I agree with the indoctrinated part. Most people educate their kids to follow what they believe in. Only later on in the lives, kids decide whether if they keep following or not. My nephew was raised as a JW but only when he got to late teens, early adulthood, he decided not to go on that direction.
No child is born believing anything, therefore no child is born a theist, therefore no child can be born an atheist either.
@Donotbelieve Logic.
So what god do babies believe in?
“I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours.”
~ Stephen Roberts
Nicely put
Have always loved the quote since I first encountered it. Here's the backstory.
We are labeled as atheists. The word atheist is negatively stigmatized.
Maybe we should start calling ourselves something which negatively stigmatizes religions. After all, turn about is fair play.
Let's call ourselves something along the lines of antioccultists.
I like the term "non-believer". It doesn't have the stigma that the term "atheist" now carries and it doesn't antagonize anyone, at least not immediately. I don't care if other people believe in god; I just don't want them trying to indoctrinate me or pushing their beliefs onto me or into the political system.
@MissKathleen
My bad, your right. Anti-cultist is much better.
Non-believer is not as aggressive. Your right, it does have a PC sound to it.
But if you go PC, then I wouldn't plan in them stopping their agendas anytime soon. They will continue to push their beliefs on you.
I think the term ‘Freethinker’ was used before atheist. I’ve always liked it, even refer to myself as such amid the like-minded.
Atheists might face stigma in your country but not mine. It's far harder to come out and announce you're a christian. Mostly people don't 'announce' anything unless they've thought about it so I happily hold the banner for atheism. To announce you're a christian would be putting yourself in a very small box. Stereotypes like : kill joy or feeble minded come to mind
Can genetic (adaptive) memory make a newborn more or less susceptible to being or becoming religious?
Yes. Read John Wathey.
Atheism is a religion like bald is a hairstyle.
Atheism is a religion like "off" is a TV channel.
Imagine a world void of religious doctrine. Not many can. But those of us that can, know this to be true because religion was created to keep control over of the masses and out of fear of the unknown.
The idea that all humans are born atheists is one of those ideas that sounds perfectly reasonable, and so is assumed to be true. But when people make such assumptions without first inquiring into the science, they are doing what they criticize religious people for.
The first scientific point to be made here is (as I’m sure you very likely already know) is that when a trait is found in every society, in every location, and in every known time period in history, it most likely has its basis in evolved genetics. So the practice of religions, and belief in gods, fits this rule of thumb perfectly.
What’s less commonly known is that a lot of well-established, mainstream science points to the likelihood of parent-child bonding circuits in the brain that morph into religious impulse as the child grows into adulthood.
That we are born as tabula rasas has long since been debunked by science.
[en.m.wikipedia.org]
I agree with this statement 100%. I compare it to racism. We are all born without any knowledge of racism or religion, but are taught it by society.
@MissKathleen Thank you!
@balou um well I think there is some evolutionary basis for racism Back in the day we had to make snap decisions about friend or foe. Kill or be killed. We looked immediately for someone who looked similar to ourselves to identify tribe members. Apparently we take 5 seconds to sum up a person. Do you think that is a reasonable amount of time? How rational is the basis of our decision? (I do think we can amend the primitive brain by heeding the pre-frontal )
I think it is more nuanced.
We are not all born atheist, we are all born with no preconceived existential philosophy. Indoctrination by a wide range of religious beliefs indeed occurs, but remember, religions categorize each other as outsiders, including atheists. Even then, I don't get the sense that all religions hold antipathy towards atheists - some are quite accepting, for example universalist unitarians or buddhists - OR other religious beliefs.
The thing that casts people of different beliefs or flavors of non-belief as the other is the severity of the dogma in any given religious or philosophical sect. Most organized religions grew simply as a means of controlling other people, and dogma, completely human-made, is the mechanism used to disseminate and harden that control, including demonization of the other, believers in other religious traditions and non-believers alike.
It's not necessarily a false statement, it's just so sweeping as to ignore the complexity of the dynamics and motivations of various religious sects.
IMHO, of course, worth every penny you paid for it.
I think God was created out of fear of the unknown. We fear and don’t want to die, so we made a god that has a place for us to go after we die. Then we kept others in line by saying there were rules to getting there. If we erased all memory of god, we would invent him again for the same reasons. Don’t understand something? With god, you don’t have to!
Mom is god, even if the mom is dog.
I agree. All babies have a full faith in their mom's as we grow we transition this faith from one to another. To be an atheist it's a process of cleansing the build up of the faith and the comfort that comes with it when we learn to think for ourselves instead of using pre existing ready made ideologies.
interesting concept, I wonder if there has ever been an isolated group of people who never developed the idea of a God?
@Donotbelieve I googled it and came up with nothing.
That is a very true statement. I consider all religious sects, cults no matter how society accepts them. I use to belong to the baptist cult and I wish I could find my baptism certificate for I can burn it. Religion hurts more people than it helps. For I thought about suicide a number of times in my 30s due to it. I'm glad to be an pan sexual atheist. One of the few regrets I have in life is not becoming an Atheist earlier in life.
On a logical or theoretical plane, atheist seems to be a term that is unnecessary and “forced.” We don't have a term for non-astrologist. Nor do we have terms for people who don't believe in ghosts or reincarnation.
However, back here in the real world, the distinction between believing or not believing in a god or gods seems more basic than the woo-woo magical thinking mentioned above. The terms theist and atheist go back at least to the ancient Greeks, and homo sapiens didn’t get very far along their development before they started imagining super-natural beings (who they hoped would take care of them).
As to all people being born atheists, I guess it's true, but it doesn't last, even if you're not indoctrinated. You might not know the word God at first, but I would assume even if you were the only person in the world and were never introduced into religion that you would eventually develop a wonder and curiosity about what was out there beyond your view to the stars and why you were here. The concept of God had to come about at some point in human history because it's obviously here for us to discuss. Someone had to come up with that concept before they were indoctrinated to the idea by someone else. So I think the idea is inevitable and people would have thought about it for themselves even without indoctrination.
The term atheist is just another label to communicate.
Funny though that, as a kid, you possibly believed there was a monster in your wardrobe or under your bed. In the years before Monsters Inc, was even a thing (unless you had a particularly evil older sibling) nobody told you it was there. The possibility crept into your head, and without the life experience and rationale to dismiss it as nonsense, you lay there in bed, petrified that there might just be something hiding, waiting for an opportunity to pounce. Which, of course, it never did.
I honestly believe that if religion didn't exist, faith and superstition would still find ways to manifest. If it's in 'lady luck' or in the 12 steps 'higher power' (which you don't have to be expressly religious to find, as I understand it) a lot of humans lean towards the idea that there's more to life than action and consequence.
Of course organised religion exploits this human trait in order to gain control and profit. The only reason you're not still afraid of the monster in the wardrobe is that you realised it couldn't possibly exist. (Think there might be an intruder in the house, and you're back to being that panicked child again.) The trouble being that there's a whole propaganda system in place to keep people from drawing the same conclusion about God.
I automatically do an inward eye-roll at memes and vacuous platitudes.
I want proof that "the religious want to define non-believers." Just because some jackass made a meme doesn't make it true.
FACT: For centuries, Christians burned non-believers at the stake.
I like words to define stuff. In that i think because we have the word 'theist', we also have 'atheist'. As a whole, I don't disagree that we are born atheist, but we are born absent of all -isms. However, I have been friends with people born to various religions who seek something else and others who follow blindly without much exploring. Also, I have seen folks who are born to atheist parents and seek out religion or spiritual connection. I think I'm going to have to think a bit on this one. Thanks for sharing.