TEXT E We all believe in
something or someone. We must believe, just as we must eat, sleep, and
reproduce. Mankind has an insatiable need for and an irresistible attraction to
a vast array of beliefs about gods and demons, magic and miracles, truth and
falsehood, love and hate, similarity and difference. Implausible, even
irrational ideas, have been cherished for centuries. Saints and other martyrs
suffered indescribable pain and agony, even death, for their beliefs. Scientists
have been put to death for their belief that the earth is round, or that there
is an invisible force called gravity, or that the earth is not the center of the
universe with the sun revolving around it, or that the blood circulates
throughout the body, or that Man evolving around it, or that the blood
circulates throughout the body, or that Man evolved from lower forms of life.
Religious leaders have attracted millions of people with their version of how
life began and how we must behave. If people do not believe in
medicine and science, religion, education, government, and the social contract,
chaos results and no society can tolerate that, which is why all societies
impose order on their members. We must believe or face unbearable ambiguity and
anxiety. Belief is faith and faith is trust and trust is
security, predictability. Fear and hope are the twins that shape belief. We fear
death, our enemies, illness, the known, the unknown’, and punishment. Hope tells
us that things will improve. We will not be defeated. We will succeed. It
promises us a good life here and after death. Fear persuades us to believe that
we can be protected, safe, if we join a group whose god is capable of holding
evil at bay, then I cling to that group. We dare not, not believe.
Furthermore, belief confers upon believers a special status: those who
know the truth. Many people believe that their faith will help them to overcome
sickness, fear, sorrow, joy, grief ect., each trigger specific endocrinal
secretions--hormones and neurotransmitters (adrenalin, serotonin or dopamine)
that modify behavior. In order to control this torrent of endocrinal activity,
many people turn to their faith because it convinces them that things will
improve and that positive attitude cures the body to fight the invading bacteria
or virus. Mind and body are totally integrated, supporting the notion that
belief (faith) is a very powerful emotional force affecting physical
behavior. Is the most effective belief system one that is
composed of absolutes--unyielding, unvarying and eternal The answer is yes,
because when we eliminate doubt from a situation we feel secure, restored to
balance, but if the belief system is science and is based on objective
information without absolutes and requires a questioning attitude, not an
accepting one as in most belief systems it unnerves people. They cannot handle
the uncertainty, the lack of a God or some omnipotent overseer who eliminates
doubt and reassures us that all is well and under control. Any system that
offers definitive answers to complex human questions and problems: this is
right, this is wrong, this is true, this is false--one question, one answer
only, is very appealing. All beliefs require confirmation from
an authoritative source whether that be a priest, a rabbi, a shaman, a family
member, a special friend, an expert--one who commands obedience and respect an
authenticator. Perhaps all belief is composed of the same elements in
approximately the same proportions for even science requires a suspension of
some disbelief, some uncertainty, however miniscule. Black Holes and the Big
Bang are metaphoric truths derived from the physics we know now. But you have to
believe, to have faith in the methods of science to gather information, to
analyse and interpret it objectively in order to accept its conclusions. No one
witnessed the Big Bang, or a Black Hole. These were inferred from careful, study
and analysis by many researchers. Can we devise an alternative
to belief Probably not. Belief pits one group against another. Muslims against
Christians, Arabs against Jews, Catholics against Protestants, Serbs against
Albanians, because each group insists that all must conform to their beliefs.
Belief in an exclusive God divides men and has been a major cause of innumerable
bloody wars. Not only religion divides people, but politics divides,
socio-economic status divides, color divides and education divides us. In all
eases, one group claims possession of the troth and the most sincere faith. All
men consider themselves chosen, chosen by their God as the one and only, the
best, the most cherished. We need our enemies. The only hope
that I can imagine, and it is certainly a very fragile one, is that we all agree
to believe whatever we wish and to worship as we choose, but we will accept
every human as human as we are worthy of the same respect and care. De unto
others as you would have other do unto you. Simple, universal. Mankind is of a
piece biologically, physiologically, and psychologically in that we all need
love, peace, security, food ,clothing and shelter; we must all sleep, reproduce
the species and we do it the same way with the same result. In the mirror you
could see ate and I could see you, but our cultures have taught us to notice
differences in color, speech, clothing, food, marriage, belief in their own
distinctively inflected way and that sets us apart. No one will
take this suggestion very seriously. They never have, though most institutions
have called for the same thing. This is true: your beliefs will separate you
from me, may lead you to see me the enemy, a beliefs and my beliefs deny or
denigrate the validity of your beliefs, but I will not be your enemy, your
scapegoat, your excuse for venting suppressed anger and resentment you learned
at home, in school, in your church or temple, in your neighborhood. I gain no
wealth, no power, no wisdom at your expense, nor do I gain life in your death;
we are bound together for our ambiguous stay on this whirling pellet in
space. Belief is universal: soothing, comforting and uplifting,
but it is tile great divider. Perhaps we should take the witty and humorous
advice of the American poet e. e. cummings: " Listen, there’s a hell of a good
universe next door’; let’s go" from his poem" pity this busy monster,
manunkind." The conclusion of this passage is that ______.
A.belief is the real reason us apart B.belief is universal and every human is as human as we are C.belief separated people from one another and leads people to become enemies D.belief is based on gaining wealth, power, wisdom at others’ expense