Is Religion an Essential Scaffolding for Morality?
If morality is assigned
to the whole of humanity, the subject matter would be so vast that this
pea-sized brain cannot handle it. But, if morality is to be taken for adherents
of one religion after another, I do not feel so diffident. So, it will be that,
in this post.
The
religions that I am aware of have many versions–for some of them running into
thousands–and even lay people of one version of a particular religion would be
in the dark about the other versions. Therefore, I would confine myself to only a
general or overall analysis, and discuss how religion guides morality, if it really
does.
My
first stop is, Scientism. I believe in science but I do not go
too far (not an objective assessment) in my belief. But the religion of Scientism
goes all the way on the slippery slope without exit ramps. I would explain.
I
am convinced that science is always a half-way house. Always. It is like Zeno’s
Paradox. I believe that Scientism’s claim that reality can be assessed
only through the methods of science is less than partly true. Every time, for
example, a major thesis is “proved”–like the existence of the God Particle, the
Higgs Boson–more of the gaps in fundamental reality, or what physicists think they
are, are revealed.
No,
my position is precisely skewed to the theists’ argument from “God of the gaps,”
which stops further probing of reality. Science promotes such investigations,
but differs from Scientism; science is confident that it can never get a
solid grasp of reality, should such a thing existed.
One
might say that my position is close enough to be tagged the Advaita
Philosophy (non-dualism) that posits with certainty Maya, the
illusion. I beg to differ, by the conditional phrase that ends the previous paragraph,
to repeat: “...should such a thing existed.” Is multi-verse reality? It is not
that we do not know, but we cannot know.
Scientism
believes
(this belief) belies the fundamental aspect of science. Hence, it is not
science, but is religion. It promotes its own paths to morality, but has no
purchase on the idea that it underpins morality.
The
next religion I wish to analyse is Scientology. This is not a straw-man
I am setting up to topple easily.
The
picture below of a building associated with Scientology sports a Cross
at the top. Then, it is religion!
My
cousin, an IIT product (he set the goal for me), got his MS from Penn State
University in Mechanical Engineering (his All India JEE rank was 32, and mine
was 1493), and fell headlong into the abyss of Scientology. He tried to
get me to follow his path and I successfully desisted (so, I am intelligent,
after all, though my All India JEE rank resembled the ends of the bridal train
that sweeps the church floor!). The above picture is the “corporate” HQ of Scientology,
I believe. Its motto is a string of mumbo jumbo words–Dianetics, Engrams,
Thetans– and nothing more than words that are pronounceable! Tom Cruise is a
member. That could tell you about that institution–has talent and know how to
make money!
For
every Scientology, there are perhaps dozens of religious orders–scams
(?)–in India. I am going to skip them.
Then,
I come to Jewish religion, which with a long coastline (Trump is eyeing
this as sites for his bound-to-fail casinos) is much in the news currently, all
because its adherents are claiming that certain real estate, indeed almost the entire
Levant, has been given permanently by a land deed to them by their God. I do
not blame the Jews.
Indians
of the past three decades or so do exactly what Israelites are doing, except
that the former cannot claim any God-given authority. They make money abroad
(the US, the UK, the Nordic countries, oil-rich Middle East) and buy land (plots
mainly and build ostentatious, glass fronted (?) houses, not to live in them,
but wait for land value to shoot up–mere speculative bubble building). No
wonder, if you conducted a survey you would find the state of Israel finds favour
among them, and also among those like me who missed the bus, but wistfully.
Basically,
Jewish religion now seems to take pleasure in agreeing with what
Shakespeare, an antisemite he must have been, wrote in Merchant of Venice!
Christianity.
A perfect example of myths creating havoc. The schisms in Christianity
is self-inflicted. Calvin and Martin Luther were Christians, but the movements
they created divided the religion permanently. Then, within the Levant we have Syrian
Maronites, and you travel eastward from Christianity’s birthplace,
the Levant, and you come across, Greek Orthodox, then Russian
Orthodox. Anglicans (The
Archbishop of Canterbury), and in the US, so many, Methodists, Baptists,
Southern Baptists, Episcopalians, Presbyterians and on and
on. Every one of these divisions must have been created by one myth trying to
transplant another and in the process mutating.
I
know not much about Islam except that there are at least two steams, Sunni
and Shia, within it. Are they divided by doctrinal issues or by other power
seeking strategies/tactics? Yet, look at them through the lens of Iran-Iraq war
of the late 1980s, or the Iraq “invasion” of Kuwait straddling the ‘80s and the
‘90s. Those wars were definitely not theological disputes going out of control,
but down to capturing resources (read oil) and getting access to the high seas.
To
be fair, one may wish to acknowledge that the UK did play mischief by creating
Kuwait merely to deny Iraq a port on the waters of the Persian Gulf, as one
reading of history points out. Even if Islam started out as an effort to endow
the population with morality, it failed to do so in the far past (near to its
beginning) and also in the near past (a little more than three decades ago).
Hinduism
is almost beyond the pale in this discussion, yet I will try my hand at it. The
religion is not a religion, its adherents say, but merely a way of life. This
alternative definition is merely obfuscation, and not a good one at that. If it
indeed is a way of life approved by it, then the way of life endorses caste
with all its injustices. Its misogyny is no less positively endorsed. Its bias
against the lower castes in terms of training and learning are stories/episodes
in its epic, the Mahabharat–the story of Ekalavya, and also the curse visited
upon Karna by Parasuram for not being a Brahmin. Some morality.
I
can write much more but I would not know when or how to end. Hence, I end it
here abruptly, merely pointing out that morality seems to play no part in Hinduisms
scripture, its philosophy, its recitations (Mantras). Such instances can
also be easily found in the other anchor, Ramayana. Hindus live multiple
lives, and they have to, jumping from one branch to another.
Oh,
that brings me to another episode, an epilogue: How Rama killed Vaali,
the monkey king, from behind a tree. Rama
applies human morality (of those times perhaps, but definitely not enlightened
and current) to monkeys; morality attributed falsely, inappropriately, shall we
say? Indra, one of the supreme strong men in Rg Veda gets sequentially reduced
in the following scriptures and ends up begging to be saved from his (not His,
as must have been in the Rg Veda) whenever under threat. Is there a
moral in it? I am playing hide-and-seek!
Jainism
seems to me to be neither here nor there. I have visited Jain Temples (they are
galore near Kanchipuram where I did my schooling) and it is confusion, with idols
of Hindu Gods, prominently the Goddess Sarawathi. This is good, prominence to
education, a good piece of morality!
But,
I have taken a shine to Buddhism, not as it is being practised (so
corrupted) but as taught by the Buddha (Siddhartha Gowthama), more
appropriately as understood by me. The Buddha was not interested in metaphysics;
merely wanted to reduce the suffering people felt as they went about their
life. Is there any moral in it? I do not know. Can it be classified as a
religion? I do not know.
Let
that be.
Raghuram
Ekambaram
P.
S. You may choose to believe that I got all the above about the various
religions, including Christianity, Jewish religion, and Islam,
from the Net, but that would be false. Christianity and to somewhat lesser
extent other religions, merely by their plurality, has fascinated me for over
forty years. Much of what I have written is from my memory, and while I am
reasonably confident that my memory has not failed me in the main, I do not
vouch for what I have written here.