Selaphiel
Well-known member
Not really. Religion has a pretty well documented history.
Religion is a useless umbrella term that really means very little unless further specified. So no, religion does not have a well documented history in that sense, because it is meaningless to throw together world views and doctrines that differ so wildly from each other in under one term and then refer to the history of what that term signifies.
The histories of the religions are not clear either, you can at best argue for ambiguity, which means that your statement of what religion does to people in this case is rather vacuous. You end up with the same nonsense as Hitchens, namely that religion "poisons everything", but to make that actually seem coherent he had to deny that for example Martin Luther King Jr. or Dietrich Bonhoeffer were actually Christians (which is borderline insane) as well as defining Stalin and Hitler as religious. So what he really did with that horrendous book, was to define religion as evil by defining evil as religion.
Belief in gods and adherence to religious doctrines and dogma.
Religion is an adherence to religious doctrines, that is a bit circular. That is like saying politics is adherence to political doctrines. It seems to me that it would matter what those doctrines actually are. The doctrines of Aztec human sacrifice does not have very much in common with the Buddhist doctrine of karma or reincarnation, with the doctrine of the trinity or the two natures of Christ or with the five pillars of Islam, to lump them together in under some umbrella term and then use that term as an explanation seems utterly meaningless to me.
I have to ask, what on earth do I as a Christian or a Buddhist monk have in common with these terrorists? That we all adhere to a set of doctrines? That is so vague that it is utterly meaningless. Doctrine simply means teaching, you adhere to doctrines as well (implicitly at least).
Never said they didn't.
It seems to be implicit when you explain these heinous actions with "It sucks what religion does to people.". Your explanation of terrorist acts is religion, whatever that means in this context.
Religion gives people one more reason to hate each other, which leads to acts like these. Take away the religion and I can't think of any reason why these guys would attack a satirical paper. Only through the lens of religion does it make any sense at all.
Then you do not have a very good understanding of geopolitics Im afraid. They did indeed attack these people because they mocked the prophet, but if you think that is the end of the explanation, then you are rather naive. Islam acts as a unifying cultural identifier for these people. They attack them because for them they symbolize what they see as western oppression of their culture and society. The origin of their hatred is not religion or even Islam per se, it is what they perceive as oppression.