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Previous comments... You are currently on page 3.
As to the source of happiness, there are going to be lots of opinions...
Ethical and moral principles do not require sectarian enforcement. Positing an invisible bigger chief than the earthly rulers was just a clever ruse to make people obey (for their own good, of course).
Do we Americans really believe that "it is necessary to believe in God in order to be a moral person?" How ignorant!
They can invent whatever form of morality they want to when they don't believe in God. Hitler had a morality he believed was right. So did Pol Pot, Stalin, the Caesars, etc.
There is a peculiar difference between the work ethic of those of us in the upper Midwest vs. the overwhelming work ethic of the folks in the South. It is comparable to the difference between Germans and Greeks. In a colder climate you have very little time to store up the fruits of your labors (farming) in order to prepare for winter. In the south, much like in Greece and Italy, the attitude toward work is "tomorrow is another day and the work will still be here then". Because of the long growing season and the heat of summer there is a tendency to "take it easy" and rightfully so. Heat stroke comes easily with overexertion.
The "fact" that the South is "religious" has nothing to do with lack of wealth ... it has to do with their work ethic. Sometimes fishing is just more important than working.
Now to clarify what religion is to me, its not the same thing to everyone so without that clarification a study such as this is flawed at best.
First off the second definition for religion from Dictionary.com.
Religion: A specific fundamental set of beliefs and practices generally agreed upon by a number of persons or sects.
By this definition a person who believes their to be no god, but believes in the power of science and that man can one day understand everything about how the worlds works has a religion.
Religion is a set of moral values by which a person lives there lives and people with the same moral values gathering together to practice them. This site represents a form of religion.
Many here may disagree with me and that is OK. But if you take away some core of moral value, some idea of right and wrong from society there is no society left. Without shared moral values you cannot have a cohesive society. With a shared moral value system you have some form of religion. Some are more loose than others, but it is there.
Our founders wrote letters to each other refering to the religion of America Benjamin Franklin desribed it with these words "I believe in one god, the creator of the universe. THe the most acceptable service we render to him is in doing good to his other children. That the soul of man is immortal, and will be treated with justice in another life respecting its contact in this. These I take to be the fundamental point in all sound religion." - Letter to Ezra Stiles, president of Yale university
At the time the 5 points he suggests here to points every sect in America agreed upon. Today it would be said differently as not everyone would agree upon the supreme creator.
However the basic morals outlined by Franklin are 100% valid for America or any society to practice or we will fail. That use to come from organized god centered religion, or so people think. It is my view that the moral code must ultimately come from within each of us, and religion helped that to occur but ultimately people made the choice to have a moral code and follow it. Without that code a society will fail. Franklin outlined it well.
Many atheists assume believers are not worth listening to either.
Both sides do it.
Atheists in my experience tend to be far more "prickly" over their "beliefs" than people of faith tend to be.
You mileage may vary.
I put "beliefs" in quotes above because I can not think of a word that better applies.
Of course when I tell an Atheist he is a proponent of a secular form of religion, a blown emotional gasket is quick to follow. Religion is a belief system with no factual foundation, so those on both sides of the question of the existence of a supernatural deity are followers. Only Agnostics are truly areligious, and those few I've met usually don't care if their religious associates practice their favorite rituals. I've never heard of an Agnostic behind any of the lawsuits aimed at suppressing religious practices, whereas Atheists almost always are.
I'm a Deist, based on personal experience. I have little tolerance for most organized religions, but so long as they don't impede my life practices the practitioners of those religions should be free to believe as they choose.
Report found:
"clear majorities in all highly developed countries do not think belief in god to be necessary for morality, with one exception only: the USA."
So if we use GDP per capita as a measure of development, the US is the highest-developed country in the study. Is this because capitalism combined with at least 50% "belief in god" creates a situation for success, or are we successful despite those 50%?
In the first case the religious in America may act as a check on the GDP, keeping it at a stable (and high) point. In the second case, the economy thrives despite the correlation between GDP and religious belief. Thus America succeeds while dragging along the believes, as Rearden (early on) supports the moochers because he feels it's easy for him to do so.
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