Isn't religion really just an opinion?

So, recently I was talking to a friend and somehow we got to talking about religion and stuff. When I complained that religion is often put on a huge pedestal and that it’s really just a glorified opinion and should be subject to the same criticism as any other opinion, they told me that that was a really hot take.

According to them, belief and religion is more than just an opinion since it’s such a big part of people’s lives. I countered that opinions are also big parts of people’s lives and personalities. I mean, a huge chunk of your personality is based on your opinions, right?

We agreed to disagree but I kept thinking about it. I don’t get why religion shouldn’t just be treated like any other opinion just because people tend to cling to it. I get that it people are emotionally invested but that’s not just the case with religion but other opinions too. I would appreciate your thoughts to help me understand better, is it really a hot take?

ohlaph,

I see religion as more of a set of opinions since it covers more than one single thing. A set of opinions typically are the building blocks for culture.

I see religion as a culture.

illectrility,

Yeah, I phrased it poorly, a set of opinions makes way more sense

gandalf_der_12te, (edited )

Well, the first religions in the history of humanity were a huge step forward, from basically nothing to a basic sense of culture and identity.

That said, most religions are thousands of years old, and we have updated our knowledge and wisdom since. Clinging to religion nowadays, to me, is just braindead.

Edit: but old customs hardly die, so there’s that.

letmesleep, (edited )

Nope. Opinion is simply the wrong word. The best English term for what a religion is, is probably belief system. Belief and opinion aren’t entirely synonymous - opinions have a much stronger notion of personal judgement (i.e. how tings should be) - but more importantly a religion isn’t just a belief, it’s a huge set including many beliefs that do - more or less - fit together. Hence it’s a system.

In German we also also use the word “Weltanschauung” (literally translates to worldview but fits a religion better than the English word).

So you can’t just compare the entire religion to an opinon about, let’s say whether or not school lunches should include bacon. But you can compare individual opinions and beliefs held by religious people to those of people without imaginary friends. A Christian’s opinion on abortion may be influenced by their religion but there’s a lot of denominations that are pro choice. Hence a Christian being against abortion is indeed just voicing a opinion.

On the other side, there definitely are non-religious belief systems. Humanism for example.

PriorityMotif,
@PriorityMotif@lemmy.world avatar

My local FB group has this horrendous edgelord troll that uses “Weltan schauung” as their name. I’m not convinced that it’s not a paid troll. I’ve seen multiple accounts using the exact same picture for their profile. It’s a picture of a sunset.

illectrility,

Yeah, “an opinion” is poorly chosen phrasing. Obviously, it’s lots and lots of opinions. Should’ve chosen my words better.

Next time the topic comes up, do you think it would be better if I said that religious beliefs are a huge set of opinions that form a person’s core beliefs and that these opinions and as a result the beliefs should be subject to scrutiny and criticism, just like non-religious opinions and beliefs? Is that phrased better or still “wrong” but put into different words?

letmesleep, (edited )

Next time the topic comes up, do you think it would be better if I said that religious beliefs are a huge set of opinions that form a person’s core beliefs and that these opinions and as a result the beliefs should be subject to scrutiny and criticism, just like non-religious opinions and beliefs? Is that phrased better or still “wrong” but put into different words?

Absolutely. That makes much easier to find fair comparisions. After all not all religous beliefs are held deeply and many non religious people have beliefs that are incredibly important to them. E.g. the no alcohol ruls in Islam isn’t especially well adhered to among Muslism in Western countries wheras your average atheist vegan will go ballistic if you try to make them eat pork.

illectrility,

Gotcha, thank you so much for your input! It helped a ton

_cnt0,
@_cnt0@sh.itjust.works avatar

I agree that ‘opinion’ is a bad term, but ‘belief system’, while wildly used, is hiding its true nature, which believers do not want to and often cannot confront because of the high cognitive dissonance it would cause. I think there is no one word to accurately describe it. My attempt to put it in one sentence is: a shared delusion by indoctrination that fills a mental space that people have varying degrees of natural predisposition for.

All of the parts are important and all of them contradict the ‘just another opinion’ stance.

Shared: because religion and/or belief is inherently irrational, it helps if a lot of people or at least a significant portion of a person’s community have the ‘same’ beliefs because it gives them perceived validity.

Indoctrination: to achieve the previous point, it is important to instill the beliefs in children, so ‘optimally’ they are perceived as natural and not questioned.

Natural predisposition: there’s plenty of evidence, that there are specific regions in the brain which are active in believers, when they pray or partake in rituals. No matter the religion. This can also be true for people who are not part of any formal religion, but ‘tap into’ this spiritual part of the brain by meditation or other personal means. Then again, there are people where these regions are ‘dead’/not there. And as always with humans: it is a spectrum.

Delusional: the ‘core tenet’ of belief is the acceptance of certain statements at face value against any amount of contradicting information, which is enabled by all the previous points.

So, how does this contrast with opinions? Anybody can have or form an opinion on anything. For any given subject there is a set of information for which a subset is available to an individual. This subset gets sorted, weighted, and filtered based on individual acquired discriminators. Those discriminators can come from all sorts of stuff, including education and religion. The available information as well as the sorting, weighting, and filtering can change over time and lead an individual to drastically reform their opinions. That is less likely (figuratively impossible) with a belief.

So, while it is possible to have religiously ‘informed’ opinions, they are very different in their nature from beliefs. And the word ‘belief system’ does not deny, but hides the mechanics that diferentiates opinions from beliefs.

(imho)

antlion,
@antlion@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Most religion is introduced to children. Children don’t have a reliable way to distinguish fact from fiction. Think about how kids with really shitty abusive parents still idolize them, they don’t know any better.

It sounds like you learned critical reasoning at some point in your education, but not everybody does. Many people just accept or reject ideas based on what their community believes, or what others might think of them, or other reasons, but NOT due to their own sovereign critical thought or judgement. Many people don’t form their own unique opinions. These people are religious.

So, it’s not really an opinion, it’s a belief. It’s a form of trust. Like you trust that so many other people you know and respect can’t possibly be wrong about this thing. In the same way you can trust a partner not to cheat. That’s not an opinion, it’s faith. You believe it and you don’t really want to consider an alternative, because it undermines your community support network.

It would be an opinion if religion was presented to an adult capable of critical thinking. There wouldn’t be very many religious people if that was the case, I think.

illectrility,

This does make a lot of sense.

Although, if I want to explain that I think that religious beliefs should be subject to the same scrutiny and criticism as opinions how would I put into words that religion should not be put on a pedestal the way it is currently done often times?

antlion, (edited )
@antlion@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I don’t think there’s any way to reach devoutly religious but telling them the thing they hold sacred, the thing that ties together their family and community, is nothing more than a mass delusion. You can’t tell them that religion is an opinion because to them, god is above all.

The only way I can imagine is by providing a viable alternative. Many religious people think atheists are incapable of morality. Lost without god, poor unfortunate souls. It might help if atheists were more open and vocal. But that’s just the problem - nobody is preaching about nothing. Nobody is preaching about just being a good person for no reason other than you want to. Atheists and non-religious should easily have a majority in many places but actually have almost no representation in government.

I got this Scientology recruitment pamphlet in the mail. Most of the precepts make sense to me, except 9 (don’t break the law), and 18 (respect others religions). But I think the religious are more likely to change religions than walk away from it entirely.

Anyway I’ve never received an atheist pamphlet. It doesn’t really need recruitment because it’s self-evident. Imagine going door to door trying to sell nothing. Not just nothing but try to tell people not to buy anything from anybody else. Kind of a hard sell.

dragontamer, (edited )

Many religious people think atheists are incapable of morality

Some but not all.

Jesus has the parable of the good Samaritan for example. The religious man (The Pharisees) leaves someone on the mountain to die, while the less-religious Samaritan saves him.

In fact, a lot of Jesus’s preachings are about the outsider. Ex: Magi were likely Zoroastrianism, etc. Etc.

There are many warnings about how Religion can be used for bad in Catholic preaching. Ironically, Evangelicals ignore these parts of the Bible.

fidodo, (edited )

I agree with you on fundamentals but I think there’s something in their argument that should be considered that they couldn’t really articulate. Researchers have found that there are specific portions of the brain that are associated with spirituality. I agree with you that it’s fundamentally an opinion, but it’s important to recognize that it does light up people’s brains differently than a standard opinion, and that sense of spirituality does impact how people connect with other people through that feeling.

Now, of course that’s just entirely internal to our brains and our internal world simulations and has no impact on the real reality around us, but it’s still important to take into account our brain functions when considering how people feel things.

illectrility,

TIL. This is incredible. Thank you so much, I didn’t know that.

This is an interesting point and I’m sure there is going to be a late night deep dive session about this in my future

kbal,
@kbal@fedia.io avatar

The average religion is a huge tangled mess of opinions, beliefs, customs, traditions, and practices. If you think it is adequately summed up as being "an opinion" then you know less than nothing about religion. Which, since you are an atheist, is fine. Nobody says you need to understand religion. Just be careful not to underestimate by too much how much you don't know about it.

illectrility,

While I’ll concede that I barely understand how people can actually be believers, I wouldn’t say that I’m uneducated on the topic.

To be fair — especially after reading the comments — I realize saying the entirety of religion can be called an opinion isn’t that great. In hindsight I should have changed it to a massive set of opinion, maybe

kbal,
@kbal@fedia.io avatar

The idea that opinion and the most solid faith of religious certainty are the same kind of thing is not necessarily unreasonable, although it's unusually blunt as systems for classifying different kinds of belief go.

But not all religion is about faith, or about believing the right things. The one I'm guessing you're probably most familiar with puts an unusual degree of emphasis on it, but even so there is a lot more to it.

illectrility,

Agreed. I would still stick with my original point but I’d rephrase it. Religion is a huge set of opinions that a person built their view of the world off of. These opinions, just like anything else, should be allowed to be critized. Everything should be.

Is that phrased better?

kbal, (edited )
@kbal@fedia.io avatar

Come to think of it, treating all beliefs within a religion — all the most obscure statements of its holy books and the most maniacal speeches of its ordained preachers — as if they're equivalent to the central principles of the faith, is also the sort of thing the craziest of the religious zealots do. There are always plenty of opinions in a religion for which it can be useful for adherents and atheists alike to recognize a difference in their character compared to that of the core tenets.

Crackhappy,
@Crackhappy@lemmy.world avatar

Religion is monetized mass delusion.

illectrility,

Delusion is a better term, isn’t it? This is actually pretty helpful

some_guy,

I read the other comments (at 2h after this post) and they go into some philosophical waters. I’ll just offer the pithy response that people rarely die for opinions. I think that demonstrates the value that people place upon religious ideas, whether right or wrong. Essentially, your friend is telling you that this opinion means so much more to them to the point that it’s in a different category. I can understand that.

I don’t think religion serves us well, but others do and they’ll fight and die for it. I wouldn’t die over which form of electronic music is best, but drum and bass is certainly a contender in my mind. That’s my opinion.

illectrility,

First of all, D&B is awesome. I’ll try to find a smooth way to drop Fox Stevenson’s name here (although he kinda went a different direction a while back but it still slaps imo).

Anyways, yeah, that is a pretty good point. It’s a weird thing. Another person mentioned in a comment that spirituality lights up special parts of the brain which may have to do with what you’re saying. This is a real tough one to figure out

some_guy,

A charlatan misrepresented a scientific study to claim that a woman’s egg lights up when the sperm fertilizes it as an argument that conception is divine (hence, anti-abortion). That’s the first thing I thought of in relation to spirituality lighting the brain.

Spike, (edited )

I dont think so. Faith is something different from having formed an opinion if someone really believes. It is why I cannot change my opinion if there exists a god or not: The belief is just not there. No amount of convincing will change that.

illectrility,

I’ve actually witnessed multiple people who became believers after years of atheism. I’ve also seen people lose their faith. I think that religious beliefs are usually just really tough but not impossible to change, just like some opinions

Spike,

I dont doubt that, Im just saying i believe it would never be because you logically convince someone.

illectrility,

Oh, gotcha. Okay, yeah that could very well be

Lemvi,

I don’t think opinions and beliefs are the same thing, beliefs just have a strong influence on our opinions. Beliefs are how you think the world works, opinions are which decisions you think are right or wrong.

But this doesn’t mean that beliefs should be exempt from criticism.

illectrility,

This does make sense but my brain isn’t satisfied. If you think the world works as suggested by science, that’s your opinion, isn’t it?

According to Cambridge, an opinion is a belief. Now, saying a belief is an opinion based on this would be a logical fallacy, right? So, are beliefs opinions?

Pronell,

Even things you are certain to be true can turn out to be false. Does that make all knowledge opinion?

There’s a reason it’s seen as cowardly to say “Well that’s just my opinion” when one says something generally disturbing. Opinions are meant to be flexible and malleable. Values and beliefs, less so.

So for one example, let’s say “women belong in the home and shouldn’t be working or voting.” If you believe that, you think that’s how society would function better, the family unit, etc… by strictly limiting what others are able or meant to achieve in life.

Thats why that strawman ‘opinion’ would get pushback. It isn’t a passing thought. It’s more than that and has become a belief or a value, something that is harder to challenge.

I gotta say that this was actually a fantastic question. I enjoyed thinking this out.

illectrility,

I don’t think it’s cowardly to say that something is your opinion. It’s just unnecessary, of course it’s your opinion.

Everything you know and think is your brain processing information it gathered. You see everything through a kind of opinion filter. That’s also what makes it practically impossible to not fall victim to logical fallacies and cognitive biases. Our brains are built to interpret the world, form opinions and whatnot, not to be fact-machines.

So yeah, what you know is an opinion based on info you gathered

themeatbridge, (edited )

The fallacy you’ve got there is called “equivocation” and it’s on you.

Belief, faith, opinion, all words have multiple meanings and context-dependent implications. My belief that the Phillies will have a good year might be based on their off-season moves, or it could just be an ardent hope. It’s not at all the same as the belief that a suicide bomber has that his sacrifice will earn him eternal reward and strike a significant blow against the great Satan.

Belief can be an opinion, implying that it is based on experience and potentially flexible. Belief can be faith, implying it is based on hope and is inflexible. It is not a contradiction for both to exist at the same time, and it’s disingenuous to dismiss a person’s faith as an opinion by the transitive property of the word “belief.” That’s not how language works.

illectrility,

I know that the fallacy would be on me. Who else would it be on? Besides, I specifically didn’t conclude that belief is an opinion based on an opinion being a belief according to the definiton.

It surely can seem to be dismissive when I tell someone that their belief isn’t as valuable as they think it is. The sad reality is, beliefs are practically immune to criticism and scrutiny since it is universally frowned upon to criticize someone’s beliefs. I think that’s stupid. Why would religious beliefs deserve this kind of immunity when there is a whole bunch to rightfully critizice? I want to find a nice way of phrasing that a belief really should be criticized, just like opinions. The closest I’ve come by reading these comments is delusion.

dragontamer, (edited )

Catholic here.

We preach to our kids that Religion is a choice. Above all else, it is the choice to believe in the mysteries (by definition unprovable) issues of faith.

taladar,

But what you believe isn’t a choice. You can not consciously choose to believe anything, you can only be convinced to believe or convinced, coerced, forced,… to pretend to believe but your actual belief is not under your conscious control.

dragontamer, (edited )

But what you believe isn’t a choice

Catholics believe it to be a choice because we believe in free will, among other things. And we choose to believe in free will as a gift from God.

At which point the argument becomes circular, therefore a choice. You can choose whatever now

your actual belief is not under your conscious control.

People seem to choose to join, or leave, our religion on a regular basis. So as a matter of practicality… I’ve seen people choose and change their beliefs.


As I explained to others on this subject: do you believe that others can manipulate your opinion? If so, you can use those same techniques to manipulate yourself in the mirror. That’s your choice as well.

Even if you are a helpless sheep, you have the advantages of psychological research today to manipulate yourself into choosing your beliefs through simple psychology and mirrors.

taladar,

Of course people’s opinions and beliefs can change. You just can’t decide to change them. You can obviously e.g. decide to learn more about a subject and as a result of that action your beliefs change but you can not just decide to change what you believe any more than you could decide to grow taller or to have your fingers fall off.

dragontamer,

You just can’t decide to change them.

You’ve never convinced someone else to change their opinion?

And have you never looked in the mirror to do the same to change your own opinion?

It’s simple psychology. Not even religion. Arguments aren’t always the most convincing, that’s why we have other words (ex gaslighting) where psychological tricks are used to change someone’s beliefs even outside of facts.

Just… Do that. To yourself. Done. There are numerous documented psychological tricks and operations you can do to people.

illectrility,

Okay, let me try.

Yes, I have gotten myself to change my opinion. Many times, actually. I usually am confronted with an opinion I have by someone or something. Then I question the validity of that opinion, do some research, find out stuff I didn’t know and form a new opinion based on the information I just acquired. That happens frequently.

What doesn’t happen is this: “I think electric motors are more energy efficient. Hold on, no, never mind, now I think that combustion engines are more energy efficient.” That’s not how opinions or beliefs work.

The only way for you to form a new belief or opinion is via new knowledge and information. Why would your beliefs and opinions change, when the information they are based on doesn’t?

dragontamer,

Catholics believe that fundamental issues of Faith are unprovable by logic.

You’ve made the choice not to believe in a matter of faith without proof. I have decided to believe despite no proof and a well understanding that there never will be proof.

That’s really all there is too it.

illectrility,

We preach to our kids that Religion is a choice.

Sorry, but all my alarm bells are ringing when I read this. It sounds like something you would say if you don’t want to admit to indoctrinating your kids.

I really don’t see a preacher give a disclaimer like “Just FYI: You don’t have to believe a word I’m about to say. There’s no actual evidence for anything I’ll tell you. It’s actually partially disproven. We still believe it, though. But, again, just because all of us here believe it, doesn’t mean you have to. Of course we all want you to believe it too. Your parents brought you here for a reason but feel free to not believe us. Totally fine.”

Come on, as if. Furthermore, do you really think that young children would understand what you mean? I doubt you would have a non-believer come in and explain their beliefs and how the world actually works and have your children pick, right? Also, do you really think that a kid who is put in a room by the people they trust most, their parents, and is told stuff that everyone there, including their parents, agrees with would get what you mean with “choice”? No, they just follow their parents’ example.

Obviously I don’t know you and if you actually explain to your kids how the world works as proven by science and assure them that your religious beliefs are purely spiritual, that’s cool I guess. I know for a fact, though, that people who do that are a minority so little that they’re statistically insignificant.

dragontamer, (edited )

Catholics are ‘two truths’, see St. Thomas Aquinas. Science is one path to truth. God and faith are another. If both are true, then any (seeming) contradiction must be a human error, a misunderstanding that deeper study (either of faith or of science) will eventually reveal the truth and let both sides agree again.

Science has a large component of Catholicism actually. The Catholic monk Mendel discovered genetics and Catholics officially are cool with evolution. (Of course, specific people may disagree but there have been a lot of… Evangelicals… Who seemed to have joined in recent years pushing us to some braindead perspectives).

Nonetheless, the ‘Mysteries’ of Catholic faith, such as the Virgin Birth, the existence of God, etc. Etc. Are all unprovable and unfalsifiable. Given the nature of the core of our faith, it can only be described as a choice.

There is no proof, no logic, no argument to the core issues. It’s simply if you believe or if you don’t believe.

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