The difficulty with science replacing religion is that it provides no basis for moral judgements, it is a quantitative discipline concerned chiefly with measurement and formulating mathemtically-sound hypotheses. — Wayfarer
Today, "unmarried man" may be defined as "a man who is not living in a relationship with another person". Therefore, a bachelor is a man not living in a relationship with another person. — RussellA
Yes they can. As I described above here, "rituals" does not equal anything supernatural or spiritual. "Ritual" simply focuses on a repeating practice or act that ground the mind. It can be used as a purely health-based practice for better mental health in its basic function. — Christoffer
And this is what I mean, although, in too small communities, such inventions can have a tendency to incorporate newly invented spiritual ideas or become corrupt by a lack of scientific knowledge that is found on larger scale societies. — Christoffer
Does this count? — praxis
Some vague notion that religions all focus on the idea of oneness or transcendence is so slippery and inexact it would seem to be foundational quicksand. — Tom Storm
I will take the opportunity to argue again that the statement "bachelors are unmarried men " is analytic. — RussellA
Many don’t realize the nature of religion. — praxis
Dharma and religion have overlaps but they’re not exactly the same. — Wayfarer
If removing any supernatural and spiritual elements then they are closer to what I described about the essential need for rituals, traditions, and awe in a non-religious way of life. — Christoffer
Is there any compelling demonstration that people's lives are better with ritual and contemplation? How would we demonstrate this? — Tom Storm
Thus I am a religious person? — praxis
I think fallacies are most useful in self-reflection. It's good to point them out in that spirit -- rather than in an attempt to prove something. — Moliere
I wonder too what counts as transcendence? Is intelligibility itself transcendent? Are the logical axioms? Maths? Morality? Do we go by Kant, Aristotle or Wittgenstein on this one? — Tom Storm
Obviously, people can believe in something transcendent without belonging to a religion, without knowing anything about any religion. I suppose you would call that a personal religion?
Religious thinking is always hierarchical thinking.
Which indicates that its essence is about order and control. — praxis
Interesting. I think I agree. Can you say some more? — Tom Storm
Interesting point, the Motte and Bailey fallacy could be seen as a kind of reversal insofar as it seems to consist in defending rather than attacking a strawman.I think it is in essence the strawman fallacy. — Pantagruel
You need to explain why religion is needed to believe in something transcendent. — praxis
That’s like saying that if the need for a drug is felt humanity will not be better off without it. If the drug was never know it would not be missed.
If you mean something else I think you may need to elaborate on the nature of the need that you mention, and why only a religion can fulfill it. — praxis
I’m curious about your reasoning that humanity wouldn’t be better off without religion. Can you explain why? — praxis
If we have trouble with a particle, we have some issues in understanding matter as revealed by physics. — Manuel
Still a whole lot to learn about experience by way of science, but, again, compared to physics, I think it's substantially less problematic, by quite a margin, I'd wager. — Manuel
The example of blindsight demonstrates one aspect of this; that, although the person functions as a sighted person, without the qualia of sight, it doesn’t feel to them that those sighted functions belong to them. It was instead just some qualia-less physical processing that the person was unaware of, like their liver function.
If the same applied to all qualia, then there would be no sense of personhood. — Luke
So in philosophical mode my question in place of Humphrey's would be something like, "what is it about a scientific view that makes phenomenal experience look so puzzling?" — Jamal
Eternalism is the belief that through the appropriate rituals and practices, one can return forever in favourable states of birth (including heaven) rather than seeking emancipation from the whole cycle of re-birth. — Wayfarer
I say let religion die. — praxis
Whereas the identification with 'what decays and passes away' (in their terms) binds to the 'wheel of saṃsāra' (detachment from same being the aim of 'daily spiritual practice').
