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Transhumanist religions?

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Baalbamoth Baalbamoth's picture
Transhumanist religions?
found this.. Lincoln Cannon, president of the Mormon Transhumanist Association, will present on "Mormonism: A Religion of the Future" at 10:30AM Second Life time (Pacific Time) on Wednesday, 4 June. Here is an abstract for Lincoln's presentation: "We should expect Mormonism to thrive amidst accelerating technological change in coming decades. Its relatively young and reproductive demographics, high cultural retention, emphasis on education, theological compatibility with science, moderate stances in bioethics, and persistent adoption of new technologies will be drivers. The views of Mormon Transhumanists may provide insight into the future of Mormonism." http://mormon-chronicles.blogspot.com/2008/05/mormon-transhumanist-assoc... I think after the fall the church of latter day saints would be screaming "we told ya so we told ya so!" so besides biomorphs on space bikes with little name tags, what other religions do you think will make it through the anvil?
"what do I want? The usual — hundreds of grandchildren, complete dominion over the known worlds, and the pleasure of hearing that all my enemies have died in highly improbable accidents that cannot be connected to me."
nezumi.hebereke nezumi.hebereke's picture
Frankly, I'd cut this into
Frankly, I'd cut this into two questions; 1) What religions were most common among Fall survivors 2) What religions are clearly contradicted by EP and need to be 'revised' or dropped to survive. Most people cling tighter to religion in times of stress and need, even if their religion is dumb or inappropriate. If the religion isn't compatible due to some event (see also: Millerism), they'll make a new church and stick to that. The books suggest that the countries with the most refugees are in North America, Europe, and Asia. So similar to today, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, and Buddhism are probably the most successful just out of the gate. However, these same continents also boast the highest numbers of atheists and agnostics. These poor souls will find themselves unmoored, and many will flock to religion, creating a huge market for new religions.
Decivre Decivre's picture
As an aside, I think it
As an aside, I think it should be noted that the MTA is not associated with the Church of Latter Day Saints, but with the Humanity+ Organization. So I doubt that the Church has the same views with regards to bioethics and future technologies as this specific group of Mormons do. That said, I actually think that most religions will make it through the Fall in one shape or form, other than perhaps the smaller cultural faiths which die off along with their people. The question isn't which ones will survive, but how will they look after the Fall? I think that due to the sheer difficulties of inter-system travel, most faiths will be far more decentralized than they are today. I can see the Latter Day Saints having multiple prophets, rather than one. The ones that are still centralized will likely be limited in how far the church reaches... the Catholic church likely only exists within the Jovian Republic, and has nearly no presence everywhere else. But microservers that host sermons, texts and teachings will make it feasible that any faith can have a near-ubiquitous presence for those members that have no nearby church.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
nizkateth nizkateth's picture
I tend to forget that people
I tend to forget that people are still religious, in real life. So my games tend to have religion pop up as an oddity, an outlier. Like Hinduism around the Sun, or Catholicism with the Jovians. Otherwise I default to the sci-fi trope of humanity overall having finally got over the desire for religion.
Reapers: Do Not Taunt Happy Fun Ball. My watch also has a minute hand, millenium hand, and an eon hand.
beej beej's picture
I agree with Nezu, there
I agree with Nezu, there would probably be more religion most people think. Like the old saying goes, there are no athists in fox holes. Christianity: In regards to Christianity, I think it might be more widely spread than some think. I definately see the conservative Protestant and Catholic groups doing well in the Junta. I will point out that you would probably see a Christian population in the LLA, at least among the early settlers and hyperelites. Alot of them would be coming from America and the EU and they might hold onto for nostalgia and a continued connection with Earth as much for actual faith. I do think you would see is some of the more esoteric/mystical rites of the Orthodox Church in the Outer System. While the are not rooted in Rationalism like much of western christianity, they are much more open to hidden truths and mysticism which would do well among the more rebellious/independent/experimental minded polit blocks and brinkers. Hindism..eh? I don't know alot about it so I can't comment on how it would do. Islam seems like it would do well like they talked about in the book. Judaism I see living on post Fall. If you don't you need your head examined. I can see Chinese/Korean/Japanese faiths/philosophies carrying over quite nicely. It could be just me but I could see varients of Taoism being developed by AGIs. Also some of the out there stuff like Jainism could be attractive to Uplifts and AGIs. Also I see weird amalgamations of Native American beliefs with shamanism and voodoo among Uplifts. Alot of those draw from animal spirits and entities that do not look human who simply possess forms. You might ask, why? People need structure, they like knowing there is something greater out there. Having a faith means that maybe you are part of a greater plan and have a soul and not just a creation of pure human hubris. Actually I could see 'spirit cults' and shamanism popping up on any actual planet/moon. Mars you could have all sorts of mystics and witch doctors dotting the Martian outback with locals going to them for advice/spirit healing/blessings. I could see Voodoo popping up in Scum swarms to one degree or another. Perhaps serious, perhaps as just part of the over all act. Snake handlers too. Why? Its a hell of a show. I could see scientology still kicking around, probably as a hypercorp and probably in middle of constant memetic wars. Religious Asyncs possess an intersting question. My money would be on an Eastern Faith/philosophy, or a strain of Gnosticism perhaps. Hell I could see Jedism surviving the Fall being picked up in some fashion. In regards to religion, the way I look at it is; when the demons (Titans) are sitting on your lawn are you going to say "There is no God, I'm all alone!" or are you going to be loading your plasma rifles and seekers and praying to God that you'll head shot all those baddies and your children who are huddled in the closest will live to see another day? You don't see religion in Star Trek because it a utopia for the most part, at least in the Federation where the stories are based in. You see religion to a degree in Star Wars (by way of hte Force and its Priest the Jedi). The Empire might be bad and all but at least galactic civilzation will continue to march on. With Battlestar Galactica and Eclipse Phase, I think you would see a fair bit of religion (regardless of ego backup and resleeving) because as good as your tech was, the Devil's tech is better and has not only eaten your house but is nibbling at your sneakers as you run away. They turn to religion because their old god (technology) can no longer help them/listens to them.
Decivre Decivre's picture
beej wrote:I agree with Nezu,
beej wrote:
I agree with Nezu, there would probably be more religion most people think. Like the old saying goes, there are no athists in fox holes.
Actually, the Ultimates are, so far as we can see, atheistic (short of perhaps idol worship of the Demiurge)... and they led the charge against the TITANs. Considering that there are [url=http://militaryatheists.org/atheists-in-foxholes/]plenty of atheists in foxholes right now[/url], I only imagine that number will grow significantly when those atheists don't need to worry about things like permanent death. The atheist population is growing very rapidly today. Even in the United States, one of the largest 1st world theistic populations on the planet, atheism is larger than it has ever been in this country in its entire history. And this is before technologies like resleeving and forking that begin to tear at the sanctimony of the philosophical concept of the soul.
beej wrote:
In regards to religion, the way I look at it is; when the demons (Titans) are sitting on your lawn are you going to say "There is no God, I'm all alone!" or are you going to be loading your plasma rifles and seekers and praying to God that you'll head shot all those baddies and your children who are huddled in the closest will live to see another day?
It should be noted that skeptical atheism isn't the only atheism out there. Buddhism, Taoism and Jainism are all atheistic faiths. Just because faith and spirituality survive the Fall doesn't mean that god as a concept with come through with it.
beej wrote:
You don't see religion in Star Trek because it a utopia for the most part, at least in the Federation where the stories are based in. You see religion to a degree in Star Wars (by way of hte Force and its Priest the Jedi). The Empire might be bad and all but at least galactic civilzation will continue to march on. With Battlestar Galactica and Eclipse Phase, I think you would see a fair bit of religion (regardless of ego backup and resleeving) because as good as your tech was, the Devil's tech is better and has not only eaten your house but is nibbling at your sneakers as you run away. They turn to religion because their old god (technology) can no longer help them/listens to them.
If that were the mentality, I'd imagine there would be far more backlash against transhumanist tech. While I can see this mindset in many bioconservatives, the largest majority of people probably didn't turn to radical faith when the TITANs came-a-knocking. The moral of the story of the TITANs is one of technology uncontrolled, not technology insidious... and I think that most of transhumanity knows this.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
beej beej's picture
I believe I overstated with
I believe I overstated with hyperbaly some of what I was trying to get across. I aplogize before hand, I use an ipad and for some reason I can't copy what you wrote. I differenciate 'skeptical atheism' as agnosticism verses atheism. Agnosticism allows for the possibility of a deity, atheism believes there is none. You are correct they will not for the most part to turn to 'radical religion' but they would have a tendency to turn to religion/faith during crisis and stress. They might be immortal atheists but what happens when their world is brought to the edge of destruction and tons of their fellow immortal atheists are either destroyed, head-hunted or turned into exsurgent monstrocities? In the wake of that you dealing with survivor guilt, ptsd and looking to understand what happened and why. Faith and religion offers comfort, its a fact, whether its a plusibo or there really is a god in the sky. Hey guess what, you live on Mars, at any moment the Titans could come boiling out of the White Zone and restart the killing. Its comforting to think there might be something bigger out there in your corner. Does that belief mean Shari Law? Could be saying prayers before going to bed? Popping into mass on Fall Day or buring a stick of insence at your shrine in ancestor worship. 'Religion' is a gambit of Easter/Xmas christrians to suidice budhist bombers (They exist in RL, i don't understand how).
Decivre Decivre's picture
beej wrote:I believe I
beej wrote:
I believe I overstated with hyperbaly some of what I was trying to get across. I aplogize before hand, I use an ipad and for some reason I can't copy what you wrote. I differenciate 'skeptical atheism' as agnosticism verses atheism. Agnosticism allows for the possibility of a deity, atheism believes there is none.
I could go all day about how trivial the distinction is between secular agnosticism and atheism, so I'll just dedicate three sentences to the topic. Atheism is the lack of a god to worship. Whether that be because you think the concept of a god is ludicrous, or you simply don't have one you believe in is moot. No one ever makes the soft/hard distinction for any other philosophical belief so significant, so why do it here?
beej wrote:
You are correct they will not for the most part to turn to 'radical religion' but they would have a tendency to turn to religion/faith during crisis and stress. They might be immortal atheists but what happens when their world is brought to the edge of destruction and tons of their fellow immortal atheists are either destroyed, head-hunted or turned into exsurgent monstrocities? In the wake of that you dealing with survivor guilt, ptsd and looking to understand what happened and why. Faith and religion offers comfort, its a fact, whether its a plusibo or there really is a god in the sky.
I get that, but I don't understand why the presumption is that they will turn to faith in god. Why do we not make that same presumption for godless faiths? Do you think that Buddhists will give up Buddhism and become Christian because of the Fall? Jainists? Taoists?
beej wrote:
Hey guess what, you live on Mars, at any moment the Titans could come boiling out of the White Zone and restart the killing. Its comforting to think there might be something bigger out there in your corner. Does that belief mean Shari Law? Could be saying prayers before going to bed? Popping into mass on Fall Day or buring a stick of insence at your shrine in ancestor worship. 'Religion' is a gambit of Easter/Xmas christrians to suidice budhist bombers (They exist in RL, i don't understand how).
Tradition should be held separate from faith to a degree. I happen to be an atheist who practices Christmas not because I believe in a fat burglar who brings presents or an ancient Jewish man who died so I could go someplace pretty, but because I enjoy the festivities and opportunity to spend time with family. Tradition does not require religion.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
CodeBreaker CodeBreaker's picture
So I know that we have some
So I know that we have some very smart people on these boards, and I can only assume that at least some of them are learned in sociology. Can anyone link me credibly sourced material that shows a sustained growth in religiosity after major crisis'? I can find papers that show momentary bumps in the religious feelings of sufferers, but none that show that those feelings are sustained for particularly long periods of time, at least throughout the population. I ask because every time I hear people say that Eclipse Phases' religious outlook isn't realistic due to peoples tendency to flee to faith after a crisis, they never source why that is true, and it is almost always backed by anecdotal evidence (or not at all, instead passed as simple fact). I am not particularly adverse to the thought that people may, temporarily, turn to faith as a coping mechanism. I am more adverse to accepting that that faith is anything other than temporary, an attempt at stymieing the building stress with community and an outward looking approach to life. I would be particularly interested in material that used a modern, largely irreligious society, such as one of those found in western Europe. Especially one that has well developed secular coping structures in place; well accepted mental health treatment, for example.
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Baalbamoth Baalbamoth's picture
I spent a little time trying
I spent a little time trying to find actual stats and figures and couldent find any one block of stats. This article from 2007 has a lot about world wide shift towards fundamentalism. http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/the-spread-of-faith-religion... "The Islamic movements around the world and the "new Christian Right" in the United States are the most striking examples of the religion revival. And it is no coincidence that both have emerged and spread simultaneously during the last 30 years." "Globalization is shattering and undermining the world as we know it, leaving people in a permanent state of anxiety. This feeling has served to energize movements that promise to restore trusted and dependable values. In this way, globalization and fundamentalism go together hand in glove." all in all though, as an atheist (or antitheist) myself I think a lot of atheists forget that the drive to believe is primarily a genetic one and not so much of a rational choice to be made. Humans universally are driven to ritualistic behaviors and religious thoughts and were not seeing any huge drive towards atheism or agnosticism if anything both the fundamentalist religions and the "religious lite" IE do it yourself religon groups are growing at the fastest rates. but I think with a lot of transhumanist inventions religons would be under a lot of different pulls and strains. Most fundamentalist religions would see uploading, uplifting, and many other scientific developments as being huge sins worthy of damnation. I think there would be a big increase in religious terrorist activities. Likewise I could see a huge surge in cult movements, especially with psychosurgery. Imagine if a religion required psychosurgery to make its members, their children, all new converts absolutely dedicated to church doctrine and church leaders. Imagine what would happen to scientology once they got their hands on that tech. It would have absolutely staggering reprocussions. I also think there would be massive splinters of faiths, and growths of new faiths. When I first started looking into the transhumanist movement (extropians, etc) as they exist now days, one of the first groups that drew my interest were these guys... he new promethians... http://www.prometheism.net/ they describe themselves as "the magneto side of the transhuman equasion" on their websites especially this one http://www.transtopia.net/pcfreezone.html#RS after you get through all the conspiracy theory stuff you can find all kinds of racist crap almost as if they are using transhumanism to encourage white power and white nationalist ideals. so in essence this is a white power transhumanist religion. I would think groups similar to this (black, brown, and blue (?) power, other radical beliefs) would pop up as well. especially if they can get their own hab and get away from governmental or corporate oversight.
"what do I want? The usual — hundreds of grandchildren, complete dominion over the known worlds, and the pleasure of hearing that all my enemies have died in highly improbable accidents that cannot be connected to me."
beej beej's picture
50K on kickstarter, YAY!
50K on kickstarter, YAY! Decivre, to get an idea of where I'm coming from when I say religion/faith goes with people to the stars and stays with them you might want to read "Sacred Matters" by Gary Laderman. Its a fairly quick read, as it's not a big book. I'd say try and find it at a library or used bookstore, 17 bucks on kindle is steep in my opinion. There's also a book I read a while back I think called "Asian Christian Spirituality"? A section involves the shamanization of Korean Christianity but that title is not hitting anything in Amazon. If there's anyone reading who knows what I'm talking about, please chime in. Codebreaker To my knowledge your right, there isn't study for that. Modern developed secular coping structures do work when three thousand people die or ten thousand die. We haven't seen them in place when a third of a continent dies in the span of 4 years. Or third of the world population dies and a continent is reduced to rubble in the span of a month with millions of displaced refugees flooding countries. The problem with the argument we're having is that we thankfully don't enough examples to prove our points. I'm in the 'pro-religion' camp I'll call it. I'm agnostic, I believe that based on past historical events that there is no reason religion would not have some level of resurgence beyond a temporary after a Fall event. By the way if I come across as being a dick, I don't mean to. This is one of those 'sit back and have a glass of scotch' discussions better had in personal, at least for me. Shit I forgot to mention Firefly! They had religion and preachers running around.
beej beej's picture
Also I think of my long
Also I think of my long running rp games is possibly imploding so I'm little distracted.
DG.MWD DG.MWD's picture
CodeBreaker wrote:So I know
CodeBreaker wrote:
So I know that we have some very smart people on these boards, and I can only assume that at least some of them are learned in sociology. Can anyone link me credibly sourced material that shows a sustained growth in religiosity after major crisis'? I can find papers that show momentary bumps in the religious feelings of sufferers, but none that show that those feelings are sustained for particularly long periods of time, at least throughout the population. I ask because every time I hear people say that Eclipse Phases' religious outlook isn't realistic due to peoples tendency to flee to faith after a crisis, they never source why that is true, and it is almost always backed by anecdotal evidence (or not at all, instead passed as simple fact). I am not particularly adverse to the thought that people may, temporarily, turn to faith as a coping mechanism. I am more adverse to accepting that that faith is anything other than temporary, an attempt at stymieing the building stress with community and an outward looking approach to life. I would be particularly interested in material that used a modern, largely irreligious society, such as one of those found in western Europe. Especially one that has well developed secular coping structures in place; well accepted mental health treatment, for example.
Undergraduate Sociology student here; Although sociology of religion isn't my forte I'm not aware of any studies like what you describe. My understanding is that while you can link increased religiosity to [i]personal[/i] crisis such as illness or bereavement, there aren't any correlations with national crises like war etc. Generally what increases religiosity is aging (Getting closer to death) and poverty; the poorer a country is the more religious the populace is and that reduces as they become more affluent. As a GM I like including religious groups in Eclipse Phase since it gives me more to play with; I'm currently running a game featuring nomadic Sufi Muslim mystics who believe the Fall actually happened 1000 years ago, and I'm planning on running a game involving gatecrashing Mormon settlers. I just enjoy imagining how religions would look in a post-singularity setting.
nizkateth nizkateth's picture
I think I'd be more curious
I think I'd be more curious as to newly emergent philosophies and faiths. Or even just radical new interpretations of things. For example a christian re-interpretation: The fall was the great tribulation. Resleeving and uploading are the immortality we were promised. Humanity has ascended to the heavens. Therefore, Jesus will soon return (maybe after a century or something) to help us reclaim Earth and return it to a paradise. I could see such a faith group supporting Reclaimers efforts, or alternately seeing no point in the Reclaimers because 'god' will come back and do it for them.
Reapers: Do Not Taunt Happy Fun Ball. My watch also has a minute hand, millenium hand, and an eon hand.
Decivre Decivre's picture
Baalbamoth wrote:I spent a
Baalbamoth wrote:
I spent a little time trying to find actual stats and figures and couldent find any one block of stats. This article from 2007 has a lot about world wide shift towards fundamentalism. http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/the-spread-of-faith-religion... "The Islamic movements around the world and the "new Christian Right" in the United States are the most striking examples of the religion revival. And it is no coincidence that both have emerged and spread simultaneously during the last 30 years."
Actually, the Christian revival in the United States is nearly 200 years old now. The past 30 years is more about a shift towards political advocacy among Christian right groups, who previously were about non-activism (Christian fundamentalists, prior to Bob Jones University v. Simon, had a hands-off approach to politics and war). Plus, I disagree with the idea that all faith is shifting to fundamentalism. Some of the largest religious blocs might be, but the largest majority are not (there has not been a significant rise in Hindu fundamentalism, among other eastern faiths). Furthermore, religiosity tends to vary even within the ranks of a particular sect; the Catholic Church is completely against the use of contraceptives other than natural family planning, while 98% of Catholic women polled admit to using contraceptives other than NFP. That can only mean that the figureheads of the Catholic Church are far more conservative than its membership is.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Ilmarinen Ilmarinen's picture
I don't see Buddhism making
I don't see Buddhism making it through the Fall very well. Transhumanism essentially denies the Four Noble Truths and then traps everyone in samsara, tempting them with worldly pleasures and denying them the opportunity to move on to true enlightenment.
[------------/Nation States/-----------] [-----/Representative Democracy/-----] [--------/Regulated Capitalism/--------]
Decivre Decivre's picture
Ilmarinen wrote:I don't see
Ilmarinen wrote:
I don't see Buddhism making it through the Fall very well. Transhumanism essentially denies the Four Noble Truths and then traps everyone in samsara, tempting them with worldly pleasures and denying them the opportunity to move on to true enlightenment.
Or, alternatively, it allows you to control the cycle of suffering so that you can use the opportunity to get closer to Nirvana within a "single" lifetime of memories. Faiths are pretty flexible things. If it isn't flexible, it's extinct.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Smokeskin Smokeskin's picture
"No atheists in foxholes" is
"No atheists in foxholes" is nothing but a religious meme, so let us just drop that one. It's like throwing Pascal's Wager around. Atheism correlates strongly with intelligence and education level. This would certainly lean towards much less religion in EP. If you look at Europe, religion is really losing ground. However, eradicating religion seems extremely unlikely. While rising intelligence and education levels should lead to less believers, and as they lose their influence in society the reduced peer pressure to believe means even less become religious, there will still be those who extremely predisposed for strong religious beliefs, and in subcultures the peer pressure can remain strong. I'd guess that most of the moderately religious have become atheist, but the fervent believers remain.
Shredicine Shredicine's picture
What about...
"Matrixism", anyone heard of that? Much like this game, the Matrix universe is deeper than most know.
Who are we, but slaves to our own personal interests?
Decivre Decivre's picture
Shredicine wrote:"Matrixism",
Shredicine wrote:
"Matrixism", anyone heard of that? Much like this game, the Matrix universe is deeper than most know.
I have a hard time taking serious any religion that claims Bicycle Day as a sacred holiday.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Erenthia Erenthia's picture
I'm curious, what aspects of
I'm curious, what aspects of the 4 Noble Truths does Transhumanism deny? As for reincarnation I don't believe Siddhartha ever said anything about it and my preferred belief (call it Headcanon) is that Buddha was an atheist.
The end really is coming. What comes after that is anyone's guess.
Decivre Decivre's picture
Erenthia wrote:I'm curious,
Erenthia wrote:
I'm curious, what aspects of the 4 Noble Truths does Transhumanism deny? As for reincarnation I don't believe Siddhartha ever said anything about it and my preferred belief (call it Headcanon) is that Buddha was an atheist.
If anything, transhuman immortality is a means of achieving bodhisattva, abstaining from the act of transcendance to Nirvana so that one can help as many others as possible achieve enlightenment before that moment. And yeah, Buddhism is an atheist faith. They believe in powerful beings that are somewhat like gods (deva and asura), but are not really gods as the western concept describes. They are merely souls that are higher on the path of enlightenment than humans, that haven't yet achieved a great enough level of enlightenment to become an arhat. Considering that every soul is capable of being at every soul rank (my soul could be a deva, asura, hungry ghost, or even arhat in my next lifetime), the concept of the western god is inadequate in describing them.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Erenthia Erenthia's picture
As with any faith, there are
As with any faith, there are a million different flavors of Buddhism. The Mahayana sects are especially influenced by Hinduism with its cycle of reincarnation. The actual teachings of Siddhartha (as far as I can find. Studying Buddhism on my own has been extremely difficult) don't seem to involve the supernatural much at all. One could choose to look at the soul ranks as an abstraction, however. In EP it's especially apropos with Alpha, Beta, Gamma, and Delta forks, to say nothing of AGIs vs AIs. I'm saddened that we in the atheist community have allowed the superstitious to have uncontested ownership of ideas like "Faith" and "Religion". And personally I think the deep understanding of the mind that allows for psychosurgery, would make it possible to create a religion entirely devoid of superstition, but rather quite honestly lays down a set of guidelines for "how to be happy and let other people people happy". Buddhism is a good early try at this, a lot of superstitions got injected into it because human beings are silly. "Faith" on the other hand is just a romantic word for certainty, and the rejection of pre-rational thought shouldn't cause us to abandon the word entirely. I have faith in things for which I have evidence. I would even say that without evidence, you can't have faith, just hope. To get back to EP, I've been working on the Neo-Buddhist religion off and on for some time. I've actually made it a combination of psychotherapy, eastern meditation, eastern and western philosophy and the martial arts. I'm even working on "Sutras" that function mechanically like Psi Sleights which come from subjective years/decades/centuries of training. Meditation has already been shown with modern science to be effective, how much more effective would it be if you had a skilled psychosurgeon watching your Ego file in real-time helping to guide your meditation?
The end really is coming. What comes after that is anyone's guess.
King Shere King Shere's picture
Persecution
If the Fall had been a natural catastrophe, yes then there should be a proportionallity & increase in the surving religons. Except it wasnt. Titans hunted down humanity for 1 year. 99% of humanity perished. Religious people tend to flock and thus easier to track, especially with church census records (hunter seeker now with a hitlist). I think its fair to assume that those super intellects that sought to efficiently eradicate humans would utilize the religious beliefs & records. With this scenario, Surviving parishes would be in harder spot due to the fall paranioa & social stigma; perceived as likely targets of TITANS and not safe to be near or be affiliated with.
Decivre Decivre's picture
Erenthia wrote:As with any
Erenthia wrote:
As with any faith, there are a million different flavors of Buddhism. The Mahayana sects are especially influenced by Hinduism with its cycle of reincarnation. The actual teachings of Siddhartha (as far as I can find. Studying Buddhism on my own has been extremely difficult) don't seem to involve the supernatural much at all. One could choose to look at the soul ranks as an abstraction, however. In EP it's especially apropos with Alpha, Beta, Gamma, and Delta forks, to say nothing of AGIs vs AIs.
Actually, Theravada Buddhism (the oldest form, and likely the direct descendant of the original teachings) does have some supernatural views regarding meditation. Of course, considering that Mahayana Buddhism formed 600 years after Buddhism was originally conceived, I don't see why a completely non-supernatural sect couldn't exist... one that focuses on relieving one's suffering within this life, rather than doing so hoping for a good reincarnation. I could see such a Buddhist branch forming of that sort after biological immortality and resleeving is achieved.
Erenthia wrote:
I'm saddened that we in the atheist community have allowed the superstitious to have uncontested ownership of ideas like "Faith" and "Religion". And personally I think the deep understanding of the mind that allows for psychosurgery, would make it possible to create a religion entirely devoid of superstition, but rather quite honestly lays down a set of guidelines for "how to be happy and let other people people happy". Buddhism is a good early try at this, a lot of superstitions got injected into it because human beings are silly. "Faith" on the other hand is just a romantic word for certainty, and the rejection of pre-rational thought shouldn't cause us to abandon the word entirely. I have faith in things for which I have evidence. I would even say that without evidence, you can't have faith, just hope.
I think that the biggest loss that the atheist community suffers for trying to set itself apart from religion is that we lack the sense of community and unity that religion often brings into people's lives. Atheists still form communities, but they often lack the goal-oriented actions that churches often work towards in the course of following their superstitious views. Churches create homeless shelters and soup kitchens because their book teaches them to take care of the least of them, and that they must convert non-followers. Atheists don't have any faith-based goals, urge to convert, nor any sense of cultural unity. There was a very interesting TED talk where someone discusses these things regarding atheism. [url=https://www.ted.com/talks/alain_de_botton_atheism_2_0.html]In it, Alain de Botton talks about how atheism needs to find a sense of culture and tradition, so that we can feel less like rebels and more like a community all to ourselves.[/url]
Erenthia wrote:
To get back to EP, I've been working on the Neo-Buddhist religion off and on for some time. I've actually made it a combination of psychotherapy, eastern meditation, eastern and western philosophy and the martial arts. I'm even working on "Sutras" that function mechanically like Psi Sleights which come from subjective years/decades/centuries of training. Meditation has already been shown with modern science to be effective, how much more effective would it be if you had a skilled psychosurgeon watching your Ego file in real-time helping to guide your meditation?
It would even be interesting, considering that there's a psi sleight that causes your character to go unconscious and restore stress. I wonder if Buddhist asyncs would consider it a "true form" of meditation.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Ilmarinen Ilmarinen's picture
Erenthia wrote:I'm curious,
Erenthia wrote:
I'm curious, what aspects of the 4 Noble Truths does Transhumanism deny?
Mostly the first one. It's sort of centered around things like diseases, poverty, and old age.
[------------/Nation States/-----------] [-----/Representative Democracy/-----] [--------/Regulated Capitalism/--------]
Erenthia Erenthia's picture
Ilmarinen wrote:Erenthia
Ilmarinen wrote:
Erenthia wrote:
I'm curious, what aspects of the 4 Noble Truths does Transhumanism deny?
Mostly the first one. It's sort of centered around things like diseases, poverty, and old age.
Well the first Nobel truth is about the existence of suffering. Disease, old age, and (in some places) poverty may be largely gone, but this [i]is[/i] a horror setting we're talking about. Suffering is far from gone.
Decivre wrote:
Actually, Theravada Buddhism (the oldest form, and likely the direct descendant of the original teachings) does have some supernatural views regarding meditation. Of course, considering that Mahayana Buddhism formed 600 years after Buddhism was originally conceived, I don't see why a completely non-supernatural sect couldn't exist... one that focuses on relieving one's suffering within this life, rather than doing so hoping for a good reincarnation. I could see such a Buddhist branch forming of that sort after biological immortality and resleeving is achieved.
I actually didn't know that, though I'm tempted to excuse beliefs in a supernatural component to meditation in the same way that we often excuse attributing a supernatural source to lightning. At the very least the object of their superstition was a real phenomena.
Decivre wrote:
I think that the biggest loss that the atheist community suffers for trying to set itself apart from religion is that we lack the sense of community and unity that religion often brings into people's lives. Atheists still form communities, but they often lack the goal-oriented actions that churches often work towards in the course of following their superstitious views. Churches create homeless shelters and soup kitchens because their book teaches them to take care of the least of them, and that they must convert non-followers. Atheists don't have any faith-based goals, urge to convert, nor any sense of cultural unity. There was a very interesting TED talk where someone discusses these things regarding atheism. [url=https://www.ted.com/talks/alain_de_botton_atheism_2_0.html]In it, Alain de Botton talks about how atheism needs to find a sense of culture and tradition, so that we can feel less like rebels and more like a community all to ourselves.[/url]
I've seen that one but I'd forgotten about it. How appropriate that I watch it again (especially when he talks about the value of repetition). The fact is, we [i]can[/i] provide meaning and community and even awe - but we don't even try because we're so dead set on not being a religion and denying that we have these needs because we're afraid of giving theists ammunition. The current strategy just isn't working and its time we faced up to that.
Decivre wrote:
It would even be interesting, considering that there's a psi sleight that causes your character to go unconscious and restore stress. I wonder if Buddhist asyncs would consider it a "true form" of meditation.
Ah yes, Downtime. I'm considering stealing that one wholesale and giving it to the NeoBuddhists. And while I haven't playtested any of this, I'm looking at having Sutras (basically just traits) for "Armor" vs SV, bonuses to Integration and Alienation (No Self) and ([i]maybe[/i]) the ability to inflict SV through speech (though that's kind of a nasty one). The martial art forms basically allow normally unrelated skills to become complementary skills. (Such as Kinesics giving a bonus to Fray in melee or Intimidation giving a bonus to Unarmed). This is all untested and pre-Alpha, but I felt like sharing it.
The end really is coming. What comes after that is anyone's guess.
Baalbamoth Baalbamoth's picture
wow a lot of this turned into a philosophy thread
but I'll put the target on myself, hell no I dont believe athiests need to provide more services to the needy as church groups do. After working as a counselor and therapist for 8 years I developed a strong social darwinist/objectivest bent. Providing for the sick and the poor only creates more sick and poor. I really dont believe humanity is too far removed from apes, and base instincts. were just better at finding infrance and reasons to justify our actions. We will never end suffering because we lack both the morality and immorality to either save or destroy those in need. Instead we just go on watching birth rates sky rocket, jobs disappear, and resources dissolve while we stuff our faces with cheap greasy food, play xbox, and tool around on forums. No, theres not much nobility of mankind in my world view. Better to burn all bridges and rush to AI hoping they will save us from our poor decision making, than in our vanity expect some ancient deity to hit us with the rapture before we choke and starve to death in cities filled with garbage and filth. As to the possiblity of a religon using "psychosurgery, would make it possible to create a religion entirely devoid of superstition, but rather quite honestly lays down a set of guidelines for how to be happy and let other people people happy" well, I guess its possible assuming you achieve the elimination of desire but then you've got that issue of your converted just sitting in the corner and wasting away. we derive joy through the satiation of desire both emotional and physical, take that away and replace it with boundless contentment and theres really no reason to do anything, any deviation from that and your back into choosing what desires you want people to have aka souless fleshbots without free will.
"what do I want? The usual — hundreds of grandchildren, complete dominion over the known worlds, and the pleasure of hearing that all my enemies have died in highly improbable accidents that cannot be connected to me."
Decivre Decivre's picture
Ilmarinen wrote:Mostly the
Ilmarinen wrote:
Mostly the first one. It's sort of centered around things like diseases, poverty, and old age.
Transhumanism doesn't directly address poverty, as nanofabrication isn't exactly a transhumanist concept... it's a post-scarcity concept. Also, you are forgetting anxiety, regret, dissatisfaction, and other major things that are part of the truth of dukkha. Transhumanism won't cure these things directly. Those will still take work. That said, transhumanism, if anything, doesn't deny the first noble truth. It addresses it on a physical and genetic level to as much of a degree as possible, and provides a transhuman alternative to the third and fourth noble truth... a transhuman means of ceasing dukkha.
Erenthia wrote:
Mostly the first one. It's sort of centered around things like diseases, poverty, and old age.
Well the first Nobel truth is about the existence of suffering. Disease, old age, and (in some places) poverty may be largely gone, but this [i]is[/i] a horror setting we're talking about. Suffering is far from gone.
Erenthia wrote:
I actually didn't know that, though I'm tempted to excuse beliefs in a supernatural component to meditation in the same way that we often excuse attributing a supernatural source to lightning. At the very least the object of their superstition was a real phenomena.
Perhaps. But beyond that, reincarnation itself is a supernatural belief. And it's a pretty important aspect of Buddhism.
Erenthia wrote:
I've seen that one but I'd forgotten about it. How appropriate that I watch it again (especially when he talks about the value of repetition). The fact is, we [i]can[/i] provide meaning and community and even awe - but we don't even try because we're so dead set on not being a religion and denying that we have these needs because we're afraid of giving theists ammunition. The current strategy just isn't working and its time we faced up to that.
Ironically, I wish that atheists would form some sort of religion, if only so that we could reap the benefits. Tax exemption for our organization, the ability to become a significant lobbying group, the force of influence necessary to actually use the 1st amendment to our advantage.... If all that means forming some sort of atheist religion, as a unified organization, then it would be worth it.
Erenthia wrote:
Ah yes, Downtime. I'm considering stealing that one wholesale and giving it to the NeoBuddhists. And while I haven't playtested any of this, I'm looking at having Sutras (basically just traits) for "Armor" vs SV, bonuses to Integration and Alienation (No Self) and ([i]maybe[/i]) the ability to inflict SV through speech (though that's kind of a nasty one). The martial art forms basically allow normally unrelated skills to become complementary skills. (Such as Kinesics giving a bonus to Fray in melee or Intimidation giving a bonus to Unarmed). This is all untested and pre-Alpha, but I felt like sharing it.
That could be interesting, but you might want to watch out. You don't want Neo-Buddhism so powerful that it gives pretty much everyone incentive to make all their characters exclusively Neo-Buddhists. I might recommend separating the martial arts from the faith, making it something anyone can take up, but Neo-Buddhists have a tendency to always have access to it. In fact, you can make Neo-Buddhist a character background, which could grant a martial arts skill as one of its bonuses. But still allow martial arts to be taken by anyone.
Baalbamoth wrote:
but I'll put the target on myself, hell no I dont believe athiests need to provide more services to the needy as church groups do. After working as a counselor and therapist for 8 years I developed a strong social darwinist/objectivest bent. Providing for the sick and the poor only creates more sick and poor. I really dont believe humanity is too far removed from apes, and base instincts. were just better at finding infrance and reasons to justify our actions.
I happen to be a third way advocate. The problem isn't helping the sick and poor, it's the way we do it. We have this tendency to believe that there are only two options: throwing money at the problem (as can be seen with all of the wonderful welfare programs in the United States), or completely ignoring it. The best option is often neither of these things.
Baalbamoth wrote:
We will never end suffering because we lack both the morality and immorality to either save or destroy those in need. Instead we just go on watching birth rates sky rocket, jobs disappear, and resources dissolve while we stuff our faces with cheap greasy food, play xbox, and tool around on forums. No, theres not much nobility of mankind in my world view. Better to burn all bridges and rush to AI hoping they will save us from our poor decision making, than in our vanity expect some ancient deity to hit us with the rapture before we choke and starve to death in cities filled with garbage and filth.
I tend to have a more optimistic view of things. Society has actually improved over the years, even if our self-destructive tendencies have kept us on the edge of the knife the entire way. We eventually solve our problems, but we often bring up new dilemmas in our wake. But technological advancement is increasing, and I am under the belief that it will soon out-pace our issues. So chin up, boss!
Baalbamoth wrote:
As to the possiblity of a religon using "psychosurgery, would make it possible to create a religion entirely devoid of superstition, but rather quite honestly lays down a set of guidelines for how to be happy and let other people people happy" well, I guess its possible assuming you achieve the elimination of desire but then you've got that issue of your converted just sitting in the corner and wasting away. we derive joy through the satiation of desire both emotional and physical, take that away and replace it with boundless contentment and theres really no reason to do anything, any deviation from that and your back into choosing what desires you want people to have aka souless fleshbots without free will.
Someone already came damn close to creating a superstition-less faith. His name was Thomas Paine, and it was called Deism. It had no churches or structure, but it came damn close to these things. It got largely snuffed out when the Second Great Awakening happened, but they showed us that it could happen. Us Naturalists just have to unify our voices and make things happen. I think there's more of us than society makes us believe. Honestly, I think the first real step has to be dropping the label "atheist".
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Noble Pigeon Noble Pigeon's picture
I really like the idea
I really like the idea presented in Transhuman Space, that the Catholic Church split apart into sects. In my game, the Church split into the more progressive branch, accepting of AGIs and uplifts (with a woman as the Pope, no less) and the more conservative branch. That's basically how they are in my game, and while both are not enemies or even entirely opposed to each other (both agree that the Earth should be reclaimed), they certainly don't get along as well as they should. Religion in general is a pretty touchy subject for me and quite a few of the groups I run with, so we honestly don't give it much thought beyond "religion is not dead, nor is it close to dying" and leave it at that in Eclipse Phase.
"Don't believe everything you read on the Internet.” -Abraham Lincoln, State of the Union address
Smokeskin Smokeskin's picture
Erenthia wrote: The fact is,
Erenthia wrote:
The fact is, we [i]can[/i] provide meaning and community and even awe - but we don't even try because we're so dead set on not being a religion and denying that we have these needs because we're afraid of giving theists ammunition. The current strategy just isn't working and its time we faced up to that.
Atheism is FAR better at deconverting religious people than religions are at converting people from other religions. And really, just because we have irrational needs for certainty and comfort, the solution certainly isn't to offer irrational, religious-like solutions. People who have such flawed thinking that they can't face reality can stay in their cult, and I'm not going to adapt to accomodate them. I would suggest that you stop being apologetic towards religious needs. You're giving people the impression that atheism doesn't offer "the whole package" and that's somehow bad. Well, a healthy life style doesn't have 4,000 daily kcals of fast food either. People who truly have a need for fast food, spiritually or physically, are just not ready to change yet. They need motivation and not just a lower bar.
Baalbamoth Baalbamoth's picture
And again... What about the genetics?
Humans are genetically wired towards ritualistic behavior and religious thoughts. Atheists are the anomaly. Its not just a matter of rational debate and wise decision making. Why do all fluke worms turn towards light? Its a genetically predetermined behavior, the same reason ALL humans consider the possibility of god, and most choose to believe in one or if completely isolated will invent one. Most humans are satisfied with or find comfort in their traditional religious views, and generally i don't find atheism all that comforting when a loved one dies. It may be self delusional to overcome rational disbelief, but really if the option is Johnny died and his life and death were mostly pointless or Johnny wasn't a bad person and is now joyously eating ice cream with Jesus, Buddha, and tom cruse in the clouds. Most people will choose the latter at least temporarily.... You know except for those freakishly cold and rational atheists, who piss in everyone else's cheerios when it comes to the god issue.
"what do I want? The usual — hundreds of grandchildren, complete dominion over the known worlds, and the pleasure of hearing that all my enemies have died in highly improbable accidents that cannot be connected to me."
CodeBreaker CodeBreaker's picture
Ooo, this one could get good!
Ooo, this one could get good! [i][b]gets the popcorn[/i][/b]
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Decivre Decivre's picture
What Smokeskin ignored is the
What Smokeskin ignored is the larger important trait that religion provides. Humans naturally form communities, and they do so based on like-mindedness. And while even atheists form communities, there are no significant atheist efforts to create effective community structure. Sure, we have /r/atheism and other such websites to vent our views on (probably including this one); but we don't have hawalas to get monetary support, confessionals for free therapeutic release without fear of criminal consequences, soup kitchens, halfway houses, orphanages, free clinics, addiction centers... or any of the other infrastructure that religious organizations often provide. That's what atheists need. I'm not talking about the sating of irrational needs, but the social structures to take care of very real needs
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Baalbamoth Baalbamoth's picture
But why do we need to do that?
Im an atheist, wasnt a decision that brought comfort or accepance, wasnt done to get some soup or drug counseling, wasnt done out of idol worship of famous atheists, was a decision made purely out of respect for painful reason and the quest for philosophical honesty. I dont see why i should support atheist charities, or promote or seek to convert others to atheism. "God", "immortality of the soul", "redemption", "beyond" -- Without exception, concepts to which I have never devoted any attention, or time; not even as a child. Perhaps I have never been childlike enough for them? I do not by any means know atheism as a result; even less as an event: It is a matter of course with me, from instinct. I am too inquisitive, too questionable, too exuberant to stand for any gross answer. God is a gross answer, an indelicacy against us thinkers - at bottom merely a gross prohibition for us: you shall not think! from Nietzsche's Ecce Homo, Walter Kaufmann transl.
"what do I want? The usual — hundreds of grandchildren, complete dominion over the known worlds, and the pleasure of hearing that all my enemies have died in highly improbable accidents that cannot be connected to me."
Smokeskin Smokeskin's picture
Baalbamoth wrote:Im an
Baalbamoth wrote:
Im an atheist, wasnt a decision that brought comfort or accepance, wasnt done to get some soup or drug counseling, wasnt done out of idol worship of famous atheists, was a decision made purely out of respect for painful reason and the quest for philosophical honesty. I dont see why i should support atheist charities, or promote or seek to convert others to atheism.
Yeah, atheist charities makes as much sense as the Doctors Without Borders Emerging Markets Investment Fund. Atheism is just the absence of religion, and that's a pretty weak thing to base a charity on. Charities that are non-religious but based on a desire to help people, now that's obviously fine, but I wouldn't call that an atheist charity. I feel the same need to promote atheism as I do to correct mistakes and flawed thinking in general. I have a low tolerance for ignorance, I'm almost affronted by it.
Smokeskin Smokeskin's picture
Baalbamoth wrote:Humans are
Baalbamoth wrote:
Humans are genetically wired towards ritualistic behavior and religious thoughts. Atheists are the anomaly. Its not just a matter of rational debate and wise decision making. Why do all fluke worms turn towards light? Its a genetically predetermined behavior, the same reason ALL humans consider the possibility of god, and most choose to believe in one or if completely isolated will invent one.
Just because you live in a largely uneducated society with strong social pressures to believe, you shouldn't assume things couldn't be different. In Denmark, the largest "religious group" is atheists (iirc we're 48% atheist with christians the runner up at 43%). In the US where the general population is religious, at the highest education levels atheism is at 92%. I agree that many are genetically pre-disposed to believe, but it seems to also require peer pressure and lack of education.
Decivre Decivre's picture
Baalbamoth wrote:Im an
Baalbamoth wrote:
Im an atheist, wasnt a decision that brought comfort or accepance, wasnt done to get some soup or drug counseling, wasnt done out of idol worship of famous atheists, was a decision made purely out of respect for painful reason and the quest for philosophical honesty. I dont see why i should support atheist charities, or promote or seek to convert others to atheism.
Again, this shows why using the phrase "atheist" is a terrible issue, and why I would rather use the terms "secular" or "skeptical". We need secular orphanages, soup kitchens, drug abuse programs and non-profits because this is the primary means of delivery for the ignorance that faiths peddle. If we continue to give them the means to hit the poor and young masses, we will always just be taking the few that don't buy into their crap by peer pressure and fear. Creating "atheist" orphanages, charity works, and rehabilitation programs means spreading the memes of critical thinking and logic to the masses most vulnerable to having it brainwashed out of them. The young and the desparate are just as much in need of good sensibility as anyone else, and it would go along way to closing the gap between social classes.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
nezumi.hebereke nezumi.hebereke's picture
As an outsider looking in, I
As an outsider looking in, I absolutely agree. Christian is someone who follows Christ, Buddhist is someone who follows Buddha, Atheist is someone who believes there is no god. Two out of three of those words are built around a particular message. The third is built around the *lack* of a message. There's no inherit philosophy around that; no point that brings community together. It's like a club of people who hate the color red. What do you talk about there? How much you hate red only works for so long. Skeptics work, although normally it's about a particular field you're skeptical about. More frequently, I've heard the term Humanist, which I think is a very nice one. Rather than saying 'we are bound by our common belief that we don't believe in god', it's saying 'we believe in helping mankind now, in the current world, through work, science, and compassion'. That's something you can bind people together with. Of course, not all atheists are humanists, and not all humanists are atheists, so it's not a perfect fit.
Decivre Decivre's picture
Baalbamoth wrote:Im an
nezumi.hebereke wrote:
Skeptics work, although normally it's about a particular field you're skeptical about. More frequently, I've heard the term Humanist, which I think is a very nice one. Rather than saying 'we are bound by our common belief that we don't believe in god', it's saying 'we believe in helping mankind now, in the current world, through work, science, and compassion'. That's something you can bind people together with. Of course, not all atheists are humanists, and not all humanists are atheists, so it's not a perfect fit.
I like the term naturalist, which refers to the philosophy of naturalism... the belief that nothing exists outside the natural world, and that "supernatural" is a nonsensical term. It suits us quite well. Even if tomorrow we were to unequivocably prove that ghosts are real, it would be through finding out how they interact with natural laws and what natural behaviors they have... not by some bullcrap pseudo-terminology and hocus pocus. And that's the point. Skeptical atheism, on a fundamental level, is about taking things on evidence. And virtually all solid evidence is for natural events and entities. People that make supernatural claims often do so with a caveat of "it doesn't have natural evidence because it's [b]super[/b]natural". Which is just a shift of goalposts.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Baalbamoth Baalbamoth's picture
to each...
smokeskin- yeah, the old addage "ya can't fix stupid" seems to come to mind, I tried to be the destroyer of faith in my past, it worked occasionally but tended to attract the same people who leap from die hard born again to ufo cultist, generally speaking I let reading the bible lead people to atheism and try not to hammer them with the classic atheistic arguements. as to the strength of american education... thats not really our strong pont... insanely well armed freedom and god loving hard workers is. as in praise the lord and pass the ammunition, drop the nukes and let god sort em out, etc. I loved the simpsons episode where the dome appeared over Springfield and people trying to escape over a destroyed bridge drove their cars, one after the other into the ravine, to wich the announcer said "In the great american traditions of never saying die and not really thinking things through many drivers today..." and for me thats the american ideal, ya see... I love my apocalypse prepping god worshiping countrymen... for the same reason I love people in the US military, they are willing to do the $hit work I would never, ever, EVER consider doing, and do it with flare and enthusiasm. more power to em. nazumi- couple of points of contention... an "atheist" is one who lacks a belief in god, not one who does not believe in god a small but important point... I consider myself a "anti-theist" because I dont believe god as anyone defines him/her/it can exist, but atheist is the easy answer most people understand. Humanist does not really suit me, I lack the compassion for it or humans in general. Decivre- I dunno, naturalism sounds like ecopsycos and crazy cat lady cat worshipers, and I think the terminology gets funky at the quantum level, as we do find some particles that a) do effect our natural world and b) do not entirely exist in our natural world. (making them ahem... partially un-natural or supernatural) then theres the whole problem of various documented cases of emergent phenomena (like tornados appearing where tornados are naturally impossible because the weather patterns there cannot create or support them, etc. ) I simply toss these into the "we dont understand cause our science aint up to the task yet" explanation rather than god is hiding in the gaps explanation (you know, the one Hawking and Einstien both signed on to..)
"what do I want? The usual — hundreds of grandchildren, complete dominion over the known worlds, and the pleasure of hearing that all my enemies have died in highly improbable accidents that cannot be connected to me."
Baalbamoth Baalbamoth's picture
as to if the religions are truging on in EP
may I present Nova York... Like its historic namesake, Nova York is a melting pot for cultural trends—and also religious ones. Unlike Extropia, which certainly is open to many new things but tends to be a bit more hostile towards religious memeplexes, Nova York is a place where ideas are allowed to flourish, and both old and new religions are embraced. More and more, Nova Yorkers seek knowledge, philosophical, and cultural enlightenment as their economy continues to shape the habitat into an egalitarian society. Religious figures from faiths presumed dead, or at least on the decline, are able to find new believers here. yup, even worshipers of the church of google are prolly still around...
"what do I want? The usual — hundreds of grandchildren, complete dominion over the known worlds, and the pleasure of hearing that all my enemies have died in highly improbable accidents that cannot be connected to me."
Decivre Decivre's picture
Baalbamoth wrote:Decivre- I
Baalbamoth wrote:
Decivre- I dunno, naturalism sounds like ecopsycos and crazy cat lady cat worshipers, and I think the terminology gets funky at the quantum level, as we do find some particles that a) do effect our natural world and b) do not entirely exist in our natural world. (making them ahem... partially un-natural or supernatural) then theres the whole problem of various documented cases of emergent phenomena (like tornados appearing where tornados are naturally impossible because the weather patterns there cannot create or support them, etc. ) I simply toss these into the "we dont understand cause our science aint up to the task yet" explanation rather than god is hiding in the gaps explanation (you know, the one Hawking and Einstien both signed on to..)
First off, most models involving interaction with particles outside our universe actually involve multiple universes... and those universes are, in turn, natural. So even when you start delving into things outside our universe, that doesn't mean you are delving outside the natural at all. [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophical_naturalism]Naturalism is a concept that doesn't really have anything to do with tree-huggery at all.[/url] It really only deals with the natural/supernatural dichotomy, and does so by simply stating that all things which exist are part and parcel to nature... and therefore all things are natural, and the term "supernatural" is worthless. Now while there are many deviations from this simple version of it (metaphysical naturalism, which generally deals with debunking religious claims; and methodological naturalism, which is effectively the scientific method), but it all comes down to the idea that "natural" and "supernatural" as they are used to contrast one another is a loaded concept that is... to put it [i]extremely[/i] mildly, full of malarkey. As for emergent phenomena, it's best to assume that it seems impossible merely due to our lack of information, not because it actually is impossible. Furthermore, my basic understanding of quantum mechanics stipulates that nothing is actually impossible, and allegedly impossible things pop in and out of existence all the time. I'm sure someone else around here can do a better job at discussing that, though. I'm extremely un-versed in all things quantum physics, perhaps outside of where it concerns computing.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
jhfurnish jhfurnish's picture
Transhuman religions... and cults.
Baalbamoth wrote:
may I present Nova York... Like its historic namesake, Nova York is a melting pot for cultural trends—and also religious ones. Unlike Extropia, which certainly is open to many new things but tends to be a bit more hostile towards religious memeplexes, Nova York is a place where ideas are allowed to flourish, and both old and new religions are embraced. More and more, Nova Yorkers seek knowledge, philosophical, and cultural enlightenment as their economy continues to shape the habitat into an egalitarian society. Religious figures from faiths presumed dead, or at least on the decline, are able to find new believers here....
I'm presently running a campaign that involves Nova York as a place where you can find a seriously sinister cult or two. There are indeed potholes and bumps on the road to enlightenment. It's actually a hard thing to find. In real life alone, I've encountered not a few of them. Imagine the melting pot presented in Nova York via EP. I think there should be a separate section for cults and more sinister philosophies in any book/chapter detailing transhumanist religions. Religions so easily devolve into cults. Agh! Let me present my idea, while I'm at it: The Society of Mary Shelly. This society was created by a deranged psychosurgeon who became twisted after surviving an aborted upload by a TITAN. (Well, that's my story.) They're based on Nine Lives and deal in hacking up egos and rebuilding them to taste or to order, in the case of customers. They even do it to themselves and each other, the way people might get into bionic parts and surgical addiction. They draw people into their web by using 'meditation clinics' in places like Nova York... and the predation begins.
jhfurnish jhfurnish's picture
Transhuman Religions and Psychosurgery = (Nasty!) Cults
Speaking again about entities such as my postulated 'Society of Mary Shelly' (yes, it's named after the writer of the original novel 'Frankenstein'): I think this is the natural course of institutional religions in such a setting. Even now, at least from my anarchistic perspective, institutional religions already involve various levels of brainwashing, apart from the fact that there are very specific conditions to be met for an entity to be classified as a cult. With the reprogramming _instituted_ by _institutional_ religions, we find ourselves separated, more than likely, from the philosophical and spiritual values promoted by the original proponents of a particular philosophy and find the believers/adherents being controlled rather than elevated. I don't see why that would change in the transhuman setting. However, like the anarchists of the Love and Rage collective and others see in the post-scarcity economy for the elimination of poverty and want, I see the opportunity for spirituality to be more individualistic and powerful than it has ever been: the liberation of the ego from the flesh is a possibility; or, finally, the manipulation of the flesh to the taste and comfort of the ego is also possible to a degree we can't presently achieve (note the struggle of transgender people in our day). Transhuman spirituality _SHOULD_ transcend the concept of RELIGION; I hope that any ruleset depicting this aspect of the EP world makes this delineation and depicts both truly individualistic spiritualities (possibly based on Native American or other Paganic beliefs) or community-oriented but contemplative beliefs (such as Bhuddist or even Ba'hai beliefs) and _institutional religions_ or out-and-out _cults_. EP would be a perfect vehicle to treat such a discussion.
Smokeskin Smokeskin's picture
Baalbamoth wrote:smokeskin-
Baalbamoth wrote:
smokeskin- yeah, the old addage "ya can't fix stupid" seems to come to mind, I tried to be the destroyer of faith in my past, it worked occasionally but tended to attract the same people who leap from die hard born again to ufo cultist, generally speaking I let reading the bible lead people to atheism and try not to hammer them with the classic atheistic arguements.
I don't speak out against religion because I hope to deconvert people. I am simply affronted by the sheer stupidity and (for most religions) extreme immorality of it and have a need to speak out against it, much like I feel the need to gesture rudely at bad drivers. Best of all is when the social dynamic is such that I can tease and expose them, especially in front of others. At the height of my atheistic activism I managed to expose a politician's fundamentalists views on a government radio talk show. Deconverting people is bound to have limited success, as I see no reason to believe I have superhuman persuasive abilities. I have attempted it on some occasions, and it needs to be done very differently. As with all persuasion, you need to get them on the road to realizing it for themselves. That means gaining their trust, asking them questions, getting them to ponder certain problems, and you have to be very careful not to go too far too fast, or their cognitive dissonance kicks in and shuts it down. These are not sceptical, rational people who will gladly cruise down any road of inquiry and see if the view at the end exposes an inconsistency. But maybe you can plant a seed of doubt. I won't claim that I have great, or even any, success with it, but I know from deconverts that this is how the process starts.
Shredicine Shredicine's picture
I like what you've done here
jhfurnish wrote:
Baalbamoth wrote:
may I present Nova York... Like its historic namesake, Nova York is a melting pot for cultural trends—and also religious ones. Unlike Extropia, which certainly is open to many new things but tends to be a bit more hostile towards religious memeplexes, Nova York is a place where ideas are allowed to flourish, and both old and new religions are embraced. More and more, Nova Yorkers seek knowledge, philosophical, and cultural enlightenment as their economy continues to shape the habitat into an egalitarian society. Religious figures from faiths presumed dead, or at least on the decline, are able to find new believers here....
I'm presently running a campaign that involves Nova York as a place where you can find a seriously sinister cult or two. There are indeed potholes and bumps on the road to enlightenment. It's actually a hard thing to find. In real life alone, I've encountered not a few of them. Imagine the melting pot presented in Nova York via EP. I think there should be a separate section for cults and more sinister philosophies in any book/chapter detailing transhumanist religions. Religions so easily devolve into cults. Agh! Let me present my idea, while I'm at it: The Society of Mary Shelly. This society was created by a deranged psychosurgeon who became twisted after surviving an aborted upload by a TITAN. (Well, that's my story.) They're based on Nine Lives and deal in hacking up egos and rebuilding them to taste or to order, in the case of customers. They even do it to themselves and each other, the way people might get into bionic parts and surgical addiction. They draw people into their web by using 'meditation clinics' in places like Nova York... and the predation begins.
This is a very awesome concept. I can see this turning into a good series for a new gaming group or the like. Thanks for this!
Who are we, but slaves to our own personal interests?
Baalbamoth Baalbamoth's picture
ya but...
thats been the goal of all societies since we climbed out of the trees, there will always be suffering and ignornace, and selfesh greed that stops us from really doing anything about it and calling those who do fools. Remember the scene in T-2 where the kids are playing cowboys and indians and john says to arnie something like, "thats us, we cant really save ourselves can we?" and the terminator says "self destruction is in your nature" I tend to agree... again save the money you'd waste on social welfare programs, it will only create more dependance, instead invest it in high tech firms doing AI research and pray our technology can outpace our self destructive natures, its really the only way I see that we can be saved... something smarter and more powerful than ourselves saying "stop" If god does not exist... we'll have to invent him.
"what do I want? The usual — hundreds of grandchildren, complete dominion over the known worlds, and the pleasure of hearing that all my enemies have died in highly improbable accidents that cannot be connected to me."
Decivre Decivre's picture
Baalbamoth wrote:thats been
Baalbamoth wrote:
thats been the goal of all societies since we climbed out of the trees, there will always be suffering and ignornace, and selfesh greed that stops us from really doing anything about it and calling those who do fools. Remember the scene in T-2 where the kids are playing cowboys and indians and john says to arnie something like, "thats us, we cant really save ourselves can we?" and the terminator says "self destruction is in your nature" I tend to agree... again save the money you'd waste on social welfare programs, it will only create more dependance, instead invest it in high tech firms doing AI research and pray our technology can outpace our self destructive natures, its really the only way I see that we can be saved... something smarter and more powerful than ourselves saying "stop" If god does not exist... we'll have to invent him.
I'm torn. On one hand I agree on the fundamentals... it is within human nature to look after number one, and most human activity tends toward this instinctive drive. However, we have had the ability, throughout human history, to set aside this basic urge for the common good. Democracy, social programs, and many other human achievements have run contradictory to our self-promoting urges. Furthermore, we have found that seemingly benevolent acts can have long term self-interest benefits as well. I think that's the core dilemma that holds society back; we need to get people to stop thinking about the short term, and educate them about long-term goals and purposes. If people would just think 20 years into the future, rather than 3 or 4, they might see the benefits in short term loss. Corporations might not measure success in quarters and years if they planned for the motherload in two decades.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Smokeskin Smokeskin's picture
Baalbamoth wrote:again save
Baalbamoth wrote:
again save the money you'd waste on social welfare programs, it will only create more dependance, instead invest it in high tech firms doing AI research and pray our technology can outpace our self destructive natures, its really the only way I see that we can be saved... something smarter and more powerful than ourselves saying "stop" If god does not exist... we'll have to invent him.
What you're describing is likely to exterminate humanity. That someone should make a self-improving AI that goes through a hard takeoff is quote possible. The future, everyone's future, will be shaped entirely by its goals. And you want smarter, more powerful, no compassion. That will likely doom each and every one of us. Please look into Friendly AI research.
Baalbamoth Baalbamoth's picture
Stoneskin- dude, I have a
Stoneskin- dude, I have a degree in human services, took victimology classes for years, spent four years looking after the severly emotionally disturbed, and adolecent units in a mental hospital, 3 years working in child placement in the dual diagnosis cottage, 3 years working with drug addicted native alaskan teens... I spent four years getting ready to save the world, and ten years trying to save it. I learned a hell of a lot in all of that. the main thing I learned is 1984 was correct, how do we show our superiority over another? by making them suffer. want to forsee the future of mankind? imagine a military boot stamping on a human face forever. look what happened to egypt, they get rid of one dictator, and replace him with another, now their fighting to get their country back again... the definition of insane, doing the same thing over and over expecting a different result. power has never resided in the people, there has always been an aristocracy. history repeats itself because were the ones making the same mistakes again and again and again, we'd like change, but were powerless to achive it. I think bill mahr said it best, if we had the power to cure all diseases, stop all wars, and create a lasting peace for all mankind for all eternity and all we had to do was for one day have all of us stop using our TV remotes... we'd never make it. never. nope... Obi-AI-Kenobi, your our only hope. as far as AI goes, na... I side with moravec. The AIs will start small as attorneys scientists doctors and other professionals. we'll become so use to turning to them to solve every problem eventually we'll put them in charge, and then they'll build a really nice zoo for us to live in. no wars, no extermination, a gradual acceptance of our inferiorty promoted through pure self interest.
"what do I want? The usual — hundreds of grandchildren, complete dominion over the known worlds, and the pleasure of hearing that all my enemies have died in highly improbable accidents that cannot be connected to me."

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