ripple Makers, and as such, they deny the sources of spiritual joy that reinforce others. Their beliefs tend to make True Believers feel upset and ill at ease, because they take away the comfortable feeling of knowing everything. (Feeling ill at ease is a positive punisher.) To a True Believer, it's rather like a political party that proclaims Tyranny to be the best path, and which would promptly be cast out of our system by dedicated believers in a Republican government.  (Casting them out gets rid of the annoyance and feels good, hence it is a negative reinforcer.)

So - to answer the question directly, we are superstitious because it seems to feel good, and allows us to not have to deal with things we fail to understand, and which bother us. It is a purely psychological phenomenon, based on the manner in which we handle reinforcers and punishers, and it has nothing at all to do with spirits, black flies, God, Satan, or the phases of the moon.

d
*****************
Well, that's as good an analysis as I've heard yet,
Dave. Too bad it IS that way...

B-man
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augoeideian
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Re: Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why?
Reply #12 - Mar 28th, 2006 at 7:42am
 
i agree Chumley; Daves posting is a good answer to your ponderings.  Human psychology plays a huge role in beliefs and one can see where a belief(s) can be created out of the psyche.

Like me stating crowley and dark arts - this is a nerving and strong statement that can have the effect of keeping it going. I knowingly take on the responsibilty for this; I said it to make a point that is based on fact.

(btw crowley's antics - the twit)

I am going to print Dave's post and go over it with the time it deserves. It is very interesting and it is helpful to be informed of these issues.

Berserk - that is truly awesome.  These things do happen large or small  Smiley

I also liked blink's reply : Trust
Trust is the fundamental basis of belief.  We trust with all our heart with no acadamic sciencific proof to back up this trust.  But we do trust in our spiritual experiences and we sense our trust in the largely unknown is validated and correct. Trust; the quintessence of our existence?



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« Last Edit: Mar 28th, 2006 at 10:58am by augoeideian »  

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augoeideian
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Re: Americans are superstitious FOOLS. Why?
Reply #13 - Apr 10th, 2006 at 9:55am
 
Apologies for bringing this to the front again but I made a terrible mistake in the above posting of mine;

i wrote:
This is a dellusional character.  This is fantasy in its true form.  That movie 'eyes wide shut' (Hanks and Kidman) smacks of Crowley.   

The name should have been Cruise; Tom Cruise
not Tom Hanks.  My huge apologies to Tom Hanks one of my favuorite actors (especially the movie The Terminal - very good take on life)

apologies if any confusion was caused.
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