BigBallinStalin wrote:How do you know? Shall we hear about how your subjective valuation is the correct one for all individuals?
If there were no religions, no one would think "man, our life sucks because there is no religion", because no one would even know what a religion is. It's like, a 100 years ago, people weren't all depressed that they didn't have computers, because they didn't know anything about computers.
I'm not saying I know for certain, because it's not something anyone can know, but I would guesstimate that most people would be better off (happier or whatever) if religions didn't exist.
BigBallinStalin wrote: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."
There are such things as collective benefits, like for example, we all benefit if we prevent our planet from becoming uninhabitable.
BigBallinStalin wrote:as soon as you commit to the fallacy of thinking that "society as a whole" acts
A society can work in unison towards a common goal, if everyone in the society agrees about the goal. Yeah yeah, it's not actually the "society" working, it's the individuals that make up the society who each make the choice to work towards that goal, but it's pretty pedantic to complain about the wording there. By the same logic, you couldn't say "our football team scored 3 goals yesterday", because it's not the entire team that scored those goals, it's the individual players who actually kicked the balls in the goal...
BigBallinStalin wrote:If you want to talk about "society" gaining value, then please explain how you can tell if society has gained value or lost value...
I never said that.












































































