While I don't disagree with anything you've said, a religion provides a set of limiting principles for someone to develop universal ethics. It can be assumed that someone who identifies as Christian would believe in the Ten Commandments, for example. So when you engage in this person there is a starting point for values to build a society. Without a moral framework, every action or belief becomes an endless opportunity for virtue signaling and the creation of a hierarchy.
While I don't disagree with anything you've said, a religion provides a set of limiting principles for someone to develop universal ethics. It can be assumed that someone who identifies as Christian would believe in the Ten Commandments, for example. So when you engage in this person there is a starting point for values to build a society. Without a moral framework, every action or belief becomes an endless opportunity for virtue signaling and the creation of a hierarchy.
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