Hey guys!
I am planning another video for my final report.
The topic for this one is corruption in religion. This topic is fueled by a reading for another class
(The book is called WTF?, and it is fantastic. Ultimate Kudos to that professor for this book).
Anyways, the first section discusses the use of less-than-adequate punishments back in medieval times. Specifically, they discussed the use of drowning people and burning people. I.e. If you're guilty, you'll float. If you hand burns after being in scalding water, you're guilty. Completely rigged system! But the priests who prepared these punishments could and would sometimes help the person pass the test. Whether it be instructing them on how to sink for a certain amount of time or by purposely lowering the temperature of the water by giving the longest sermon ever known to man, so it was bearable by the time the person submerged their hand.
The point is: At what point does religiosity wear off and humanity take over? That's my question
While this book is an inspiration for this topic, I will be pulling from many sources as it is a very intriguing topic to me, and I want to discuss as much as possible.
Among the topics to be discussed:
Buying pardons(Think Canterbury Tales)
Injustice(Looking at you Claude Frollo)
Manipulation of Children (That nighttime prayer is the creepiest thing I've ever heard)
Obviously, I will discuss many more sources with these top three, but I'd love to hear your guys' thoughts as I develop my outline for this report.
"At what point does religiosity wear off and humanity take over?" Somebody once said it's only religion that can drive a good person to perpetrate evil (or words to that effect). It's not literally true, but it does pose the dichotomy you're suggesting: humanity vs. religion. In fairness, of course, there have been great humanitarians who were also religious. Nonetheless, the notion that believing in something infinite and transcendent can numb people to their human connections and thus incite inhumanity is compelling. It's one of the implications I draw from Hagglund's book.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to your report.
Is this "WTF?: What's the Future and Why It's Up to Us" by Tim O'Reilly, "Silicon Valley’s leading intellectual"? (And is that moniker the result of a poll conducted among Silicon Valley intellectuals? Or is it the author's own self-description?)
DeleteIt is not. It is WTF?! An Economic Tour of the Weird by Peter T. Leeson.
ReplyDeleteIt is the author's own description as he discusses old practices that make us say "WTF?!" Very interesting book.