Religion is commonly based on some “sacred” writings, — Art48
:100: :fire: Excellent post.[R]eligion and science don't serve the same human needs. Science is the tool used to understand and manipulate matter. Organized religion (which bears only the most superficial resemblance to prehistoric or tribal ritual) is a tool used in support of stratified power structures. — Vera Mont
As I mentioned, religions can and do change their teachings, by reinterpreting or ignoring scripture but not by repudiating scriptural verses. — Art48
Usually, even a non-Christian knows something about the earth, the heavens, and the other elements of this world, about the motion and orbit of the stars and even their size and relative positions, about the predictable eclipses of the sun and moon, the cycles of the years and the seasons, about the kinds of animals, shrubs, stones, and so forth, and this knowledge he holds to as being certain from reason and experience.
Now, it is a disgraceful and dangerous thing for an infidel to hear a Christian, presumably giving the meaning of Holy Scripture, talking nonsense on these topics; and we should take all means to prevent such an embarrassing situation, in which people show up vast ignorance in a Christian and laugh it to scorn. The shame is not so much that an ignorant individual is derided, but that people outside the household of faith think our sacred writers held such opinions, and, to the great loss of those for whose salvation we toil, the writers of our Scripture are criticized and rejected as unlearned men.
If they find a Christian mistaken in a field which they themselves know well and hear him maintaining his foolish opinions about our books, how are they going to believe those books in matters concerning the resurrection of the dead, the hope of eternal life, and the kingdom of heaven, when they think their pages are full of falsehoods and on facts which they themselves have learnt from experience and the light of reason? Reckless and incompetent expounders of Holy Scripture bring untold trouble and sorrow on their wiser brethren when they are caught in one of their mischievous false opinions and are taken to task by those who are not bound by the authority of our sacred books. For then, to defend their utterly foolish and obviously untrue statements, they will try to call upon Holy Scripture for proof and even recite from memory many passages which they think support their position, although they understand neither what they say nor the things about which they make assertion 1.
Science is the tool used to understand and manipulate matter. Organized religion (which bears only the most superficial resemblance to prehistoric or tribal ritual) is a tool used in support of stratified power structures. — Vera Mont
Once upon a time, when I was a high school junior, a priest had told me "Reason is for living in this world and faith is living for the world-to-come". (Some months later I recognized I'd not only lost "my faith" but also that I'd never had any "faith" whatsoever.)Personally, I refer to purposes, meaning the purpose of science is to tell me about the world. The purpose of religion is to tell me how to live in it — Hanover
This observation would be universally applicable to all human institutions. Humans are social animals, and hierarchies always arise, which includes political wrangling and control of power. — Hanover
But this is to compare apples to oranges — Hanover
Personally, I refer to purposes, meaning the purpose of science is to tell me about the world. The purpose of religion is to tell me how to live in it — Hanover
He taught that the Bible had multiple levels of meaning and that it should be interpreted allegorically as well as literally. He believed that the literal meaning of scripture was the surface level, but that beneath that there were deeper spiritual truths that could be understood through allegory and symbolism. — Wayfarer
Once upon a time, when I was a high school junior, a priest had told me "Reason is for living in this world and faith is living for the world-to-come". (Some months later I recognized I'd not only lost "my faith" but also that I'd never had any "faith" whatsoever.) — 180 Proof
P.S. Of course, an allegorical and/or symbolic interpretation may contain much wisdom. But the wisdom is not from the book; it is from the writer. — Art48
Interesting article BTW.It was not until the 5th century that all the different Christian churches came to a basic agreement on Biblical canon. The books that eventually were considered canon reflect the times they were embraced as much the times of the events they portray.
to give the new deity some historic roots and legitimacy. They were collected and maybe some newer ones added on by one or more of the collators, while some old stories were later thrown out, for several reasons - they didn't fit prevailing doctrine, or were objectionable on some moral ground, contradict papal edicts, or are simply badly written fiction. (I have read some apocrypha and it's uphill work.)The oral traditions within the church formed the substance of the Gospels, the earliest book of which is Mark, written around 70 A.D., 40 years after the death of Jesus.
So, how does that relate to the question: Why has science, which explains so much, not displaced religion? — Vera Mont
That was the specific question of a prior thread, but less so this one. — Hanover
It's simply embarrassing to me, that despite the fact that humans are smart and now have a mountain of scientific data, some of the people can still be fooled by theism and/or theosophism, all of the time! — universeness
I didn't have one. I already knew that people tend to resort to magical thinking when they can't control their environment or their lives. And that magical thinking appears in the form of religious observance, augury, water dowsing, gambling, horoscope and palm reading, witch-burning, ritual dancing, human sacrifice and the avoidance of ladders and black cats. On the up-side, it also manifests as art, literature and cosmology.But all of this is to say the answer to your question — Hanover
Nevertheless, that post you quoted and disputed was a direct response to:
It's simply embarrassing to me, that despite the fact that humans are smart and now have a mountain of scientific data, some of the people can still be fooled by theism and/or theosophism, all of the time!
— universeness — Vera Mont
— Hanover
But all of this is to say the answer to your question
— Hanover
I didn't have one. — Vera Mont
This is the situation we should expect if God does not really exist: different civilizations making up different stories about God — Art48
That was the question I answered, which was the question you asked. — Hanover
It's simply embarrassing to me, that despite the fact that humans are smart and now have a mountain of scientific data, some of the people can still be fooled by theism and/or theosophism, all of the time! — universeness
That's only because religion and science don't serve the same human needs. Science is the tool used to understand and manipulate matter. Organized religion (which bears only the most superficial resemblance to prehistoric or tribal ritual) is a tool used in support of stratified power structures. — Vera Mont
How does this ^^^^ relate to the matter of science failing to replace religion?Science is the tool used to understand and manipulate matter. Organized religion (which bears only the most superficial resemblance to prehistoric or tribal ritual) is a tool used in support of stratified power structures. — Vera Mont
This observation would be universally applicable to all human institutions. Humans are social animals, and hierarchies always arise, which includes political wrangling and control of power. — Hanover
Only Science and God are expected to do that, and of course, neither one says an intelligible word in response to Who am I?" "Why am I?" "Where's the universe come from?" "What's it all mean?" — Vera Mont
Can you give me an example of a way that religion tells people how to live, which could not be delivered by irreligious moral humans? What moral exclusivity do you suggest religion or god (in any of its descriptions, ancient or modern,) has, that humans cannot equal?Personally, I refer to purposes, meaning the purpose of science is to tell me about the world. The purpose of religion is to tell me how to live in it — Hanover
Science is a manifestation of human intent. — universeness
Science is a manifestation of human intent. In my view, science aspires to omniscience. — universeness
Can you give me an example of a way that religion tells people how to live, which could not be delivered by irreligious moral humans? What moral exclusivity do you suggest religion or god (in any of its descriptions, ancient or modern,) has that humans cannot equal? — universeness
The best I could do is to say that I derive significant meaning from the idea that there is meaning behind everything big and small. You might find that quaint, stupid, curious, or just simply unnecessary, all to which I wouldn't care. — Hanover
This is the situation we should expect if God does not really exist: different civilizations making up different stories about God — Art48
Quick question. If God doesn't exist, why is it such a persistent archetype of human existence throughout our history as a species? — Benj96
Science is a manifestation of human aspiration and curiosity. It is not always intentional or directed; its products are not always functional. In horizontal societies, the product is innovation - more efficient ways to obtain and prepare food, travel, build, carry, preserve, keep warm, recover from illness and injury. In vertical societies, fruitful scientific investigation is co-opted by the ruling classes, to serve their own interests. To the extent that incidental improvement in the lot of the underclasses benefits the ruling class or ensures their security, some benefit extends to the society at large. If an innovation or its byproducts are harmful, the underclasses are affected, while ruling class is shielded from the harm. — Vera Mont
You seem to slightly contradict yourself with 'neither one says an intelligible word,' and then 'one provides some fragment of the what, why and how of things.' Science has made enormous in-roads into the 'how' and 'what' of things. It also helps a great deal towards the much more difficult 'why' of things.neither one says an intelligible word in response to Who am I?" "Why am I?" "Where's the universe come from?" "What's it all mean?" One provides answers to some fragments of the what, why and how of things; the other provides rules of conduct, accompanied by a stick and a carrot. — Vera Mont
Similarly, projection and narrative are manifestations of human self-regard and imagination.
In horizontal societies, the product is some form of animism, myth and spontaneous ritual. — Vera Mont
Science doesn't aspire any more than a wheelbarrow rolls. Humans aspire and push at the limits of their knowledge. Science is a method applied by humans to human endeavours; it is not a supernatural entity with a will of its own. — Vera Mont
Full respect to that!I'll try my best to answer — Hanover
:lol:It's an anti-proselytizing view I have, both because I don't believe in it, and "proselytize" is hard enough to spell that I have to keep trying until it's close enough for spell-check to have a clue what I'm trying to say. — Hanover
If I am curious about what exists up a dark path or how a bird is able to fly, then I might manifest an intent to find out, such intent to find out would be intentional and directed. I think you are hair splitting. — universeness
You seem to slightly contradict yourself with 'neither one says an intelligible word,' and then 'one provides some fragment of the what, why and how of things.' — universeness
Do you not agree that your second sentence above, is less true today than it has ever been since the days of the first cities, such as Jericho and Uruk? — universeness
Masons are irrelevant. That is a very recent past and there are much more sinister cabals now. In all post civilized societies (the last 6000 or so years: stone walls, writing, kings and warlords, legal codes, big tombs for the elite, little wooden markers for the peasants) one to three classes or castes run the whole show and control all the wealth; one or two middle layers carry out the administrative and law-enforcement work and get a decent standard of living; some merchants and artisans do all right; the vast majority work hard for small reward and are mostly scared.Even (in the past, very infuential/powerful male based ritualistic groups) like the 'masons,' have lost a great deal of their membership, and the youth of today seem a lot less interested in such groups. — universeness
Animism, myth and ritualistic practices are in global decline, imo. — universeness
Scientists are humans and they are the harbingers of science. — universeness
I am not trying to 'objectify' science in the way you suggest. — universeness
We ask questions Vera because our goal is omniscience. — universeness
3:22 And the LORD God said, Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil: and now, lest he put forth his hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live for ever.
Thanks for articulating your perspective. I always find it fascinating to hear from believers who are not led by dogma and dominated by fear.
Can I ask if you consider your reasons to be located in an aesthetic context? It almost seems that you are saying the world appears more captivating, agreeable or attractive when viewed in this way. — Tom Storm
and it's no help at all with moral and ethical questions or the conduct of society. — Vera Mont
One interpretation would see science simply as a totality of the efforts of all scientists.Scientists are humans and they are the harbingers of science.
— universeness
Practitioners, not harbingers. — Vera Mont
When I ask why the sun rises today from a causative perspective — Hanover
Perhaps realising that the sun does not actually 'rise' at all, EVER! would be a good start. — universeness
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