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It is very reasonable to worry about the harm done by organized religion, and to prefer looser and more private arrangements.
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Pretensions to moral superiority are devastatingly destructive.
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Real equality is immensely difficult to achieve, it needs continual revision and monitoring of distributions. And it does not provide buffers between members, so they are continually colliding or frustrating each other.
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Enclave life becomes very tense, Even when they do elect a leader, the factions remain, with the threat of splitting off.
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Without that assured American largesse Israel would have been obliged to come to an accommodation with her neighbours.
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When we are reflecting on terrorism we can grieve for many things we do and have done.
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If you want to change the culture, you will have to start by changing the organization.
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It is only partly true that religion does more harm than good in society. The community makes God into the image it wants, vengeful, or milky sweet, or scrupulously just, and so on.
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It's unlikely that the organized religions will get more sectarian... or is it? I am not at all sure.
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Since 1970, relationships can be more volatile, jobs more ephemeral, geographical mobility more intensified, stability of marriage weaker.
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Behind a leader there must be followers, but they should always be on the lookout for the main chance and ready to change sides if the current leader doesn't deliver.
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I have increasingly, over the years, felt that religion today does our civilization more harm than good.
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The theory of cultural bias... is the idea that a culture is based on a particular form of organization. It can't be transplanted except to another variant of that organization.
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An escalating, violent tit-for-tat may lead to terrorism.
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Our technological infrastructure alienates us from each other. No need to form a workplace community, everybody there will be out in a year or two, and so will you, looking for a better place.
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I am sure it must be true that people opt out of the mainstream society because they feel that there are going to be no rewards for them, if they stay.
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Just in our lifetime our society has become looser and more private, it becomes extremely difficult to hold to any permanent commitment whatever, least of all to organized religion.
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Mormons... are so strong, they can handle wealth, they are confident. I think it is because they are not bogged down by rules for equality, but have a firmly defined system of relative status and responsible command.
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Religion can make it worse. Are you supposing that if people were encouraged to believe in a transcendent reality, and to be encouraged by grand rituals and music and preaching, to love their neighbors, then they would put jealousy and frustration aside?
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Inequality can have a bad downside, but equality, for its part, sure does get in the way of coordination.
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If people want to compete for leadership of a religious group, they can compete in piety. A chilling thought. Or funny.
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The history of the Church of Rome is a constant leakage of members into such breakaway cults, which go on splitting.
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Hierarchy works well in a stable environment.
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The natural response of the old-timers is to build a strong moral wall against the outside. This is where the world starts to be painted in black and white, saints inside, and sinners outside the wall.