What your opinion? Good or bad?
Should we question religous authority only? What about governmental authority? Will questioning improve our chances of survival as a speicies?
I think it will. We need to escape from the narrow reality tunnels that the State and religion pressures us to live in. We have been programed by politicians, school teachers, religion, culture, national corporate owned media and parents to think and see the world the way they want us to think and see the world, it is much better IMO to think for yourself. The State has programmed us to accept dominance by a few as normal, and good, even patriotic , to unquestioningly lay down your life to save the government(rulling elite, and extremely rich's property holdings) or even worse to invade another country and kill those labeled as the enemy, if called upon to do so. Will following such programming bring about a better world? Or more mind numbing enslavement?
I did a litte google search, and here our some quotes that more or less express my views on the importance of questioning authority:
http://www.liberatefreedom.com/question-authority.html
In order to explore consciousness as the source of liberating freedom we must be vigilant in bringing the highest standards of disciplined empirical inquiry to bear upon the process of perception.
Nietzsche defined freedom as “the will to be responsible to ourselves.” This to me means the ability to respond to the instinct for freedom that is innate within ourselves—ability here meaning competence and skill.
In other words, wise discernment and intellectual rigor play vital roles as we open to the contents of consciousness and examine the role of perception as the architecture of reality. And to extract anger and ignorance from “misperceptions of freedom” requires courage, intelligence, and kindness.
http://www.geocities.com/arno_3/intro/
With his famous slogan "Turn on - Tune in - Drop out" Leary encouraged the young generation of the 60s to take psychedelic drugs and question authority.Not so many people know, however, that Leary reemerged in the 1980s as a spokesman of a new global counterculture called the cyberpunks and became one of the most energetic promoters of computers, virtual reality, and the Internet. "No magazine cover story on the [cyberpunk] phenomenon is complete without the septuagenarian Timothy Leary, admonishing readers to "turn on, boot up, jack in" and proclaiming that the "PC is the LSD of the 1990s,"
In contrast to the hippies of the 60s who were decidedly anti-science and anti-technology, the cyberpunks of the 80s and 90s ecstatically embrace technology. They believe that technology (especially computers and the Internet) can help us to transcend all limits, that it can liberate us from authority and even enables us to transcend space, time, and body
Timothy Leary-How to operate your Brain:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5263229526732787208
Liberate Freedom:
http://www.liberatefreedom.com/movie/liberate-freedom-movie.html