quote:
I don't even know what Carm is, but I love the way you guys embrace the ad hominem.
If you pay attention, the data is not even from Carm. It's from the Encyclopedia of Wars - a publication I know nothing about.
Well, I think the topic of why people kill each other so much is a lovely one for R&P regardless of where the pie chart comes from....
Having said that, I would like to see the methodology used in making said pie chart. What counts as a religious war?
Does the main aim of both sides have to be converting the other?
What if only one side is motivated to convert the other?
Is it enough if the sides have different religions and the winner will impose theirs on the loser even if that wasn't that motivating cause of the war?
If one or both sides attack or destroy religious sites, is that motivated by religion, or just an attack on your opponents culture, or just the collateral damage of war?
What about Pakistan and India? Their wars are over territorial disputes, but if they were all of the same religion there would be no Pakistan, just a united India not fighting wars with its neighbor.
Things get multifaceted and complex quickly. Take Hitler. He certainly wasn't a Christian, but the Nazis did use Christianity as part of their propaganda. Hitler himself was a mystic. Does that count as a religion? Say he was motivated to war by the belief that he was a god meant to rule the world. I don't know that he was, but he wouldn't be much different than lots of Pharaohs and Emperors if that was the case. And personality cults run the gamut from Charles Manson to Pharaoh believing he was Ra--which are religions and which are not? And just to finish with Hitler, how can a war in which one of the main motivations was to exterminate an entire religion not have a religious component?
Still if you ask me what the cause of war is, I would say that one factor is the main motivation behind 99.99% . Territory. Gaining land, defending land, either for its strategic value or just for its resources is why wars are waged. Ideology may lead to war, but inevitably the guy with the wrong philosophy also just happens to be sitting on a piece of land you would like.
But that's a little simplistic too. If you read history (or perhaps compile an encyclopedia of wars) it looks that way, because that is the motivation of Kings, Emperors, Pharaohs, and Generals. Is that really the motivation that matters? Without armies there are no wars, and without soldiers there are no armies. So maybe the question should be about the guys carrying the guns. Why are they killing each other? What motivates them? Is it a belief that god is on their side? That their cause is morally just, and that the heavens would have them prevail?
Look at the rhetoric from the American civil war. No one would argue that it was a religious war, but both sides preached to their troops that god was in fact supporting them. Or the Japanese in WWII. They regarded their emperor as a god, and fought for him.
I don't believe that religion is the source of most of the misery on earth--or whatever the quote is. Religion can be an incredible motivator for individuals and masses though, and a belief in divine help or eternal reward can drive men to incredible acts. Some of them incredibly awful.