Gabriella,
I didn't say you couldn't get anything from stories in general - but I don't think you get anything meaningful from these particular religious stories.
I’m not sure whether I get much that’s meaningful from them or not – “be kind to others” for example I couldn’t disagree with (though some of us don’t need to be told to do that), but there’s some pretty despicable stuff in the various religious texts too whether allegorical or not. The problem I think comes from jumping from Aesop’s fable-type “here’s a story that may have some educative content for you” straight to “the constituents of this story are factually real and inerrant too so you must do as the story says or you’re a “sinner” and will be punished accordingly” and suchlike BS.
It's a matter of aesthetics.
At an allegorical level, I agree. Not though when you want to arrogate to the stories claims of objective and inerrant truths. That’s not about aesthetics at all – it’s about (supposed) hard facts.
Compared to a hare and a tortoise challenging each other to a race, which uses concepts that have properties that we are very familiar with, religions are talking about supernatural concepts i.e. with properties that are beyond natural that we cannot be familiar with or demonstrate to others. Therefore, there is a lot more room to believe in ideas of what might be possible. Though reality and whether anything outside our mind is real is a whole other discussion - e.g. how can we obtain knowledge of a mind-independent world?
But the problem is that religions aren’t just talking about supernatural concepts at all. “Homosexuality is wrong” for example is anything
but a supernatural concept – it’s a real injunction about a real phenomenon in the real world. The authority claimed for it (“god”) is (supposedly) supernatural all right, but not the practical, real world claims made in its name.
That’s the difference between “religious claims = allegories” and “religious claims = facts”, which is the point I was making.
Presumably because some of us believe in the possibility of the supernatural entity because of subjective experiences, and that belief adds something of value to our lives.
No, that’s not it at all. I have no problem believing in the possibility of anything – gods and leprechauns alike – because there’s no logical way to eliminate those possibilities (see negative proof fallacy, Russell’s teapot etc). My puzzlement is why so many religious people must also convince themselves not only of the possibility but also of the (supposed) fact of the objects of their beliefs.
I don’t need the hare and the tortoise and their race to have been real to get the point; (many) religious people on the other hand it seems do.
Also see above - we have no method to obtain knowledge of supernatural things that exist through our experiences in our mind.
That’s called begging the question. Before you get to “obtain knowledge of supernatural things” you need to establish that there are supernatural things
at all, and for that matter you need to demonstrate even before that the there
even is a “supernatural”. In other words, you’re reifying here.