Please don't yell at me. I didn't write this and am not sure I completely agree with it, though he does make some valid points.
I remain hopeful that science with discover cure. Unfortunately, that cure may have to be imposed against their will, as they are unlikely to seek positive change on their own.
Specifically, an otherwise harmless virus is edited to include a sequence of RNA that matches what is produced and stored in the brains of believers. Finding the matching pattern, the virus is triggered to destroy the RNA that stores the memory of the belief, or simple kills the neuron as it then reproduces another thousand viruses. Thus, the believer acquires amnesia about those beliefs. Perhaps alternative belief memories can be inserted in other neurons at the same time...
That sounds like promoting a cure for homosexuality and removing an individual’s life practice because it doesn’t suit the ruling regime.
Eugenics and Master Race come to mind.
@Geoffrey51 Homosexuality, Eugenics and Master Race might come to mind, but they would be false analogies. People aren't born with religion, it is nearly always gained by forced indoctrination. Also not corresponding is the notion that the absence of myth is advocated by the ruling regime. Non-belief remains as blasphemy to the ruling regime. Both the ruling regime and the religion that supports it have become existential threats to the human species. Many of the religionists clamor to instigate Armageddon. Removing both the ruling regime and it's religion are necessary to avoid extinction for everyone. It might be different if the religionists genuinely believed in martyrdom, but they always want non-believers to go first. Infecting the deranged with an otherwise harmless virus seems far more humane than the murderous solutions they have always resorted to.
@racocn8 okay. Sounds like you are entrenched with that one so I’ll leave you to it.
Religion is going away, but it's a long game. Very long. About a thousand years before most religion is consigned to the fringe. Maybe a hundred years for fundamentalism. Those are my personal guesses.
And no, science won't destroy religion. It isn't designed to and hasn't set out to.
Critical thinking will be religion's undoing. It is already underway. But it's a very slow process.
I believe religion is going away, but dogma is here to stay.
I see it usually in the form of vegetarianism, veganism, gluten free-ism and in political tribalism.
When people don't have a God they worship, the preaching takes on a different shape, but it still exists.
It's kind of like a super-duper extreme groupthink . . . . although the word "think" has very little to do with it.
Well said.
It's not that much of a surprise when you consider the fact that many people don't practice logical thinking. Some will go way out of their way to not allow facts to hinder their thinking.
What I call "willfully ignorant".
I look at this from my own experience. 30 years a Christian and at times a diehard one. Had a very traumatic experience and almost died. Tried to say prayers for 2 years to solve an emotional problem with no success. Finally someone suggested hypnosis and I tried it one time and it helped me more than 2 years of prayer. I decided to study hypnosis and the more I studied the more I realized that religion was nothing more than self-hypnosis. To feel 100% confident that I wasn’t being blasphemous I started to research history of Christianity. I was absolutely shocked at the lack of evidence. I had always assumed because I had been told that there was overwhelming evidence. Then I started to listen to Christian apologist defending Christianity and claiming its 100% true. The arguments and evidence they used was flimsy at best and not only did it not sway me to their side it actually strengthened the other sides argument.
Most Christians will not have the near death at 46 experience I had and try something alternative like hypnosis. They will be stuck in the emotional experience of salvation. That time when the preacher told you if you didn’t get saved you’re going to hell. Then you go up because of fear and feel a sense of relief and joy that you prevented yourself from being tortured forever. Then spend the rest of your life trying to please and thank god for not punishing you. Religion is disconnecting from your rational reasonable self and letting emotion dictate your life. Forget that there is no evidence of Jesus physically or historically that doesn’t matter cause I could feel him when the choir was singing or the Holy Ghost got hold of me when the preacher was talking. The thing is that people outside of religion can have those very sane experiences. Emotions can and will lie to you. Emotions don’t care about the truth it only knows what feels good. Cold hard facts don’t care about emotions
I just love the way you put it!
At a personal level, I am driven to know cold hard facts and act on them: it is one of my survival mechanisms in this dingbat crazy world.
I nearly died in childbirth at age 22. I was out of my body, looking down; I KNEW it was me, I saw my daughter being born, saw the bleeding. There was no tunnel, light, etc.
The doctor and nurses saved me: the bleeding had started suddenly and soon as the baby was born, they controlled it and suddenly, I was looking at the ceiling instead of looking down from it.
Nothing religious about it! I was already a skeptic and thought the ‘near death’ stories were woo. After I nearly died, I was sure of it. I might-probably-dissociated for a minute from the trauma. Either way, it made me even more of a skeptic.
WoW! Very elegant argument - Thankyou.
The idea that science would oust religion is predicated on the assumption that a significant majority of people are able to think, which assumption is manifestly false.
In the last 400 years science has not destroyed religion, but it sure has damaged it!
Religion had an enormous head start of thousands of years while science and enlightenment are relatively recent developments. You can't destroy an idea like that overnight. Having said that, science isn't out to "destroy " anything. It seeks the truth through knowledge and study.
Quite honestly. Life and the realities of the universe are too complicated for most people to grasp. The superstitious and simplistic explanations religion provides creates a comforting illusion that they have a great understanding.
In part it is stupid people who want ot feel smart, and it is also in part intellectual laziness and the mistake of evoked emotional experiences as being "spiritual" confirmation of religious beliefs.
I know. I see it firsthand with my family. Watched my brother fight and die of brain cancer, talking about ‘God’s plan’ every damn day.
I see people on my chronic illness groups, posting long screeds on why god hasn’t healed them YET, but they still think it will happen.
Some will always need the delusion/illusion.
I don't expect that religious faith will ever be eradicated.
Definitely not as long as the religious indoctrination of children is permitted, anywhere.
Also, not as long as there's money in it for the hierarchy who perpetuate it.
Most people are followers anyway. That aspect of human nature is not likely
to evolve away.
It wishful thinking as more and more people, particularly young people, abandon outmoded and 'magical' ways of thinking and turn more and more to reason. They want answers, or at least to know someone is actually looking for them rather than vague pronouncements from dusty old tomes that lost most of their relevance decades, if not centuries, ago.
There's a line in a Neil Young song which goes, "When the aimless blade of science slashed the pearly gates." Scientific experiments are reproducible; if they're not then one questions the original experimenters' method and integrity. This was exactly the case when Fleishmann and Pons claimed that they had succeeded in achieving "cold fusion." The scientific community discredited their paper as nobody else could replicate this experiment. In my opinion, answer to prayer doesn't work and it isn't reproducible. If I pray multiple times for something and I receive something else, or nothing at all, every time, then my prayers have not been answered and I am deluding myself if I choose to conclude otherwise.
Good point
Of course not, it is a disconnect from reality is why. Their reality is they live in a dangerous eat or be eaten world were not many others care. A make believe panacea of love and forgiveness hiding a violent monster. It shows all through their writings, nothing is hidden, the warring continues because the governments want the bodies that religions create with "fill the kingdom". Taxation breaks are the pay off...
Pretty disgusting...and that, yeah it will probably be a long while if it ever goes away. It is a hard mental disorder to understand,
I have aquaintances and family believers, most i think have some semblance of reality around such a belief some not so much.
My thoughts fwiw...
100 years ago, or less, people were not very good at predicting the future, with the exception of a few who had some pretty good notions about what was coming, like Aldous Huxley or George Orwell, but there are definitely things they would not have expected, and, one hundred years from now, it will be the same way only more extreme, my bet is that it will be way different, simply due to the exponential growth of technology . . . most people have no idea just how much deep learning and artificial intelligence are going to transform things, or how fast this is happening . . .
.
"Buckle up your seatbelt, Dorothy, 'cause Kansas is going bye bye" - Cipher's comment in Matrix
Religion is completely incompatible with science. You have to reject one to fully embrace the other. That's why religion, irrational fear, greed, etc will never go away. (IMHO)
Why then do half of US scientists report a belief in God?
@WilliamFleming that's up to them, not me.
Compte’s idea of the stages of history as religious, metaphysical and scientific reminds me of Vico’s stages of gods, heroes and men. There is also the very interesting concept by Gioacchino da Fiore of the Age of the Father, corresponding to the Old Testament; the Age of the Son, beginning with the Incarnation of the Son of God, or New Testament; and the Age of the Holy Spirit, an idyllic time where the Church would be obsolete. From time to time, I read an occasional reference to the return of Vico’s age of gods. I think these ideas of the stages are a bit deficient in that they don’t allow for aggregation of thought (for want of a better term) that continues adding to itself as the cycles progress. I was pleased to find out that the poet William Blake did promote this idea.
This is a bit misleading. This was also the topic of my undergrad dissertation.
The Pew Religious Landscape survey reported that as of 2014, 22.8% of the U.S. population is religiously unaffiliated, atheists made up 3.1% and agnostics made up 4% of the U.S. population. The 2014 General Social Survey reported that 21% of Americans had no religion with 3% being atheist and 5% being agnostic. As for other countries, you can see their stats here: [worldpopulationreview.com]
I do agree that "The thesis that ‘science causes secularisation’ simply fails the empirical test, and enlisting science as an instrument of secularisation turns out to be poor strategy." It would be more precise to say "Education causes secularisation." Were I to compare it to any other phenomena socially, it would be the minoritization of white christians in the US. It is inevitable but it is also being fought with tooth and nail by those being marginalized.
Additionally, the social onus of confessing atheism must be taken into account for survey results (much the same as sexual proclivities). One survey of Americans found that a majority preferred their child marry a muslim rather than an atheis. This is an interesting article about the American view of secularism which also espouses the doubt that science will end religion.
[newyorker.com]
@Kymmacg I definitely agree about the social onus of confessing atheism affecting survey results.
@TheMiddleWay If you compare this list of top educational nations to the list above, the correlation is striking. While there are outliers, like Israel, Ireland, Italy and the US, the majority of the top nations are also the most secular. [worldtop20.org]. It may be pertinent to note the number of countries within this study that provide education without cost.
This is a very interesting study on modernity as it relates to secularity. [pdfs.semanticscholar.org]
The subject is largely studied and very interesting. When I was in Sweden, I studied the removal of the church from tax-based support to private support and it's effect on the religious institutions within Sweden. How secularity applies to education in different countries continues to be of primary interest to me.
Mental illness will never die either, sadly......
Has destroyed it.
Really? Still seems to be a lot of it around.
@Tomfoolery33 right? i mean, even science can easily become a religion, seems like
Religion is NOT a scientific problem, and hence science is not the solution. Religion is a politico-economic problem.
And a social problem.
Well said.
the reason is people are too stupid not to be fooled by con artists. We educated people to see the difference between fable and facts. The stupid brreed faster than smart people watch the Movie Idiotcracy it is on netflix and comes comedy central from time to time.
In my experience, educated people are just as capable of stupidity.