If you agree that value is subjective, benefits differ, costs differ, and goods aren't homogenous nor are they perfectly substitutable, then the following can't be correct:
natty dread wrote:Those are all benefits that are not inherent to religion, and as such are not good reasons why religions are necessary.
natty dread wrote:If there were no religion, there would be other ways for people to get "club goods", or feel accepted, or get explanations to questions.
Anyway:
natty dread wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:And the value of the religious club goods comes with religion
But "club goods" are valuable only to the people who receive those goods, ie. they only benefit the people who are part of said religion. Even if some people personally benefit from being part of a religion it still doesn't mean that religion is beneficial to the society as a whole.
natty dread wrote:I think that was the real question here, if we go by
this post, where 3 atheists seem to assert that religions provide some kind of value "as social institutions" which to me seems to imply that religion provides value to the society as a whole, and not just on an individual level. So I think you're arguing against the wrong argument here, because I certainly agree that some people do receive personal benefits from being part of a religion. What I dispute is that religions provide some kind of value or benefit to the society as a whole, ie.
I posit that the society would probably ultimately be better off without religions.
How do you know? Shall we hear about how your subjective valuation is the correct one for all individuals?
You're right in that we can't say that religion benefits or fails to benefit "society as a whole" because as Rothbard says, this "is the fallacy of treating collective constructs as 'social wholes.' " As Hayek says, these "only are metaphorical constructs for describing the similar or concerted actions of individuals."
Society is only a collective metaphor, and that's it. It doesn't act, or feel. Society is only composed of individuals, who each have their subjective value, their own actions, etc. Since it doesn't act, it can't engage in exchanges, it can't produce, save, or consume anything; therefore, it can't gain value.
Here's an example by Mises:
The hangman, not the state, executes a criminal. It is the meaning of those concerned that discerns in the hangman's action an action of the state."
The above is the proper use of "society" or "the state." But as soon as you commit to the fallacy of thinking that "society as a whole" acts, then you lose, sir. Good day.
If you want to talk about "society" gaining value, then please explain how you can tell if society has gained value or lost value...