RE: Is rationalism a humanism?
August 15, 2023 at 6:30 am
(This post was last modified: August 15, 2023 at 6:41 am by The Grand Nudger.)
More fundamentally, the problem with eugenics isn't that it's false, but that it's undesirable. A person suggesting that we can be bred for purpose or traits just like any other animal isn't saying something untrue, they're saying a true thing we find abhorrent for any number of cultural and historical reasons. Nothing about eugenics indicts rationalism. I do have some sympathy for the idea that rationalism is becoming a religion. Not in the classical sense - but - that's to be expected. A religion suitable for people brought up in todays culture is unlikely to share much with religions suitable for bronze age o early iron age minds from which the definition of the same proceeds.
Nowadays, even the traditionally religious have a tendency to base their ideas about a good life and how to live it on rational premises (or at least a rationalizing impulse). In this, the focus of religion has ceased to be the wishes of the divine and become an item of present conditions. It's not enough, for example, for christian theocrats to simply say that god doesn't like x y or z. They also feel the need to claim that this x y z is ruining america. A purely "religious" ideology, in the sense of any separation, wouldn't give two shits if doing a thing was ruining america or not. If doing what a god wanted ruined america then so be it. This isn't an entirely new phenomena, ofc, I just use it as representative of the interaction.
Rationalism-as-religion would be the strict adherence to exclusively rational statements about how to live our lives. Little care or deference would be given to the purely subjective or the emotional aspects of our lives that inform the same. I strongly doubt our ability to come up with an entirely rational religion...or to genuinely engage in rationalism-as-religion. Instead, we flirt with it, and try to apply it as a filter.
Nowadays, even the traditionally religious have a tendency to base their ideas about a good life and how to live it on rational premises (or at least a rationalizing impulse). In this, the focus of religion has ceased to be the wishes of the divine and become an item of present conditions. It's not enough, for example, for christian theocrats to simply say that god doesn't like x y or z. They also feel the need to claim that this x y z is ruining america. A purely "religious" ideology, in the sense of any separation, wouldn't give two shits if doing a thing was ruining america or not. If doing what a god wanted ruined america then so be it. This isn't an entirely new phenomena, ofc, I just use it as representative of the interaction.
Rationalism-as-religion would be the strict adherence to exclusively rational statements about how to live our lives. Little care or deference would be given to the purely subjective or the emotional aspects of our lives that inform the same. I strongly doubt our ability to come up with an entirely rational religion...or to genuinely engage in rationalism-as-religion. Instead, we flirt with it, and try to apply it as a filter.
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