Saturday 27th of April 2024

follow me to the gate of nothing...

hell...


street art in Newtown, Sydney...

Melbourne is gearing up to host the Global Atheist Convention, where for three days a coterie of the faithless will urge each other on in their collective scepticism. The most famous proponents of a godless universe will be there - Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris and Daniel Dennett - but this time, sadly, the most engaging and entertaining of them, Christopher Hitchens, won't.
The convention seeks to ''Celebrate Reason'', which seems, well, reasonable enough. We all need something substantial on which to make our judgments, and according to those attending, it's the clear thinkers, those unencumbered by superstition and religious nonsense, who are most likely to arrive at the truth.

blah blah blah... In conclusion:

But Plantinga's thesis might prompt those in the ''all religion is delusional'' camp to approach vital questions of human existence with measured consideration of the alternatives - something beyond naked contempt. That, surely, is a reasonable request.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/society-and-culture/faith-in-the-infallibility-of-the-mind-is-the-atheists-delusion-20120411-1ws4j.html#ixzz1rrxL34Rb

Gus: I won't be going to that atheist convention... Mainly because there is no such thing as collective scepticism of sort and there is no need for a convention to celebrate reason. Reason should be a daily activity. But for some people — being a famous priest like the pope — a convention of association about the non-existence of god helps pay the bills... Meanwhile, whomever wrote the garbage above doesn't know zip... or he knows zip about atheists. Actually his name is Simon Smart (of all names) and the piece is titled — probably by a mischievous editor, I guess, to counteract "the God Delusion" written by Dawkins: — "Faith in the infallibility of the mind is the atheist delusion"... 

I rest my case. 

Well not quite yet because you may not have noted the irony within. 

Rule number one, the atheist does not have faith in the infallibility of the mind... unlike the popes who believe in the infallibility of their silly dictums that come from wearing silly hats and burning ballot papers, while rejecting women. Unlike fanatics of any religious persuasion, atheists do not have "faith". Thus any reasoned atheist would be appalled at this other bit of garbage written by Simon Smart:

"Believing in human rationality is quite rational within a theistic world view, but not so in an atheistic framework."

Rubbish, rubbish, rubbish, all non-rational rubbish!... I wrote this in the same vein as Bossuet preached "vanity, vanity, vanity, all is vanity!"...

How can one believe in human rationality under a theist world view? This does not make any sense at all. Any theistic belief will interfere with the quest to understand rationally. The wrong goddamn answer will always be in the background of the investigation.
And Simon's propensity to quote Plantinga seems to be a bit intelligent design-ish, to me... 

Yeah, see what Plantinga has to say for himself:

Like any Christian (and indeed any theist), I believe that the world has been created by God, and hence "intelligently designed." The hallmark of intelligent design, however, is the claim that this can be shown scientifically; I'm dubious about that. ...As far as I can see, God certainly could have used Darwinian processes to create the living world and direct it as he wanted to go; hence evolution as such does not imply that there is no direction in the history of life. What does have that implication is not evolutionary theory itself, but unguided evolution, the idea that neither God nor any other person has taken a hand in guiding, directing or orchestrating the course of evolution. But the scientific theory of evolution, sensibly enough, says nothing one way or the other about divine guidance. It doesn't say that evolution is divinely guided; it also doesn't say that it isn't. Like almost any theist, I reject unguided evolution; but the contemporary scientific theory of evolution just as such—apart from philosophical or theological add-ons—doesn't say that evolution is unguided. Like science in general, it makes no pronouncements on the existence or activity of God.[47]

 


Okay, let's take the plunge from 10,000 feet above to down here: "guided evolution" does not make any sense... Our corner of the universe is about 14 billion years old, our sun is nearly six billion years old and our planet is about 4.5 billion years old... The universe is expanding at a rate of knots...


If we were creationists, we would challenge the value and specific relationship of these figures to fit a 6000 years of the world and human existence with Noah's ark as the centre piece on the coffee table...  That's a completely goddist delusion.


If we're adherent to "intelligent design, we're impotent to note there are too many flaws in the universe and on our own small planet as well for this to be an intelligent construct. That's another complete goddist delusion.


Anyway, all the prospicious accidental "creation" since "day-dot" led to the evolution of a bipedus monkey about 3 million years ago that we call homo erectus to eventually lead to the homo cleverus (sapiens) monkey that we are today. And there were some notable failures on the way: Homo Neanderthalis and a few others on this recent line of homo "evolution"... There were also other species and groups of species, such as the dinosaurs, whose evolutionary line but disappeared in a flash (it took more than a million years for the dinosaurs to become extinct though) apart from a few remnants in birds and their far cousins such as crocs and lizards... And humans were not there then...


So according to the result, it appears that for the theists, their god — or gods — would have experimented in evolution rationale until it/she/he/they got it right... Well not quite right: humans are really unfinished uncouth farting beasts with a more complicated brain than a goldfish, but that's about it. Hence the concept of the original sin being wheeled in for good measure... Blimey! Who do they think we are? Dummies?... Sure...


Unguided evolution is far more rational in this context than having an all whatever god fiddling with himself out of boredom and producing massively imperfect creatures swimming in a massively too huge relative universe ballooning like exploding baggy pants... Our relationship to our immediate environment is bleedingly obvious, though most species on this earth have no specific intimate relationship with us — humans — us of the superior intellect, the intellect we suspect we have. That "superior" intellect gives us thick ankles — a euphemism to explain that we think we're shit-hot... We believe we're fallen angels rather than fumbling monkeys... I ask you...


Hey? What is wrong with a bit of progressive randomity in evolution? Nothing. What is wrong with a "guided" evolution? Everything! It does not make any sense at all... The intent, the purpose, the end game are completely illogical. 


That a god spent a lot of his perfection to create imperfection and give us the task to climb the ladder of pseudo-perfection to claim an eternal seat at an eternal banquet makes as much sense as the theory of nothing. 


But this sneaky concept of salvation is very attractive though... many people fall for it. It's easy to believe.  We live in the "age of Deceit"... We're swimin' in deceit...


There's the trap! Humans still in their pyjamas, are luring themselves with the comfortable concept of eternity to dismiss a relative world in which as individuals we spend on average 77 years alive and that's it... So we have to find a rational for the "that's it" factor... We invent a lure: god. 

 

But in this invention we have also to find a reason to explain the imperfections of our imperfect world created by a perfect god: The infirm, the sick, the mad, the destruction, the aggression, the stupid, the "natural" disasters... Thus we invent the "evil", the devil, a nasty creature (born from god, nothing less) that we associate with the darkness, while we associate the light with god... Gooodo... All very reassuring, but totally false and completely ignoramus of reality. The illusion of god, yaweh, allah or whatever is only our silly reassurance against... whatever difficulty life is throwing at us, from the moment we exist... We have to manage pain... Reality can be painful... But we socially streamline our performance in order to define our "social" duties to develop better comforts... We are a social species — we depend on one another for survival, stylistic and basic — and getting more so together as we augment our numbers on this planet. In order for this social structure to sustain or thrive, we need to more-than-less be able to be kind to "others" of our kind, until we snap. But our social duties, humanistic duties, do not have to be derived from a silly belief. Yet silly beliefs can help tame the beasts: Santa Claus knows whether we've been good or bad and presies should come accordingly... I wish.


Meanwhile WE ( too many of us) DON'T WANT TO KNOW the non-spiritual relative reality... Because... it's hard not to have a belief of some "superior being" dictating our behaviour and it's bloody hard to be 100 per cent responsible for what we are and do. So we don't want to know the REAL world...


Well this statement is relative of course, some people, including scientists, are working hard at finding out the bits that increase our rational knowledge, from black holes, atoms to quarks and other bizos — but it's a hard slog... As soon as we invent a purpose or an intent, outside the relative rational values of what we observe, our understanding crashes because we don't want to accept the non-purpose of it all.


And that is the key, my key. The key for many atheists... Atheists don't have faith in anything, including the infallibility of the mind... We can create our own purpose to suit a relative moment and we can be wrong, but, hell, never as wrong as the goddists are...


From the first amino-acids in the soup in which chemical reactions complexed the amino acids into proteins, bits self-created ways "to be-and-not-be". RNA, DNA... More complexities developed the process further. An accidental but necessary ability for this process to survive was to feel and react to the environment, an ability that relatively defined evolution and devolution. The bits that could "survive" their amino-acid line character in a changing environment of this little planet were adapting to these changes. Many other lines of bits did not make it... This reactivity of "life" and the environment CHANGED THE ENVIRONMENT as well. The early atmosphere of the Earth would have been poisonous to us, while for some species, say, sulphur dioxide would have been food.


Life in the soup we now call "the sea" thus started probably before 3.6 billions years ago... It had many evolutionary and devolutionary trends... Self-destruction included. Those lines that survived best made it, still with the individual "be-and-not-be" timeline ingrained in the process, while those lines of complexity that did not adapt or those that "did devolution" became extinct... Life became about change and adaptation to change... Modification of energy and specific constructs of matter... Awareness of individuals in their space-time position IS NOT NECESSARY but it can help... It took a billion years to first self-complex the structural process at monocellullar level. After that it became more complex as it entered the construct of multicellular organisms.  Changes in the environment (from within or outside the individuals of the line of species, including cosmic changes) would instil a new step, either favourable to survival or not. 


The process involves the fabrication and acquisition of other amino acids and proteins to continue. Should there be no "food" available and the process "dies"...  Thus there is a chain of event, in which "life as a whole" (if there is such a thingy — there could have been several original life-lines of amino-acids) has to "sacrifice" individuals of some species in order for individuals of other species to survive their "be-and-not-be" timeline. Of course there is no intent in the "sacrifice", just a process of whomever/whatever that can survive, will take over other's proteins — and those who become fodder are fodder but these can defend themselves by becoming "numerous".


We know of the complexity of genes, that are in themselves very strong chemical structures that possess this individual "be-and-not-be" trend. We know how genes specify and eventually deteriorate as they copy themselves to grow an individual's complex structure. We know too that cancerous cells have lost (or never gained) the "not-be" part of the genetic make-up... But this "eternal" property creates havoc. The cells survive well but the finely tuned structure disintegrate as these "cancerous cells do not have the ability to create a defined structure, just a "blob". Nonsensical development takes over. We know by precise observation that cancerous cells lack the terminators at the ends of their genes. While normal cells have only a limited duplicating "life" (x 50 approx) because the terminators eventually induce self-degeneration (not-be), the cancer cells can divide ad infinitum without structural needs — as long as "food is available".  Planet earth was lucky that cells developed the "be-and-not-be" conundrum, otherwise the planet "be" would be now known as planet "Blob".


Involved in the process of surviving are many molecules and at any point in time the chemical processes can go "wrong" though in general they are extremely hard-wired to maintain a line of powerful integrity in the repeat (construction of another/others) of chemical individuals. 

The sexuation of species came early in the sea as complexity cannot (couldn't) develop beyond a certain point in simple duplication of cells. There was no need for this "evolutionary step", except that IT HAPPENED... chemical circumstances made it happen.


Before this separation of reproductive "purpose", there were also sympathetic alliance between various cellular species. The mitochondrion in eucaryotic cells, for example has been though to be from a different species that found a host for the benefit of the host and of itself and developed an important role as power producer within the cells... In plants the mitochondrion is often non existent and  the role of power-plant for the cell is provided by chlorophyll, another possible "alien" to the original cell...


One of the major development in this context is the ability of complex individuals in many lines of evolution (including plants) to feel and react with the environmental factors. This leads also to speciation where individuals of the same species recognise each other to a point, and reject other species for procreation, relatively. But the animal kingdom in which a centralised nervous system of feel and reactive action has also developed a sense of "being" by memory. Awareness of "being" is the delta of memory of "events"... Many animals are aware of their existence — and most will do anything in their relative power to protect this awareness. Hunger is part of memory, for example...


Memory-complex helps store reactive behaviour to specific environmental factors. Humans are the same. Our memory eventually defines whom we think we are. But as I have mentioned many times before, our memory processing power is bigger than our survival need. This gives us quite a bit too much slack — the ability of stylistic creative thought, including lies such as invention of religious beliefs. 


When our memory looses its ability to be above a certain level of performance, we become less able to take care of ourselves. We know this too well. And then we die. That's life.


There is no shame in having been and be gone forever. That's being an atheist.

 

the religion of sex...

religion and sex....

Street art in Newtown, Sydney

 

The American presidential elections are on.... What are the most debated topics? Religion and sex... The religion of sex, in packages ranging from condoms, RU pills, contraception and abortion. Then there is the gay conundrum and women in their place in the religious order... All about sex and control of reproduction... Every so often, the pope himself enters the fray and posts edicts that say "stop it or you'll go blind" or something like that... Religion has an unhealthy relationship with sex in general, and a few priests with kids in particular. 


As a species we, humans (Homo sapiens sapiens), are reasonably good at taking care of ourselves as a group. We often need this social interaction to survive, yet most of what we do socially can be deemed totally unnecessary. 

In general, apart from a few struggling groups (those living in abject poverty and hunger), we provide systems of survival that, despite their many flaws, take care of our general individual well-being. There are three main characteristics to this care — common to most species — : Environment (shelter), food and reproduction...

Shelter and food are the subject of our evolved industrious nature and usually well taken care of — albeit with some regulation on safety and some controversial issues such as global warming. 

But reproduction is a more contentious issue. Sex is still anchored in our animalistic desires to copulate and we have not managed to fully accept it for what it is, nor the pleasures associated with it. Medically, "unregulated or unprotected" sex can transmit some nasty diseases... On top of this, or before this, religions and morality have worked hard in putting the lid on the issue, principally by suppressing sex, except for reproduction, exclusively. Rare pleasure indeed...

There is a big tug of war between religion and sex. Religion is mostly about the control of sex. Of course religion uses other not so subtle philosophical implants to hide this premise. Death is inevitable so religions use the lure of eternal life to controls behaviour, which, in short, is mostly about repressing sex.

Thoughts of sex are deemed impure in most religions, especially in the Abrahamic religions. They have an underlying resonance with the expulsion of humanity from the garden of Eden — a well known fable, rehashed in the "sacred" books and bashed into our brains until submission — a silly imaginary fable that is enforced by priestly con-artists, to be the reality or an interpretation of the reality — as we'd like to stop ourselves from understanding our true origins. We'd rather be fallen angels rather than being evolving monkeys... Thus, while our secular activities allow a certain freedom of sexual activity and acceptance of of our animalistic ancestry, most of this is strongly repressed by the morality police, officers who are disguised as priests, rabbis and Imams with fingers pointing to the sky as if it was god.

For example it is ludicrous that under the umbrella of religious beliefs we accept the exploding glories of war, the ideals of defeating the decreed enemy or killing the infidels, with gory pictures of blood and spears through the hearts and decapitations. Such horror is even "enjoyed" as fun in our entertainment moments such as those provided by the box in programs of "police/army/spies VS VILLAINS. Yet we cannot show pictures of breast-feeding on "Facebook" (http://www.tera.ca/photos7.html). We will accept pictures of female monkeys breast-feeding their young, though... or sows, or dogs feeding an army of pups... and we say "how lovely". The human nipple seems to have an association with the devil, as decreed by the religious nuts... And the more we repress the naturalness of our beings, including seeing female nipples in action of purpose, we end up with reinforcing the concept of "impure" thoughts. Nothing impure about nature. But this concept can be used for profits by those who sell powered milk after a decree that feeding babies from tits is unhealthy...

Of course, not every human is at the same stage of development or decline from life and thus, there are "regulation" in regard to age for the young ones to be introduced to the sexual thought — and oodles of "helping toys" for the oldies. Some of us need a bit of porn or a little blue pill to perform and we need to pay attention to the different "needs" of our partner. Some may like to indulge is sexual activity more often than others. Subconsciously implanted by religious rectums, some of these needs may be felt as "sinful"...

I accept that the human body is not the best looking of all the animal kingdom... On average, we're not a pretty lot. Not all of us are Greek statues, muscle men or Roman goddesses... or Arnold, back in the 1980s... But this should not stop us from enjoying each other's company or sharing moments of bliss — sexual moments or sheer companionship. But sexual bliss outside very strict parameters is often presented to us as ugly, sinful and shameful. Porn and sexual toys are deemed evil.

When Prince Charles was forbidden to marry "the love of his life" and had to marry Princess Diana instead. The religious and the royalty mobs aligned each others' need for control into a forced tinselled pageant. All about tits and bums of the blue blood variety... Lucky, the resulting kids came up good enough, but the whole affair was sordid despite the pomp designed to woo the masses in which many individuals secretly still dream of their own prince charming or damsel in distress. let's face it, too many relationships are not as sparkly as they should be. Relationships vacillate or are already in the gutter... The end of princess Diana was a shocker, with nasty innuendoes attached... 

Sexual bliss blended to the idea of sin is destructive. Meanwhile the old young Prince Charles has decided should he become king, he would not be "the keeper of the faith" but "the keeper of faiths"... a bit of grammar in the making, trying to be the big cheese of all religious beliefs. Too many big shoes to fill... Presently he's the grand master of the Pommy Free-Masons... The old young prince has now married "the love of life" who could now by decree become queen while back then when he was not allowed to marry her because she'd already had sexual intercourse with another man... Royalty is (was) about powerful alliance via dicks...

Now, conservative religious America is fighting with all its might to make sure sex is restricted with the religious dictum: No to condom, no to the pill, no to abortion even if you've been "fucked by the devil himself" (raped) and no to "fun-sex". No to viagra? No to IVF?... In the same breath, the same conservative religious America is also fighting science harder than ever against the theory of evolution and against the theory of climate change...

It's ugly. The fight is inevitably getting stronger between the atheists and the religious extremists, mostly the Christian extremists... Even in "broadminded Europe, humanists' desire for secular public service is cut down to size by the set-ups of religious zealots.

Why? (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b9Tu_R_EiLA&feature=player_embedded)

I've got a theory and I may be wrong and but here it is...

A third factor that has entered the equation. The Islamisation of parts of Europe, and of the US, seems to slowly change the future of these societies at large... 

There is fear of change...

It has been discovered that in England about 6,000 primary school students going to private Muslim schools are being taught (in extra-curriculum time) sharia law as the law for them to follow, exclusively in the future. The "school books" used for this indoctrination come officially from the kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and represent the Wahhabi style of Islamic beliefs. Since the "education" is done outside the school time, the UK department of education can do little to "check the value of the books and information used in this process". 

Managing to obtain some of these "hidden sacred" books used to teach kids from under six years old, the UK education department was taken aback by the instructions contained within. The books directly teach the enforcement of sharia law in detail. For example, subjects like how to deals with robbers by cutting the hands of such and cutting the feet for second offences. There are graphic images and detailed instructions on how to perform such "sharia" surgery. Imagine six year old kids learning this stuff... Sure when I was at this early age, many moons ago, gory martyrdom in the catholic church was promoted as a glorious performance. But it was promoting a self-sacrifice in which there was "redemption" and one victim only — the self — while in the Muslim sharia law there is only harsh sadistic punishment of others, of those who break the law — which to say the least is often only a slight moral trespass in other cultures...

In these books, adultery and homosexuality are simply dealt with obligatory death. No excuses, no redemption... Offences, punishment and application of punishment are what the kids are taught in this religious framework. Beyond this forceful teaching, the young kids are also indoctrinated that it's okay to kill infidels or people who do not believe in the Quo-ran...

Am I making this up?... I wish I was... It's a chapter in our present history we need to strongly deal with secular laws. But how long have we got before this indoctrination becomes fully ingrained in the social moires of our secular societies? Sure not all Muslim are such religious fanatics, but it's often a question of proportion and the proportion of fanatics. Catholics and muslims can only grow poorer in this push for delirious supremacy. Glenn Beck for example, considering himself a religious man, is in favour of genital mutilation if they are part of religious rituals... He is totally against the secular views that wish to stop this kind of religious freedom... any religious freedom... What about killing the infidels? Or what about the powerful and sneakily developed control of men over women... All this comes back to sex and enforcing sexual inequality in religious communities. The pill, condoms and abortion are devil's work in the church teachings. A secular organisation of society has to draw a line in the sand before we all loose out.

It is to be said here that secularists do not have "rituals"... No bar mitzvah, no praying five times a day with the arse pointing to the sky as a mark of respect to a god looking down on us, no confession for masturbating, no changing wine into blood... 

For example, in regard to young people, "coming of age" is a young person's transition from childhood to adulthood. The age at which this transition takes place may vary in societies. In many societies, such change is the subject of a ritual, associated with the age of sexual maturity; in others, it is associated with an age of religious responsibility. In most western societies, modern legal conventions stipulate at which point adolescents are generally no longer considered minors and are granted the full rights of an adult. Too early, this is often a mistake, as adolescents only become fully responsibly aware at around 25 years of age as attested by university research and insurance empirical data.... Many cultures retain some ceremonies to confirm the coming of age, and some benefits come with the change. At the end of "schoolies" for example, the new rituals is for adolescents to go on binge drinking on the Gold Coast and some may have sexual experience that they won't remember the next day...

Secularists have nothing much to offer in this department as religions have highjacked the concept by creating illogical paradigms, impressive rituals in buildings with arcane decorations. It would be worthwhile for secularists or humanists to develop some specific non-religious "passages" from birth to death. At the moment, most of the laws are based on religious activity controlling the passages. But I do not like Alain de Botton's concept of "religion of atheism". I know it's a cute way to challenge the mind-crap, but it does not. It contradicts itself from the start despite the expansion of this concept that "religion has got some good part" so let's keep the good bits and throw out the rest to "religionise atheism". It's a silly concept. Atheism does not need the good bits of religion.

Nor does sex needs the imprimatur of religion... Sex existed way before religion came along...

 

the age of divertissement...

 

When human first became organized in groups, a loop of non-productive functions and purposeful activities developed in a blurred tandem — itself growing from activities needed for survival and activities that were not necessary for survival... In the early construct of this social intra-behavior, a culture of "entertainment and rituals" would have grown somewhat fast to allay fears about the world around, explain the unexplainable with plausible stories and "spend idle time" with something to do collectively or individually... Thus stylistic activities were generated without a direct primary need and became the hallmark of our species. 

These stylistic activities would have complexed the language, and one can imagine camp fires with people telling "yarns" of recalling evens of the day, with some increasingly developed embellishment... Recall of past events and past stories would have led to a relative acceptance of belief in what was being told — adding to the new spin. 

Our brain paste — disguised as our memory — is more powerful than what we need for survival... This faculty developed over a couple of million years possibly through having been immersed in this loop of tall tales — but more likely we had to be cleverer to survive in the wild while being a weaker species, thus our memory developed beyond its original natural flux in the next natural level of bullshit... This might have been the birth of imagination, the visualisation of tools and actions to achieve a purpose (necessary or not) — and the memorisation of such in the social and individual contexts, via communication. Thus, when the battle against nature was relatively won in the relative environment of the group, imagination became a greater tool of relationship beyond instincts, beyond simple food gathering...

Some people might have been clever enough to bullshit knowingly then, the bullshit became gospel for others. The group and individuals would have discovered there was some value in some lies on several levels... This would have been the progressive jump between the "age of deception" to catch a prey into "the age of deceit" to fools ourselves and each others for comfort... Comfort being an imagination leap from basic contentment in a cave, which leads to the construct of devices to make our life less of a struggle. 

The bullshit was of course used to manage the growing awareness of space and time in which angst and the fear of the cosmic unknown — a value not directly relevant to survival — becomes overpowering in an imagining — now creative — mind... And not all stories were bullshit either. 

As societies increased in size, the need to access resources became paramount. Thus what best way to acquire things by either steal stuff from another social group — or do some nifty exchange in which the values become weird and wonderfully idiotic: pretty shells for roots. Yes, because, with time on their hands, some people decided to "adorn" their self with glittering stuff such as shells... This was critical in the development of the importance of values — a relatively alien concept in most of the natural environment, apart from the coats and feathers of beasts of distinction, and some male birds that are hoarders of blue plastic bits to impress a female.

Items that were not necessary for survival became the most prized for their ways to enhance beauty and importance. The interactive symbiosis between all these activities, thus led those with the most with decoration to become the most attractive or more powerful... In conjuction with this decoration, the ideas and the stories of creation would have merged with the value of the bangles.

Eventually tired of roaming the place as hunters and gatherers, it became niftier for the group to make some of the low-valued members hard-toil the earth and get bumper crops...

Today the same elegant bullshit applies. 

Our camp fire is shaped like a teevee screen. About 60 per cent of families watch the box while having dinner. I am surprised here that the TV is not a hot cooking plate as well. Mind you some TV screens are used to show a bon-fire when not in reception mode... 

The low-valued participants do not participate in the ritual giving but are caught in the absorption of what is thrown at them, like monkeys in a zoo, catching peanuts... We are not valued in what we can contribute at this instant but in what we can buy in the next five minutes... In rare instances we will complain and use the remote to switch station and watch some program more inane that the previous show or play a game of violence with joy-sticks. Meanwhile, when the siren starts or the clock ticks, we've got to "work" — that is we create something of agreed value to exchange for food, shelter and more roots.

Welcome to the divertissement society...

This is only a very short summary of 3 million years of human's evolution of the need to believe in what we do, in which the knowledge of stuff is basic and often erroneous in the explanation, though quite accurate in the sense of observable repeats, such as noticing the seasons.

In our more complexed social groups, these days, there is still a huge gamut of erroneous beliefs in order to deal with our existence in our "age of deceit"... In order to maintain these beliefs, we have oodles of mechanisms from news bulletins to religious ritual that keep our beliefs and glory on track whether they are correct or not...

The campfire story telling has been replaced by a vast quantity of stuff from TeeVee to internet and cinema, where the story technological delivery has become hugely complex but, often, the story lines are still fairly basic — and mostly rely on our ability to deceive...

To some extend, Aboriginal story telling is far more complex than western story telling, not so much because, in our western stories, we know the characters and most of the outcomes, but the sense of "our" stories is mostly based on a duality between the "good and evil" way of life — in which the devilish porkie is defeated, yet has to come back in the next story — otherwise we'd run out of things to say. Religion came in thus with more complex rituals and reinforced silly beliefs to streamline the moral compass of the group (religion and sex — see article above)... Our imagination created such lies as Adam and Eve and other stories that we still believe in because it's the "tradition".

Aboriginal story telling is more complex, and involve characters that often do-not have a good-and-evil side but a creation spirit(s) without intent and with complex event story line where the "accident" of creation and death is underlying the story. What happened happened, no reason for this to be so, except for the process. This in some way is far more existentialist than western/arabic religious gabble, even if the stories can be "scientifically" wrong...

Not that existentialism means living like Aboriginal people. There are many dynamics and paradigm in which the complexity of various knowledge mix into various culture, and various culture mix within a particular group such as "multiculturalism" in countries...

Our search for comfort as well as knowledge and entertainment has led to the world we live in now... In Avatar, for which I rightly bagged Miranda Devine for her assessment, the plot is still a western plot of "good versus evil".  Miranda did not like the way the evil and good sides were chosen to covertly depict Yankeedom versus Sweet Savages on planet "Nothinium" (is my memory playing a trick?).... In fact the problem with the movie lies mostly in the simplistic succession of events, the corny dialogue and the schematic development of the story in favor of massive special effects that are there to dazzle us rather than show a proper conflict where real pain is felt and real blood is oozing. 

May be I did not watch it in 3D...

For example the US soldiers in afghanistan showing off with bits of blown up suicide bombers is gruesome, yet this is part of our cycle of news — our official deception channels, in which our side is depicted as glorious while the other side depicted as savages... And where the exception of event, such as a murder in XCross and the whole of town is a dangerous place...

Cringe and conqueror's boasts. The teevee exception make the rules: a person is shown flaunting the entitlements, thus all entitlements are bad — or everyone is rorting the system... Pox.


Of the need for fantasy... and/or believe

Science can tell us a lot of things... from quarks to biomechanics. But in general we have problems accepting the complexity of these processes. In our mind are remnants of the necessity to instantly decide who-did-what, as a reassuring value of our worth... We don't like swimming in uncertainty, even if it is the correct attitude. We need to delude ourselves.... We need Punch and Judy...

In aboriginal culture, there are many narratives on how the universe was formed and how animals became the rocks. There is also some narrative about the sea rising and invading the Arafura plain between Australia and new Guinea, an event recorded as an act of creation, that can also be associated with the rainbow serpent. This event happened around 12,000 to 10,000 years ago as the "big melt" of the last ice age. This also relates to Noah's ark of course but, there in the bible, the story has been embellished beyond bullshit. 
In Indian culture there are a few gods involved in the cycle of life and death. Vishnu... These are our interpretation of life. Of all of these interpretation, science is the closest to reality, but the least "reassuring" or "purposeful" for our little brains. We want certainty of purpose, we want gods and ultimately we invent one or two or three. 

In the next instalment of this "come with me to the gate of nothing", we will look in details to the way we con-struct our deceptions for comfort in some subjects already tackled and flattened on this site — including this dissertation:
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