Thread 17768099 - /his/ [Archived: 1019 hours ago]

Anonymous
6/16/2025, 1:09:19 PM No.17768099
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Religious belief represents the intellectual middle ground—the midwit state where humans are smart enough to ask profound questions about existence but not sophisticated enough to accept uncertainty or pursue rigorous empirical answers. When early agricultural societies gained leisure time to observe natural phenomena they couldn't explain, they defaulted to creating divine beings rather than developing systematic methods of investigation. This impulse to fill knowledge gaps with supernatural agents reveals a mind that has evolved beyond primitive survival mode but remains trapped in anthropomorphic thinking, projecting human-like consciousness onto forces beyond immediate comprehension.

The believer occupies this awkward intellectual space between the unreflective and the truly analytical. They've developed enough abstract reasoning to grapple with mortality, meaning, and cosmic forces, yet lack the intellectual courage to sit with uncertainty or the methodological sophistication to pursue evidence-based understanding. Instead of recognizing the limits of human knowledge and working within those constraints, they retreat into comforting narratives about divine purpose and cosmic justice. This represents humanity's adolescent phase—no longer content with simple existence, but not yet mature enough to construct meaning without invisible parental figures. The creation of gods reveals more about human psychological needs than cosmic truths, marking the midwit's inability to graduate from needing external validation for their place in the universe.
Replies: >>17769668 >>17769671
Anonymous
6/16/2025, 1:09:54 PM No.17768100
The hunter-gatherer existed in a state of pure immediacy that rendered gods psychologically unnecessary and practically irrelevant. Their entire cognitive apparatus was devoted to survival's concrete demands—tracking animal movements, reading weather patterns, identifying edible plants, navigating terrain, and maintaining group cohesion. Every mental resource was allocated to tangible, observable realities that demanded immediate response. There was no luxury of contemplating abstract causation when a missed opportunity meant hunger, when a misread sign meant death, when group dynamics required constant attention to prevent exile. The hunter-gatherer's relationship with nature was direct and transactional—they understood storms as weather to shelter from, not as expressions of divine anger requiring interpretation or appeasement.

This cognitive state represented a kind of intellectual purity that agricultural societies would never recapture. The hunter-gatherer's mind operated like a finely tuned instrument of practical intelligence, processing environmental data without the interference of metaphysical speculation. They experienced what modern humans might call "flow state" as their default mode—completely absorbed in the present moment's demands, with no mental bandwidth for existential anxiety or cosmic questioning. Death was simply another environmental factor to avoid, not a philosophical problem requiring supernatural explanation. Pain, beauty, and mystery were immediate experiences to navigate rather than puzzles demanding narrative resolution. The absence of gods in their worldview wasn't intellectual limitation but cognitive efficiency—their minds were too occupied with reality's demands to construct elaborate fictions about invisible agents orchestrating their lives.
Replies: >>17769668
Anonymous
6/16/2025, 1:38:59 PM No.17768125
Humans have survived precisely because we have the best understanding of reality around us. Our mind is our primary tool for survival. We are slow, weak and frail compared to the animals of our planet. We have to make up for this by keeping ourselves warm, fed and healthy by meticulous planning and interpreting reality correctly. Our complex mind enables us to do that. To then say "Man cannot know reality and must be bound to spiritual/mystic beliefs" is to deny the very idea of humanity in the first place. It places us back to the status of beast, born ignorant and needing the shepherd to get anything of value done. I believe this is the biggest hit to the confidence of regular human beings yet. We *can* know reality, we *must* necessarily know reality in order to survive and thrive.
Anonymous
6/16/2025, 1:46:39 PM No.17768130
Great thread
Anonymous
6/16/2025, 2:57:59 PM No.17768221
Enjoy hell.
Replies: >>17768227
Anonymous
6/16/2025, 3:01:55 PM No.17768227
>>17768221
You are already there, by condemning others you condemn yourself.
Anonymous
6/16/2025, 3:04:27 PM No.17768232
very inefficient to spread bait out over three posts, you want something concise and effective
Replies: >>17768244
Anonymous
6/16/2025, 3:12:17 PM No.17768244
>>17768232
Only two.
Anonymous
6/17/2025, 3:03:09 AM No.17769668
>>17768099 (OP)
>>17768100
The fact you spent the time to make these longwinded posts is enough to show that you fear the actual truth, and are trying to ward it off from your own subconscious by telling yourself this stuff.
Chud Anon
6/17/2025, 3:04:56 AM No.17769671
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md5: 2f0175c2cede630534a053de0be07bf0🔍
>>17768099 (OP)
Wow, an actual insightful OP for once. Unironically a diamond in the rough- you cut this issue to the bone and I mean that in earnest.