• @[email protected]
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    618 days ago

    Yeah, of course they do. They literally form the cornerstone of your worldview. If you change someone’s beliefs, you change how they see the world. That sounds pretty damn big and important.

    • @[email protected]
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      88 days ago

      I wish I got to be as militant about my atheist beliefs as some nut jobs can be about their faith.

      Not that I really want to, but must be nice sometimes just acting like everybody that doesn’t think like me is wrong

      • @[email protected]
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        58 days ago

        Some people are, it’s called antitheism. I confess when I was an edgy 16yo I was like that, but I had just left a religious cult so don’t judge me too harshly.

        • Maeve
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          27 days ago

          I went through that for the same reasons. If it was under our caregivers, they went through their traumas that caused that.

      • Maeve
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        27 days ago

        Something about being careful what you wish for.

    • Cosmoooooooo
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      58 days ago

      Cornerstones, my ASS. Beliefs are just goofy fiction. I believe you’re wearing fruit as a hat. Nobody gives a shit. Nobody should ever give a shit. It’s not a cornerstone of my life, it’s a fleeting nothing, based on nothing, worth nothing.

      Some asshole taught you that beliefs are everything? They lied. You know what IS everything?

      Fucking everything is! Matter, energy, reality, facts, - that’s what’s important. You believe you can walk on the Sun? “Fuck you” - Reality.

      • @[email protected]
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        98 days ago

        So what you are saying is that it is your own belief that the concept of beliefs encompasses only false beliefs.

        • Fushuan [he/him]
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          27 days ago

          No he wouldn’t, his philosophical viewpoint is a belief in itself. So important to him that he revolved his life around it!

          You are assuming that belief = religion, but that’s waaaay off. Belief is anything you don’t know of, and I would argue that there is extremely little we do know at any given point in time. Right now I believe that the window in my room is opened because I can’t see it, and even if I looked at it, I’m believing that my eyes aren’t defying my reasoning.

          Belief is what defines us as individuals, every kind of assumptions we do, anything we try to remember, any intuition we have that’s based on experience aka memory, it’s all small figments of our belief system.

      • @[email protected]OP
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        8 days ago

        So why are beliefs so important for ao many people then?

        I mean sure, maybe it’s just indoctrination.

        Or maybe it’s utility. Believing a nice scientific model or car repair manual can deliver definite advantages.

        Or maybe it’s habit. I’m stuck in my head so arranging my mental furniture becomes important.

        Or something else

        • Riskable
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          28 days ago

          So why are beliefs so important for ao many people then?

          They’re a coping mechanism.

          Reality often sucks, so how do you go about your day knowing that so many suffer so many injustices every day? Easy! Just ignore them and pretend like everyone will get what’s coming to them in the afterlife 👍

          It’s the perfect system for tyrants: Think I’m a monster who abuses my power and intentionally makes people suffer? Well, if you even try to do anything about it you’re going to hell! Overthrowing an openly evil government is not what Jesus would do!

          It’s the same mental gymnastics that people use when they blame minorities for their problems. It’s not me or my beliefs (about the world) that are wrong! It’s those trans furry kids and immigrant invaders who are destroying the very concept of everything I believe in!

          • @[email protected]OP
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            58 days ago

            It can also be a tool.

            For example, the model for gravity is just a useful fiction. But it’s useful. And it being constantly useful like that, one becomes attached to it.

            • Maeve
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              27 days ago

              A scythe can be used for harvest, cutting a path, or murder. Tools are neutral, intent not so much. And purity doesn’t matter here. I can have purely loving intention and rob someone of their own. Or purely base intention and something beneficial occur by happenstance.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      48 days ago

      Why does it get that special role of “cornerstone”.

      You have a thousand things in your perspective. Sights, sounds, vibes, random thoughts… Why does belief get this special treatment?

      • @[email protected]
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        58 days ago

        Sounds like the idea of “belief” is just being accepted as a religious or spiritual idea. Beliefs are the cornerstone because it’s a tool we use every single day.

        At the center of how we think is the fundamental idea of The Way Things Work and that comes down to how we believe the physical things around us will act and react. Just about everyone will start making a choice by comparing what we know to be real or true for ourselves and the things around us.

        That cornerstone of belief is what we use to define “real and true”. Ghosts or spirits are absolutely real and true for some people while others don’t see the same evidence.

        Beliefs get the special treatment because we are a collection of our experiences and each one of us has a different way of understanding how things work.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          28 days ago

          Ahhh. Yes, they are thinking religion. I didn’t think they’d lunge that way. I mean, with all the politics and gender stuff around these days, I figured the term would bee seen as broader. A wider range of options.

          That said. Meh. Your thesis sums to “beliefs are important because beliefs are important”.

          • @[email protected]
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            48 days ago

            Knowledge is built on justified, true beliefs. I know and believe the sun will rise tomorrow. You can believe shit on faith, or lack of evidence, but I’d disagree if someone claims to “know” gods or ghosts exist and ask for their evidence.

            • Maeve
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              17 days ago

              I know and believe the sun will rise tomorrow.

              No we don’t. Some unforeseen cosmic cataclysm could happen as I type this and obliterate our yellow star. I don’t believe it will, and have faith it won’t.

              • @[email protected]
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                37 days ago

                Speak for yourself, please. I am willing to change my beliefs with new information. Unless you have evidence of an asteroid heading toward our planet or whatever, I’ll stick with what I do know.

                Again, faith means belief without evidence. You have every indication the sun will be fine, the earth will be fine, etc.

        • Maeve
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          17 days ago

          Like we believe in colors but there aren’t. It’s just the way light bends, reflects.

      • @[email protected]
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        78 days ago

        I think by cornerstone, they are referencing that beliefs are assumptions that form one’s model of the world.

        You think by logically building on assumptions. “I remember putting leftovers in the fridge last night, so I don’t need to make dinner tonight” You assume your memories are accurate (or accurate enough) and then build on other things you “know” to construct every thought.

        Sights, sounds, and vibes are a different story. They are called qualia and the raw experience of them cannot be described.

        Think of qualia like the raw data you collect from an experiment. Your worldview is the scientific model you’ve built to describe this data and it rests on both fundamental logic and the beliefs/theories you currently believe in.

        Unfortunately people don’t like having to change their worldview. And when you’ve held a belief for long enough, it becomes foundational to many of your other assumptions. Some people would rather say reality is wrong than change their beliefs.

        The word for a belief that cannot be changed via evidence is called a “delusion” in case you ever want to piss off a religious person who says “nothing can shake my faith” like it’s a good thing.

  • Wytch
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    208 days ago

    Beliefs lead to actions. Actions affect others. It’s not super complicated.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      78 days ago

      Lots of things lead to actions. Feelings, habits, inertia, inspiration… Beliefs are not special in this.

  • FlashMobOfOne
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    118 days ago

    They do indeed.

    My parents are deeply religious, but have never figured out that it’s my siblings and I who actually answer their prayers.

    • @[email protected]
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      68 days ago

      God sent you to them. It was their reward for rubbing their genitals together. Thank you heavenly Father!!

  • @[email protected]
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    158 days ago

    Because as Terry Pratchett astutely notes in the Hogfather belief is what makes the human society possible. We invented justice, mercy, duty, laws, money etc. They exist only because we believe in them. Some beliefs make the world better, other ones worse, and we should try to emphasize the former and minimize the latter.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      7 days ago

      Ok. So there’s benefit there as long as the believing is controlled.

      Is there a general benefit or liability to believing? What do we gain and lose simply by believing, no matter what the belief?

  • Magiilaro
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    7 days ago

    Beliefs are important, beliefs are what gets us through life somewhat mentally sane.

    Beliefs are (for example) the cornerstone of relationships, because you have to believe that your partner really loves you. There is no hard evidence for that so it can never be a fact, only a belief.

    I believe that my neighbors don’t plan to kill me in my sleep (why should they, I am a nice and easy neighbor), I believe that the person at the fast food corner doesn’t spit on my food (and that they had washed hands after using the toilet), I believe that my landlord will some day repair the water damage in my second bathroom (and put all the bathroom stuff like sink, shower and toilet back in).

    One could say that belief is behind everything where “trust” is involved. Belief is just accepting something as true, either because it is something that is a concept without hard facts (love, religion, justice, freedom, money, “the good in people”) or it is something where the information are lacking either because they are not fully known yet or because it is such a complex topic that having all information is (nearly) impossible.

    I believe for example that climate change is real, because I trust (there it is again) the science. I have to believe in this case because I can’t have all the information without studying climate sciences, and one can argument that even our best climate scientists doesn’t have all the information (models are still incomplete and simulations don’t use all possible parameters) so even they have to believe for some parts.

    Beliefs become problematic when people take them as hard facts, as dogmas, and become extreme.

    I believe that taking extreme positions is always wrong and a way to disaster and suffering. That’s one reason why I don’t like faith and are against cults of any kinds.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      6 days ago

      Are you saying that beliefs are useful (necessary even) for navigating other beliefs?

      For example, I believe that my neighbors wont kill me. I do that to stave off the belief that my neighbors will kill me.

      • Magiilaro
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        6 days ago

        The part with the neighbors was more or less only a joke. If i believe anything about them, then that they are good, honest and peacefull people. Because so far nothing happend to make be think otherwise.

        The belief that the neighbors will kill someone (oneself for example) sounds more like a delusion… or a really bad neighborhood!

        In both cases is a counter belief maybe not the best solution

        But yes, i do think that beliefs can be helpful to counter inner urges and impulses. The belief in laws and punishment by law is an example for it.

        And shared beliefs (for example faith and religion) acts like a glue for societies. The belief in eternal judgment by an all knowing god in combination with a holy law book (that is what most holy texts in their core are IMHO) helps to prevent chaos and ensures that people can work against a common and shared goal. As an example for the good and positive side of that.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          36 days ago

          It was just an example.

          My point is the specific utility of beliefs. You seemed to be offering an interesting one.

          Imagine a landscape made of beliefs. In it you are always standing on some bunch of beliefs. So choosing and navigating is going to be important. To get to the good beliefs and avoid the bad ones.

          • Magiilaro
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            6 days ago

            The landscape should also have some strong pillars and mountains of hard facts and factual truth. But besides that, yes it sounds like a good mind construct. Interesting idea for sure.

  • Lovable Sidekick
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    27 days ago

    IMO “I don’t know” is a perfectly valid opinion if you just don’t know.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      8 days ago

      Nonetheless we definitely get attached to certain ideas. For various reasons.

      But more than that, getting attached to certain ideas (believing stuff) is widely considered to be normal, right, healthy and necessary.

      So you gotta ask why that is.

      • @[email protected]
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        48 days ago

        You definitely assumed that the message you typed could be understood by a random stranger and be delivered through a series of wires and rocks that can think, and possibly sent over magical waves which cannot be seen. Maybe it’s all just your or my imagination.

    • Riskable
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      28 days ago

      If you don’t know shit you need to eat some real food!

  • YappyMonotheist
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    8 days ago

    So you stand for nothing? You’ve no values? I mean, I guess one doesn’t need to have an ideology to be a hedonistic, consumerist pig, lol, it would get in the way!

      • YappyMonotheist
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        8 days ago

        I mean, I assumed you didn’t believe beliefs were fundamental and important since your whole post consists of being shocked by it, lol. Don’t retreat now, silly man.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          38 days ago

          Your thesis so far consists entirely of trite accusations. You got something with more substance?

          • YappyMonotheist
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            38 days ago

            Thesis? Substance? Do you hold any beliefs, are there any value systems or ideas you appreciate greatly and by which you live by? Or don’t you? Cause if you do, then your initial post is either a bad attempt at comedy or, idk, a social faux pas? Regardless, it’s false, cause you do understand how beliefs are important. And if you don’t, then why do you care? Why did you act out when I said values and ideas get in the way of hedonism and consumerism? It’s not your case, right? That would be shameful, but whatever. And if it is, then at least admit to it the same way you ‘admitted’ not to understand the importance of beliefs, or else it’s double shameful and a certain sign of a silly man.

    • Cosmoooooooo
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      58 days ago

      This asshole thinks that religions and beliefs stop people from being hedonistic, consumerist pigs. lololololol.

      • YappyMonotheist
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        38 days ago

        How do you think you pass over riches, drugs, sex, etc that you can easily acquire one way or another? You don’t cheat on your wife because of your beliefs, you don’t do coke because of your beliefs, you don’t undercut your employees because of your beliefs, etc etc. There literally isn’t any other way to curtail your hedonistic impulses (and other impulses, ofc) but to BELIEVE in something, a sentence or a group of sentences that resound within you at least, that tells you “no, it’s okay, I can hold it in cause if not I’ll regret it later”. It’s either that or, idk, locking yourself up in a room? 😅

        • @[email protected]
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          8 days ago

          I dunno, I’d say people do things like coke, cheat, etc, because of beliefs.

          They have a belief that “it doesn’t matter”.

          But yea, our beliefs, our paradigms, are what help us be better people to each other.

          Hell, science is founded on the belief that the universe is rational, that “God does not play dice with the universe”.

          Studying quantum mechanics makes me wonder otherwise. Nothing about it is rational. Not to say I don’t operate on a day-to-day basis that the underlying framework makes sense, what other choice do we have?

          • YappyMonotheist
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            28 days ago

            If we manage to understand pretty much everything about the universe above the quantum level, I’d consider that a great success for some bipedal primates on the 3rd rock from the Sun, looool. 😁

          • Maeve
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            17 days ago

            They have a belief that “it doesn’t matter”.

            Maybe the belief is that it does matter. Gotta grind beyond what’s normal or healthy for too-long-extended periods. Or be homeless.

        • @[email protected]
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          28 days ago

          Wait, what?? Are you guys walking around holding back a savage animal through raw force of will?

          Like…I’ve done lots of things I regret, but then later I don’t want to do them anymore, because I know it’ll feel bad

          • YappyMonotheist
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            18 days ago

            Why do you feel bad? Are their lives and opinions that important? I know that the human being is kind at his core, of course, but that nature can be easily veiled with enough wrong ideas. The reason for rampant immorality in some places and times is not because the human being is a natural antisocial, solipsistic deviant but because some cultures heavily uphold wrong things and have completely let go of the right ideas.

            • @[email protected]
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              38 days ago

              I feel bad because I’ve made the world worse, or that I’ve disappointed myself. But when circumstances force me to act in ways I find immoral, I just feel disgust

              I want good things for everyone in general, but I’m not some endlessly patient Buddha.

              I just try to understand people through their own eyes… And I try to understand myself too. I feel what they feel, but I can also just walk away

              But it’s not about them, not really.

              It’s about me - who am I? Do I make things better or worse? Do I make people better or worse? If you brought me into a perfect world, would I make that world worse?

              If there were 5 billion of me, what kind of world would it be?

      • @[email protected]
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        58 days ago

        You brought religion into this, and your sophist insults.

        Sounds like someone has a belief and is upset it’s being exposed.

        • Maeve
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          17 days ago

          Strangely enough, we are often able to see each other’s shadow (Jung), and not our own.