DrZoidberg
Contributor
I'm starting to warm up to Stephen Jay Gould’s Non-Overlapping Magisteria, assuming we make some adjustments.
According to Gould, religion was about meaning, morals and values (and science deals with facts about the natural world).
I don't like this as is, because science has plenty to say about morals, meanings and values.
But if we instead adjust it to, religion is about feelings. Then I think it works. Religion as an emotional manageament tool. Which I think is a superior tool to science. There's only so much emotional support pills can give. Yes, I am aware that the secular world also creates platforms for emotional support. But it just doesn't have the pull as religion. Me and my girlfriend signed up as volonteers for a Christmas party for poor people struggling. When we were trying to find organisations to join, they were all Christian. I live in Denmark. Danes are very atheist. The celebration of Christmas stopped being Christian a long time ago in these parts.
Religions just seem to be much better at creating emotionally meaningful, nurturing and connecting moments than science. I share a house with scientists who do "street astronomy". Ie, taking a telescope out on the Copenhagen streets and letting people look through it. Which is cool, and creates a sense of community. But the moment people leave, that's the end of it. Religion gives emotional glue in the way other things just don't do.
Or to put it another way, why does science and secularism suck so much at bringing people together?
According to Gould, religion was about meaning, morals and values (and science deals with facts about the natural world).
I don't like this as is, because science has plenty to say about morals, meanings and values.
But if we instead adjust it to, religion is about feelings. Then I think it works. Religion as an emotional manageament tool. Which I think is a superior tool to science. There's only so much emotional support pills can give. Yes, I am aware that the secular world also creates platforms for emotional support. But it just doesn't have the pull as religion. Me and my girlfriend signed up as volonteers for a Christmas party for poor people struggling. When we were trying to find organisations to join, they were all Christian. I live in Denmark. Danes are very atheist. The celebration of Christmas stopped being Christian a long time ago in these parts.
Religions just seem to be much better at creating emotionally meaningful, nurturing and connecting moments than science. I share a house with scientists who do "street astronomy". Ie, taking a telescope out on the Copenhagen streets and letting people look through it. Which is cool, and creates a sense of community. But the moment people leave, that's the end of it. Religion gives emotional glue in the way other things just don't do.
Or to put it another way, why does science and secularism suck so much at bringing people together?