Jimmy Higgins
Contributor
- Joined
- Jan 31, 2001
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- Basic Beliefs
- Calvinistic Atheist
It is your term, and with religious being an adverb for the verb impulse, it would seem to imply that "religious impulse" indicates a natural proclivity to being drawn to religiously based ideologies. However, as I note in my post, I think that the impulse is being overly finetuned by you for something that is much broader.Sure. That sounds about right, but unfortunately you didn't define "religious impulse."The impulse to feign some level of control over a situation, if even just tiny, isn't religious impulse. It is a general desire of the mind in order to not panic at uncertainty.That's the ideal, but the human psyche is rarely ideal. We need to learn to live with our behavior based on emotion and recognize it's reality, and that includes the "religious impulse."Being rational doesn't replace feeling or imagination or intuition. It's to guide them so they serve life instead of undermine it. Also to avoid letting belief about the existence of God/gods/goddesses be chosen for you by impulses.
I think it would be hard. Those are primal issues. Spiders don't count.I would add that a tenacious adherence to dogmas can also serve as a level of assurance that one is "right" and therefore able to overcome difficulties using knowledge that one actually doesn't have. For example, using home remedies that have no curative powers to help a loved one get over illness can serve to mitigate panic in the face of that kind of uncertainty.We see it this in a decent amount of life in addition to religion, such as astrology and superstition and even in ardent adherence to routine.
That's one list, but it's not difficult to come up with many other lists of what we fear the most.Of most things, what our minds fear the most is:
- A lack of control
- The unknown
- Being wrong
The word is superstitiously, not religiously. Godly religion came after animism.I think there's some truth to what you're saying here, but I'm not sure how it relates to what I said about the great difficulty we can have overcoming our emotions including the human tendency to act religiously.This is generally the reason why we get trapped in superstitions, even if they are completely and utterly ridiculous. Dancing in fancy dress to make it rain is really little different to kneeling in a building, hands clasped together, in silent thought to an invisible entity we think can hear us to help with a family relative's bad health condition. It is just that due to number 2 and especially 3, it is hard for people to let go of the idea.