That is simply wrong. There is no proof of the collective unconscious. It was Jungs theory, but nothing supports the theory.
Psychology is arguably the softest of the "soft sciences." Even economists can claim to be more rigorous in their application of the scientific method. So no, there is insufficient evidence to prove the archetypal model
beyond a reasonable doubt, which is the standard required to
promote a hypothesis to a theory. (When scientists casually throw around misleading terms like "string theory" they are destroying their own credibility and inviting the followers of the Religious Redneck Retard Revival to say, "well shit, evolution is only a theory, so it might not be true.") Nonetheless, there is enough evidence to make Jung's hypothesis worth studying. Why do the same motifs occur over and over again in almost every society and every era? Even our languages are less stable than that.
There are however many physical aspects of our brains and psyches (which I won't go into) that provide a fruitful place to make up gods, but we ARE NOT born with them.
It sounds like you accept the concept of archetypes as instincts, and we're just quibbling over the precise nature of the archetypes. That's fine, I'm not going to argue over whether the 23 gods are innate in our synapses or are second-order constructs that evolve from them.
Same as I don't believe in your B.S. about primordial soup , I am not attacking you belief. You are happy your way , let us be happy our way.
I can't speak for everyone but that would be fine with me. My problem is that, at least in the USA, the "born-again" Christians cannot stand to let us (or Muslims or Jews or Hindus or anybody else)
be happy our way. They believe they have a mandate from God to
save us from hell by teaching us to accept Jesus Christ into our hearts, and if we won't accept him we are doing such irreparable, eternal harm to our "souls" that they are justified in using extremely offensive tactics to "save us." They insist that the United States is a
Christian nation and therefore aggressive evangelism is their
Constitutional right.
Is not Dawkins your priest ?
He's certainly not
my priest! I think he's an insufferable asshole and I despise the bastard. He gives atheists a bad name! It's one thing for us atheists to be rude to religionists here on SciForums because this is a place of science and scholarship where religionists can expect to be attacked. But to go out in the mainstream and be rude to them is something quite different. He's not an American so he has no mandate to respect freedom of religion, but we do because it's a fundamental right. I would never publish a book with the kind of rhetoric I use on this website. Not only would it be un-American (arguably, since we hold freedom of speech just as sacred as freedom of religion and the two rights often conflict), but it would make the majority of Americans think I'm an asshole.
Unfortunately, you are not representative of all religious people.
Certainly not in the USA. He is representative of
the majority of religious Americans, who don't go around insulting atheists. But there is a rather large
minority (the Religious Redneck Retard Revival to which I referred earlier includes millions of people in the "Bible Belt" and many more all over the country) who are very Dawkins-like in their evangelism.
I do not agree with your so called consensus. Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism are not "religions" by your yard stick. They are called Dharmas, which does not translate into religion.
Every time a Hindu explains Hinduism he or she always says that they believe in a god, and that it's the same god that Abrahamists and other religious people believe in, and that everyone just sees him/her differently and gives him/her a different name. Never have I seen or heard a Hindu claim that you can be an atheist and still be a Hindu, the way it is very nearly possible to be an atheist and still be a Jew as long as you obey Judaic Law.
Obviously these days there are "secular Hindus" the same way there are "secular Christians" and "secular Jews," but that's stretching the definition of the name. They hang onto the traditions, celebrate the festivals, and extract the morality from the faith, but they leave out the supernatural aspect. This is philosophy, this is culture, but
it's not religion.
You may be unaware of this, but being a religion allows you to not pay taxes. Thus if simple clever tricks could get a non-religion religious status, people would be doing that left and right. (One could argue that Scientology was just that - a clever dodge to avoid paying taxes on something that was barely a religion to begin with.)
That's hardly controversial, unless you're talking to a Scientologist! L. Ron Hubbard was both a science fiction author who wrote about an imaginary group of space travelers called the "Thetans," and the founder of a self-help methodology called "Dianetics." He combined the two into a rather preposterous set of legends and principles which he named "Scientology" and presented it as a religion. He was clever enough to make it look very much like a real religion (all of which are, after all, pretty damned preposterous!) and he was lucky enough to have the government approve his application.
The difference between atheism and Buddhism is that Buddhism is a religion and atheism is the absence of religion.
I beg your pardon. My wife is a Buddhist and neither she nor any of her fellow American Buddhists believe in any supernatural creatures, forces or other phenomena. The writings I have read by Buddhists from other countries are quite similar. They do not discount the possibility of a supernatural universe, but they await proof of its existence and do not generally factor it into their philosophy. There are a few things in it that a rigorous scientific atheist might object to, but the Americans, at least, say those are just metaphors, which are a rich resource for any philosophy.
Most people, including the writers of dictionaries . . . . split no hairs between the degrees of "supernatural" inherent in (or contaminating) various belief systems commonly and universally classified as religions.
Excuse me, but as the Linguistics Moderator I must correct you and point out that the vast majority of American dictionary definitions of "religion" prominently include belief in the supernatural, particularly in a god or gods, in the first or second line. If there's no god, it really isn't very much of a religion, and if there's no supernaturalism at all, it's simply not a religion at all. Period.
If you have a system with monks and temples and some ritualistic insistence on charity, kindness, etc, almost everyone is going to call that a religion.
Sure, and Americans routinely say things like "rock and roll is my religion" or "baseball is our national religion."
Can you say
"metaphor"?
Ah you sure bout that . I think I have heard a mythologies about Einstein. Maybe you could just call them exaggerations about his life . He is a bigger than life personality if you ask Me.
My favorite is that he once halted a conference and said, "You'll have to excuse me for fifteen minutes. 'Time for Beanie' is on."
The puppets Beanie and Cecil were two of the most beloved characters on American TV in the early 1950s, and "Time for Beanie" was one of the most popular children's shows precisely because a lot of adults watched it.