The Gospel According to Neo 797
Xel writes "Josh Burek, writer for The Christian Science Monitor and A.K.A. the guy who sits 4 cubicles from me, has written an excellent essay on religion in The Matrix: The Gospel According to Neo. Sure, this topic has been covered ad nauseum, but it's refreshing to see such a thoughful examination aimed not at geeks alone but a broader, more traditional, and more traditionally religious audience. It also has a nice little glossary at the end where even pasty-faced and vinyl-clad Matrix worshippers may find some easter eggs they didnt know."
And on the seventh day... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:And on the seventh day... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:And on the seventh day... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Religion in the matrix? Are you serious? (Score:3, Insightful)
This man speaks sense. I think the Wachowski brothers did intend for some philosophical and theological elements perhaps to enhance the story, but the claim that their changing of the WB logo, which is from the Greek for "word", corrupts the "word" of the Gospel of John...utter baloney.
Also, I'm not entirely convinced that the "Matrix" is the "womb" fr
Re:Religion in the matrix? Are you serious? (Score:5, Informative)
Michelangelo painted the Oracle of Delphi on the ceiling of the Sistine chapel. Compare Michelangelo's painting [abcgallery.com] to the costume worn by Gloria Foster in the movie.
Obvious (Score:5, Funny)
Warner Bros. confirms: Trinity is dying! (Score:4, Funny)
One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered Matrix fanboy community when the Warshowski Bros. confirmed that Trinity's wank appeal has dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction of 1 percent of all geek porn. Coming on the heels of a recent Natalie Portman survey which plainly states that Trinity has lost more market share of masturbatory fantasies, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. Trinity is collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by dead last [goatse.cx] in the recent "Who do I think of while jerking off" test.
You don't need to be a pasty-faced, anti-social computer nerd [amazingkreskin.com] to predict Trinity's future. The hand writing is on the wall: Trinity faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for Trinity because Trinity is dying. Things are looking very bad for Trinity. As many of us are already aware, Trinity dies in the end of "Matrix Reloaded." Red blood flows like a river of blood. From her. When she dies.
Nude Trinity is the most endangered of them all, having lost 93% of her erotic potential. The mannish and unpleasant physique of long time Trinity actress Carrie-Ann Moss only serves to underscore the point more clearly. There can no longer be any doubt: Trinity is dying.
Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.
Trinity sycophant Michael states that he has written 7000 fanscripts featuring Trinity. How many people who give a shit about Trinity are there? Let's see. The number of Galadirel versus trinity posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 Trinity fanboys. Trinity in vinyl images on Usenet are about half of the volume of picuters of women shitting on themselves [tubgirl.com]. Therefore there are about 700 losers who fantasize about Trinity being their girlfriend. A recent article put Trinity at about 80 percent of the "jerking off to pictures of distended anuses" market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 total losers still reading at this point. This is consistent with the number of Trinity Usenet posts.
Due to the troubles of Hollywood, abysmal acting and so on, Trinity was killed off at the end of "Matrix Reloaded" and the role was taken over by a small beagle puppy who conveys emotion better than Moss. Now Trinity is dead, her corpse turned over to the Matrix to be liquified and fed to unsupecting batteries.
All major surveys show that Trinity looks like a post-operative male-female transsexual. Trinity is very hideous and her long term wankability prospects are very dim. If Trinity is to survive at all it will be among Matrix geeks who bought the first one on DVD. Trinity continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save her at this point in time. For all practical purposes, Trinity is dead.
Fact: Trinity is dying at the end of "Matrix Reloaded."
I clicked on your link (Score:3, Informative)
Meh, sometimes you look a little TOO deep (Score:3, Insightful)
I believe that there's symbolism in the film, but come on, that's stretching it just a bit. You can find non-existant messages in anything if you look hard enough. Just like assassination predictions in Moby Dick [anu.edu.au].
Re:Meh, sometimes you look a little TOO deep (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Meh, sometimes you look a little TOO deep (Score:3, Funny)
Christ.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Soemtimes I think people just get stuck in the "willing suspension of disbelief" and forget that its just a movie... im not looking for a religious revolution, I just want to see Neo kick some machine ass...
But I will be watching on opening day... I already have tickets...
Re:Christ.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Literature has always been written to be inclusive to as many levels of audience as possible. An atheist can read the bible and see some "good stories" a zealot sees a way of life. That you appreciate the base level of the movie says only that this is where your enjoyment is. If I enjoy the symbolism my enjoyment is elsewhere. Kudos for having a film with such diverse appeal
Once again... (Score:5, Insightful)
Ooops.
Re:Once again... (Score:5, Insightful)
MTV isn't run by teenie boppers, it's run by Harvard grads who know how to bleed money out of sheep-like hordes of teenagers.
Re:Once again... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Once again... (Score:3, Interesting)
While great works of literature abound, they are not always relevant in today's society. The rising generation is striving for a connection to themselves, one that centuries old literature does not provide. Movies are a medium that provide such connection in a way that is engrossing to modern youth. The messag
Don't forget Eastern Religion (Score:3, Insightful)
There's also a fair amount of Buddhism mixed in the Matrix ... more specifically the idea that the world is not real, and that anybody can find enlightenment through belief. But I guess since we don't have a "Buddhist Science Monitor" in this country we get a lot more observations on Christian "Wester Religion" themes. There's a good essay about Buddhism, Gnosticism and Christianity on the Matrix website...
Re:Don't forget Eastern Religion (Score:5, Funny)
That's Gnu/sticism, darn it!
Re:Don't forget Eastern Religion (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Don't forget Eastern Religion (Score:5, Insightful)
He's not pushing or enforcing any Christian reading of the film or saying that the Christian viewing of the film is the only one.
Re:Don't forget Eastern Religion (Score:2)
They do have a lot of "family" articles (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Don't forget Eastern Religion (Score:2)
But there's also a great deal of Christian idealism in the original as well. Neo's willingness to come back to lead others to safety strikes me as different than the Buddhist leitmotif of detachment. (I'm not a practicing Buddist, so if there is a strong tradition of self-sacrifice for others as being foundational to being a
Re:Don't forget Eastern Religion (Score:3, Interesting)
The tradition of boddhisatvas in Buddhism is just this - souls who forego enlightenment to return to Earth and help others reach enli
Oh My God! It's true! (Score:5, Funny)
13+ 1+ 20+ 18+ 9+ 24=85
Subtract the number of apostles
You get 73.
If the holy number is expressed as a trinity like so:
7*(7+7)
You get 98.
Multiply the two numbers:
98*73
Which gives 7154
That spells out the word God.
Coincidence?
I think not!
7154 = God? (Score:2)
Another symbol for Allah?
The number of angels that can dance on a pin?
Re:Oh My God! It's true! (Score:2)
Sigh. At least you didn't go for the obvious 666.
Re:Oh My God! It's true! (Score:3, Funny)
7154: Prophet!
Re:Oh My God! It's true! (Score:2)
The Horse (Score:4, Funny)
And in their hands are whips.
And one at a time they step forward and take a few good licks at the stoic creature.
When they're done, they smile broadly and scream "Next!"
This is the image that comes to mind when I read about another "insightful" and "interesting" article philosophizing The Matrix.
(yeah, its a joke)
Re:The Horse (Score:5, Funny)
sheesh.
All's I know is... (Score:2)
Its like reading Asimov's foundation series and reading the Roman empire into it and so on.
Trust me fellow slashdotters, this is just a really good movie (just like Salvor Hardin was a figment of Asimov's imagination), with a really good premise and some really kewl fight scenes and clothes.
Just go enjoy on thursday!
PS. Keep the spoilers to a minimum in
My favorite Matrix "easter egg": (Score:5, Funny)
Every time that someone says "God" in the movie, Trinity (if she is present) responds as if she was being addressed. This happens at least twice.
Whether she is actually responding is always left kind of pseudoambiguous: But, while it could be coincidence, I'm guessing that it just means that Trinity has a healthy amount of self-esteem. If you were a leather-clad female trapped in a hovercraft with a bunch of antisocial geeks, you'd probably start to think you were God too.
Wow! (Score:4, Funny)
In fact, you probably do the same thing. If you're somewhere with a person who says "Jesus!", do you think
a) Hey! They mean me!
b) The second coming? Already?
or
c) What would cause them to say that now?
Re:Wow! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Wow! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:My favorite Matrix "easter egg": (Score:4, Interesting)
Unfortunately, this only happens twice (in the nightclub and in the car en route to the Oracle).
Search a copy of the screenplay [216.239.33.104] online sometime. Neo says "Jesus Christ, that thing's real!?" after he's debugged and Trinity doesn't react. Trinity says "Goddammit", "God damn you, Cypher!" and "Jesus, he's killing him", thereby allegedly invoking herself. There are plenty of other times characters say "God" to or around Trinity with no reaction.
It's just an interjection, that's all. Of all the supposed easter eggs, this one's clearly a coincidence.
Jeez, it's just a movie... (Score:2)
Sometimes if you see something weird in your dreams, it might not mean anything, you could have just been dreaming something you might have seen on the TV or something.
All this armwaving about "hidden meanings" is just making a fun movie more than it really is: a fun movie.
What a load of bollox (Score:2)
I got as far as the line above and had to stop reading. I dont remember ET whipping out a hammer or saw during the movie to do a bit of carpentry and if I remember correctly he goes back to his buddies in the end without being crucified to death.
Its a movie. Turn your brain off for a couple of hours and enjoy the spectacle
Re:What a load of bollox (Score:2, Funny)
Re:What a load of bollox (Score:2)
Amen! oh crap...
*ducks*
Lawrence Fishburne Interview (Score:4, Interesting)
Switching gears... In an interview released today over at Coming Soon [comingsoon.net], Lawrence Fishburne gives a pretty detailed account of (some of) his experience with The Matrix and playing Morpheus.
WARNING: The interview may spoil some minor plot details near the bottom -- the first six paragraphs are safe. When it gets to "Early audiences are already getting a different sense...", you might consider waiting a day or two to see the movie and then catch up on what he had to say about his character.Re:Lawrence Fishburne Interview (Score:4, Insightful)
A young man's "one of the oldest stories" is an older man's cliche.
When I need my dollops of Greek Tragedy (or Christian Philosophy or Buddhist Revelation or Qaballah Interpretation or Zoroastrian Interior Design) I think I'll look in directions other than the Brothers Wachowski or, um, Lawrence Fishburne for my enlightenment.
Why must we always cloak our guilty pleasures in layers of "meaning?" (Probably something to do with our Judaeo-Christian mores, but I'll leave that to the armchair theologians and film-makers to posit upon...)
Gimme Carrie-Ann, vinyl trenchcoats, automatic weapons, a hundred Agent Smiths, some wacked out over-the-top Martial Arts, and a big tub of p-corn and I'm happy to suspend my belief. Just don't expect me to gain any insight into my Belief in the process.
Re:Lawrence Fishburne Interview (Score:3, Interesting)
I think this is a really important, well spoken point, and it might shed light on why I had a hard time getting through the CSM article.
When I read articles like this, they always seem to come across as saying "Look how Christian the [insert item of disc
Repeat after me (Score:2)
1) It does not auctomatically make him successful.
2) It does not make the film have a plot. (And before the sheep come out, I understood what they thought the plot was [It didn't "go over my head."], but it was not internally consistent or logical enough to warrant a suspension of disbelief.)
Because when I think of eastern religion and Christianity (as in its core teachings and not as practiced), I think of a casual disregard for human life and mi
Bull (Score:5, Insightful)
With dialog like "Noone can be told what the Matrix is", "Woah", and "I know Kung Fu" it's no wonder everyone's in an intellectual tiffy over it. And let us not forget that whole brilliant monologue on weather chicken tastes like chicken.
The Matrix rocks, but it's a silly sci fi super action movie-not some kind of brilliantly thought out metaphor for reality. I'm reminded of my English teach in HS telling me how every noun in every book is a symbol for humanity and her struggles. Come on people, the people who wrote that script were just making a good movie, not sending us a message. That said, I still have opening day tickets.
Re:Bull (Score:2)
Thats probably the most insightful summation of the crap written about the Matrix I have seen.
Re:Bull (Score:4, Funny)
Yes, let us not. Here it is now..
When I was a kid back in Iowa, we had us a weather chicken. It was like a weather rock, but it had feathers and it moved around more. When the weather chicken was wet, it was rainy. When the weather chicken was white, it was snowing.
But one day we noticed that the weather chicken had had its head cut clean off and a wooden stake driven through it, pinning it to the ground. We looked skyward to see what this might mean, weather-wise.
The sky was pure blue. There were absolutely no clouds. Yet there was something eerily wrong: there was no sun!As we stood there gazing, white words started to appear across the sky:
*** STOP 0x0000001E KMODE_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLEDAs it turns out Reality is a Windows app.
Exclusive Matrix 2 screenshot (Score:5, Interesting)
Similar to what Eastern religions say (Score:4, Insightful)
Huh? (Score:2, Funny)
I'd love to meet the first guy who thought to time that. I can see the tinfoil hat now.
Also, as a physics major, it hurts my eyes to see 72 seconds = 72 hours = 3 days. I guess no one bothered to teach the numerologists unit conversions.
Christian symbolism (Score:5, Insightful)
Neo Anderson
Neo = New
Ander = Man
Which translates to 'New Son of Man'.
What did Christ call himself? The Son of Man.
But then again, there's also Bhuddist imagry and as was mentioned the main theme is based on Plato's Cave.
BTW: My wife attended a talk by Leonard Sweet [leonardsweet.com] several months back and he claimed that he is one of the spiritual consultants for The Matrix movies. That would explain where the Christian imagry came from.
Re:Christian symbolism (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Christian symbolism (Score:5, Interesting)
It's interesting that he never said either of these things about himself. Others around him said it of Him and he didn't dispute it when they did.
For example, at one point He asks his followers what people are saying about him. They give answers like "they think you're a prophet", etc. And then he asks them "Who do _you_ say I am?" and Peter answers "You're the Son of God." He didn't dispute the statement.
Just prior to His crucifixion, Pilate asks him if He is the King of the Jews and Jesus answers something to the effect "It is as you say".
thus possibly explaining to Christians that while Christ's philosophies were good, he should be viewed as a normal person who believed in himself.
Well, in a word, no. Sure while Christ was fully God and fully Man; He didn't rely on his 'God'ness while he was here on earth (that would have been cheating). But He did know who He was. He didn't tell people to belive in themselves, but that the only way out was to beleive in Him. Christian thought doesn't teach to beleive in yourself (that's the Positive Thinking crowd) but instead it teaches that the self is bankrupt and you must surrender it if you're going to get anywhere - to focus on others, not the self.
Re:Christian symbolism (Score:3, Insightful)
"I tell you the truth" Jesus answered, "before Abraham was born, I am!"
Jesus making pretty clear claim to God-hood. Specifically note the use of "I am" not "I was", This is the name God used to identify himself, and Jesus is describing himself with it
Quite right. To the Jewish mindset at the time that was indeed a claim of God-hood. That's why they wanted to stone him in the next verse or two.
I wasn't trying to say that there was any question that Christ claimed divinity, but it's interesting that f
Christian Science Monitor Not Really Religious (Score:5, Informative)
Christian Science is neither... (Score:3, Flamebait)
What the CS Monitor is (Score:5, Interesting)
More about the CS Monitor's origin and purpose [csmonitor.com]
They forgot to mention Descartes (Score:3, Informative)
Re:They forgot to mention Descartes (Score:3, Funny)
After hearing him repeat "But I can't know if you really exist -- you could just be a figment of my imagination" in response to protests from his companion, I leaned forward with the following suggestion to the annoying metaphy
Universal Themes (Score:2, Insightful)
Christian Science != Christianity (Score:2)
Christianity means you think Christ = son of god (Score:2)
There are better movies for this kind of stuff (Score:2)
I guess it's somewhat interesting, but there are other popular movies out there that make better examples of the "Christian story" than the Matrix. In the realm of sci-fi, we have ET, 2001: A Space Odyssey, and of course Star Wars. If you want some really overt symbolism try watching Cool Hand Luke.
Re:There are better movies for this kind of stuff (Score:2)
Religiousfolk tend to consider their literature to be Revealed Truth(tm) so whenever someone makes such allusions, they get all antsy and nervous, especially when the borrowing is not subtle. Some react with disgust, others rationalize. The literary allusions are somewhat overt in Cool Hand Luke, but they're buried in the story. The casual viewer won't pick up on it, as for them it's just a prison movie with memorable dialogue.
I'm ac
Neo Nebo (Score:2, Interesting)
If Nebo later became Neo ( a reasonable linguistic morph), then Nebuchadnezzar might have meant "The one[who] protects the crown."
kinda sad (Score:3, Interesting)
If I had time, I could write a equally definitive argument that the Matrix is about personal spirituality and questioning authority and what other's tell you you're perceiving.
But I guess that's what art's about, and sometimes narrowminded people aren't going to change no matter what you show them.
Re:kinda sad (Score:3, Insightful)
But I guess that's what art's about, and sometimes narrowminded people aren't going to change no matter what you show them.
-Says the speaker....
You have to come up with definitive proof of everything before you can make a blanket statement like that. Organized religion is not wrong, as it seems that you yourself subscribe to one of them. Just becuase it is "anti-religion" does not mean that it is itself, a religion.
Learn that religion takes something called "faith," which basically means that you hav
Missing the point...? (Score:2)
Comments like these really make me wonder how a lot of these people think. To observe in this fashion is like looking at reality through a polarized lense polarized to your own personal tastes. Reality consists of many things and to interpret it without recognizing the whole is futile.
Furthermore, it's interesting to note that one of the central messages in
Before there was the Matrix... (Score:5, Funny)
"Thou shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a human mind." -The Orange Catholic Bible
Disappointed too (Score:2, Interesting)
foremost a highly entertaining, but still just an entertainment nevertheless, one can push and
pull the plots, the names, the numbers and everything else to fit their personal beliefs.
I expected something beyond this in this article and I was deeply disappointed.
Firstly the article just touches upon other interpretations of Matrix other than
that of christianity. Secodnly there is a desparate attempt at bending and me
Matrix Philosophy (Score:5, Insightful)
Could it just be the typical geek fashion to write off something as worthless if it is not exciting or doesn't have any practical application? I don't know, but I encourage any of you who have shrugged off philosophy but find interest in the philosophy found in The Matrix to try out reading some real philosophy. Philosophy may change the way you view the world and--more importantly--make you think about the world.
Besides the philosophy in The Matrix, there are other geek appealing topics in philosophy. For example, you can find AI in philosophy, and I don't mean from some research paper written by some cognative scientist at MIT. What it means 'to think' and to 'be conscience' have been thought about by some of the most profound thinkers in human history thousands of years ago.
If you are in college, I would recommend taking an introductory survey course in philosophy. If taking courses is not your thing, try reading some of the philosophy books put out by Penguin Classics. Their books generally have understandable translations, provide historical context where needed, and have explainations for the more difficult readings.
It's an icebreaker, not a treatise (Score:5, Insightful)
What I have problems with is when people hold up these films as proof of their creators' intentions to promote particular religions. The "Star Wars" films have been accused, off and on, of promoting "New Age" religion and spirituality. "The Matrix" relies on Buddhist beliefs and themes as much as Christian ones, if not more. And I still can't understand why the Christian right touts "The Lord of the Rings" as a brilliantly disguised retelling of the Gospels (which it wasn't) while the "Harry Potter" books are vilified for encouraging witchcraft and occult interests (which they aren't).
All of these are works of fiction, not of faith. They use a variety of religious themes together to make their story more interesting to viewers, often in ways that's not immediately obvious. But religious sorts should be careful to take these stories as they are and not assume too much about the creators' intents.
Re:It's an icebreaker, not a treatise (Score:3, Insightful)
Go to the source, Luke (Score:3, Informative)
You can find interesting articles about The Matrix's philosophic and religious background right on the official site [warnerbros.com]. Enjoy.
philosophical implications (Score:3, Interesting)
Any pointers from
See also http://www.simulation-argument.com [simulation-argument.com].
Searching for the truth (Score:3, Insightful)
Why is this true? Because science and religion are closely entwined--if not the same thing. They are both the search for the truth. There is a reason so many scientific discoveries were made by priests and monks
At some point, the major religions lost the bit about the search, and decided the truth had been found. I think science, as Contact points out, must also acknowledge that not everything is knowable.
This is what is what's is so disturbing about "the origin of the species through evolution" and "creationism" debate where it seems each considers the other "blasphemous". They aren't really so mutually exclusive.
i read the csm matrix story last week, it was good (Score:3, Interesting)
Hacking the 'Matrix' Master Code [villagevoice.com]
favorite quote:
Consider the messianic thread of "The One." As much as we all like a good Christian allegory, 'The Matrix' doesn't decode like 'The Old Man and the C Drive'. When I asked Laurence Fishburne, who plays Morpheus, if he followed the first flick's philosophy, he announced he'd mused plenty in his life about "all that, you know, spiritual fucking voodoo fucking mumbo jumbo kind of shit."
lol
Gnostic Christianity? (Score:3, Funny)
If you think the matrix is deep, try slashdot... (Score:5, Funny)
The Masks of God (Score:3, Insightful)
Campbell's thesis is not particularly religious, but rather that groups of people create similar myths. Campbell, like Jung, arrives at this conclusion through comparative mythology.
That the same archetypes should emerge in the dominant storytelling medium of the day--sci fi movies--is not surprising. Believe it or not, Hollywood draws heavily on Joe Campbell, all the time . Even the fact that Hollywood stories are so formulaic is evidence of this: there's always The Hero, The Trickster, The Seductress, The Higher Power, etc. It's the very familiarity of these archetypes that make these modern-day myths so compelling.
Most Hollywood movies, however, stay within the conventions of the archetypes and their stories, rather than raising questions about art, artifice, consciousness, myth and reality. Hollywood movies work within dramatic and myth-making conventions, whereas The Matrix is about getting behind and beyond the masks, which is what is so fascinating about it. The Matrix chooses Gnostic Christian forms for its own mask, rather than the forms we're more familiar with from schul , catechism class, Sunday School, etc. The choice of gnostic forms allows them to get much closer to eastern philosophies, while dodging doctrinal disputes. Skillful means, grasshopper.
One thing I was surprised to see undiscussed in the CSM article was really the central theme of the Matrix, and also the unifying principle in all religions: compassion. The AI simulacra, The Smiths, lack compassion, and his is what makes them, and the artificial world they have constructed, so inhuman, so terrifying and so inhumane.
The "is it live, or is it Memorex" debate is begging the question, really. It duss jusn't matter. Also, I wish that they'd used Peter Gabriel's song Mercy Street [lyricsdomain.com] just once.
I think (Score:3, Interesting)
In our society we try to make more jobs, more work, for people to do. This is so they can eat, right? Wrong. We have the technology to automate the production of food. Meaning if we put the thought, time and resources behind it we could give everyone the food they need to live without asking for money in return.
Do most people do productive jobs or are they some psychology major sitting in some marketting department thinking up new ways to get people to spend their money?
I think the message in The Matrix is society doesn't have to be a complex matrix of propoganda designed to keep us independant and greedy. Society could be anything we want to make of it.
Is it logical to raise cows so every human can eat a steak? No. But some people would rather live in a society that would destroy our environment so they could eat steak everynight, blissfully ignorant of reality.
Re:In case of slashdotting: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Religious Undertones (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Interesting read.. (Score:5, Funny)
Great! Could you send me your resume? I was looking for some qualified techs!
Re:Matrix Topic Icon (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Matrix Topic Icon (Score:2)
I have looked at it several times and still don't get it.
red and blue pills
You'd have a lot of depressed, mentally ill folks (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:You'd have a lot of depressed, mentally ill fol (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:You'd have a lot of depressed, mentally ill fol (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:You'd have a lot of depressed, mentally ill fol (Score:3, Funny)
"Next we have the sexual criminals... (stuff cut) ...No, not those people. The rapists and child molesters... those hopeless romantics. We could just ban religion, and those crimes would go away in a generation or two, but we don't have time for rational solutions"
Re:You'd have a lot of depressed, mentally ill fol (Score:3, Interesting)
"Yes, but why is it wrong," they'll say. "Because God said so," is one answer. Another is Scalable Behaviors. Just ask youself, "what would happen if everybody ______," filling in the questionable behavior. Let's take looting, one of your examples.
What would happen if everybody looted? Well, every shop would be quickly destroyed, and it would be impossible to have shops. So, if everyb
Re:You'd have a lot of depressed, mentally ill fol (Score:3, Interesting)
That's true, I'm assuming the value of human life is significant. If you don't have commerce, you either don't have division of labor or you have a socialist dictatorship of some sort.
Dictatorships tend to kill lots of people just to maintain power, so we can rule that one out.
If you don't
Re:Whatever... (Score:2, Insightful)
Seems to me that the history of the 20th century suggests that the most dangerous thing in the world is people who think they have the key to making life for everybody a little slice of heaven.
Re:Whatever... (Score:3, Insightful)
I mean, come on. There are plenty of people who do not believe in God who seem to believe that Not Believing in God is the One True Path, and that everyone else is a poor sheep who have strayed from the Truth. I see this as no different from someone who believes in a God and that all others should come and see the Truth. The atheist believes in nothing, while the o
Re:Whatever... (Score:5, Insightful)
A power that is the organizing force of the known universe, that arranges everyone's life in an orderly fashion.
The machines.
Re:Whatever... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Whatever... (Score:3, Insightful)