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The craziness of 50,000 religions

2024-04-08

Publisher: In-Sight Publishing

Publisher Founding: March 1, 2014

Web Domain: http://www.in-sightpublishing.com

Location: Fort Langley, Township of Langley, British Columbia, Canada

Journal: In-Sight: Independent Interview-Based Journal

Journal Founding: August 2, 2012

Frequency: Three (3) Times Per Year

Review Status: Non-Peer-Reviewed

Access: Electronic/Digital & Open Access

Fees: None (Free)

Volume Numbering: 12

Issue Numbering: 2

Section: B

Theme Type: Idea

Theme Premise: “Outliers and Outsiders”

Theme Part: 30

Formal Sub-Theme: None

Individual Publication Date: April 8, 2024

Issue Publication Date: May 1, 2024

Author(s): Sam Vaknin.

Author(s) Bio: James A. Haught, syndicated by PeaceVoice, was the longtime editor at the Charleston Gazette and had been the editor emeritus since 2015. He was thought to have been the first investigative reporter in West Virginia. He won two dozen national newswriting awards and was author of 12 books and 150 magazine essays. He was also a senior editor of Free Inquiry magazine and was writer-in-residence for the United Coalition of Reason. He died on Sunday, July 23 (2023), at the age of 91.

Word Count: 401

Image Credit: None.

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN): 2369-6885

*Please see the footnotes, bibliography, and citations, after the publication.*

Keywords: Adventists, Asian sects, Baha’is, Buddhism, Christian Scientists, Confucianism, Dukhobors, Free Inquiry, glossalalia, Hare Krishnas, Homo Sapiens, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Moonies, Mormons, New Age, Pentecostals, Psychology Today, Raelians, Rastafarians, religions, Scientologists, Sufi, supernatural worship, Taoism, Thugs, Unity Church, Urantia, Voodoo.

The craziness of 50,000 religions

The wide array of current religions, plus many that died in the past, are pretty much impossible to count.

“There are tens of thousands of religions on Planet Earth today … excluding all the religions that came and went (and are now lost) during the first 190,000 years of Homo Sapiens,” states a Psychology Today report. As a blind guess, I estimate the grand total at perhaps 50,000. Alongside major world faiths are hundreds of branches and thousands of small sects, cults and tribal folk groups in Africa, Asia and elsewhere.

Scholars list multitudes of new faiths created just since the start of the 1800s: Mormons, Baha’is, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Christian Scientists, Moonies, Hare Krishnas, Adventists, talking-in-tongues Pentecostals, Scientologists, rattlesnake-handlers, New Age mystical groups, Rastafarians, Unity Church, Urantia, Christadelphians, to name just some, plus a flood of Asian sects. Gordon Melton of the Institute for the Study of American Religions informed The New York Times readers that 40 to 50 new religious movements emerge each year in the United States alone.

Religions have bizarre variety: from Thugs strangling victims for the many-armed goddess Kali to Pentecostals erupting in uncontrollable glossalalia — from Sufi “whirling dervishes” to Canada’s Dukhobors (Spirit Wrestlers) who stage naked protests and burn buildings — from Voodoo priestesses sacrificing chickens to Raelians who espouse open sex and think humans were created by space aliens.

This zoo of supernatural worship has one common quality: It’s all based on fictional fantasy and untrue claims — in other words, lies. Gods, devils, heavens, hells, visions, prophecies, saviors, blessed virgins, angels, demons, apparitions, miracles, holy visitations — none of this stuff is real. It’s all concocted by the human imagination. (Exceptions to note: Some Asian religions such as Buddhism, Jainism, Taoism and Confucianism are mostly philosophical, with few supernatural claims.)

What does it all mean? I think it means that supposedly logical humans have a streak of lunacy, of pure irrationality. Why on Earth do people invent magic tales and declare them real — even turn violent to defend them?

All supernatural religions are absurd because they proclaim “truths” that aren’t true. As educated modern people become more knowledgeable, the absurdity grows more obvious.

Something is wrong with Homo Sapiens. If our species were truly rational, it wouldn’t concoct 50,000 fairy tales and waste whole lifetimes on them.

This column is adapted from a piece originally published in the April-May 2020 issue of Free Inquiry.

Bibliography

None

Footnotes

None

Citations

American Medical Association (AMA 11th Edition): Haught J. The craziness of 50,000 religions. April 2024; 12(2). http://www.in-sightpublishing.com/haught-50000

American Psychological Association (APA 7th Edition): Haught, J. (2024, April 8). The craziness of 50,000 religions. In-Sight Publishing. 12(2).

Brazilian National Standards (ABNT): HAUGHT, S. The craziness of 50,000 religions. In-Sight: Independent Interview-Based Journal, Fort Langley, v. 12, n. 2, 2024.

Chicago/Turabian, Author-Date (17th Edition): Haught, James. 2024. “The craziness of 50,000 religions.In-Sight: Independent Interview-Based Journal 12, no. 2 (Spring). http://www.in-sightpublishing.com/haught-50000.

Chicago/Turabian, Notes & Bibliography (17th Edition): Haught, J “The craziness of 50,000 religions.In-Sight: Independent Interview-Based Journal 12, no. 2 (April 2024).http://www.in-sightpublishing.com/haught-50000.

Harvard: Haught, J. (2024) ‘The craziness of 50,000 religions’, In-Sight: Independent Interview-Based Journal, 12(2). <http://www.in-sightpublishing.com/haught-50000>.

Harvard (Australian): Haught, J 2024, ‘The craziness of 50,000 religions’, In-Sight: Independent Interview-Based Journal, vol. 12, no. 2, <http://www.in-sightpublishing.com/haught-50000>.

Modern Language Association (MLA, 9th Edition): Haught, James. “The craziness of 50,000 religions.” In-Sight: Independent Interview-Based Journal, vo.12, no. 2, 2024, http://www.in-sightpublishing.com/haught-50000.

Vancouver/ICMJE: James H. The craziness of 50,000 religions [Internet]. 2024 Apr; 12(2). Available from: http://www.in-sightpublishing.com/haught-50000.

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Based on a work at https://in-sightpublishing.com/.

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© 2012-Present by Scott Douglas Jacobsen and In-Sight Publishing 2012-Present. Authorized use/duplication only with explicit and written permission from Scott Douglas Jacobsen. Excerpts, links only with full credit to Scott Douglas Jacobsen and In-Sight Publishing with specific direction to the original. All collaborators co-copyright their material and may disseminate for their purposes.





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