Religion exists because of the physical reality of the presence of Spirit in our day to day lives. It may well be a light touch, but its presence is derived from the reality of a networked system of super computers present with every single cell. This is constructed from Dark Matter and scaled at the level of an electron.
For a long time science has simply rejected this physical reality to produce the separation MEME. That is rapidly falling apart, not least with the burgeoning literature on out of body experiences and their like. Put simply, the Other Side is providing ample evidence to go with their direction.
Most of us, including most scholars do a poor job of reading ancient scriptures and too readily allow our own baggage to control the interpretation. We all must work to get past that.
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Why Religion Is Not Going Away and Science Will Not Destroy It
Social scientists predicted that belief in the supernatural would drift away as modern science advanced. They were wrong.
https://getpocket.com/explore/item/why-religion-is-not-going-away-and-science-will-not-destroy-it
In 1966, just over 50 years ago,
the distinguished Canadian-born anthropologist Anthony Wallace
confidently predicted the global demise of religion at the hands of an
advancing science: ‘belief in supernatural powers is doomed to die out,
all over the world, as a result of the increasing adequacy and diffusion
of scientific knowledge’. Wallace’s vision was not exceptional. On the
contrary, the modern social sciences, which took shape in 19th-century
western Europe, took their own recent historical experience of
secularisation as a universal model. An assumption lay at the core of
the social sciences, either presuming or sometimes predicting that all
cultures would eventually converge on something roughly approximating
secular, Western, liberal democracy. Then something closer to the
opposite happened.
Not only has secularism failed to continue its
steady global march but countries as varied as Iran, India, Israel,
Algeria and Turkey have either had their secular governments replaced by
religious ones, or have seen the rise of influential religious
nationalist movements. Secularisation, as predicted by the social
sciences, has failed.
To be sure, this failure is not unqualified. Many
Western countries continue to witness decline in religious belief and
practice. Census
data released in Australia, for example, shows that 30 per cent of the
population identify as having ‘no religion’, and that this percentage is
increasing. International surveys confirm comparatively low levels of
religious commitment in western Europe and Australasia. Even the United
States, a long-time source of embarrassment for the secularisation
thesis, has seen a rise in unbelief. The percentage of atheists
in the US in 2017 was at an all-time high (if ‘high’ is the right word)
of around 3 per cent. Yet, for all that, globally, the total number of
people who consider themselves to be religious remains high, and
demographic trends suggest that the overall pattern for the immediate
future will be one of religious growth. But this isn’t the only failure of the secularisation thesis.
Scientists, intellectuals and social scientists
expected that the spread of modern science would drive secularisation –
that science would be a secularising force. But that simply hasn’t been
the case. If we look at those societies where religion remains vibrant,
their key common features are less to do with science, and more to do
with feelings of existential security and protection from some of the
basic uncertainties of life in the form of public goods. A social safety
net might be correlated with scientific advances but only loosely, and
again the case of the US is instructive. The US is arguably the most
scientifically and technologically advanced society in the world, and
yet at the same time the most religious of Western societies. As the
British sociologist David Martin concluded in The Future of Christianity
(2011): ‘There is no consistent relation between the degree of
scientific advance and a reduced profile of religious influence, belief
and practice.’
The story of science and secularisation becomes even
more intriguing when we consider those societies that have witnessed
significant reactions against secularist agendas. India’s first prime
minister Jawaharlal Nehru championed secular and scientific ideals, and
enlisted scientific education in the project of modernisation. Nehru was
confident that Hindu visions of a Vedic past and Muslim dreams of an
Islamic theocracy would both succumb to the inexorable historical march
of secularisation. ‘There is only one-way traffic in Time,’ he declared.
But as the subsequent rise of Hindu and Islamic fundamentalism
adequately attests, Nehru was wrong. Moreover, the association of
science with a secularising agenda has backfired, with science becoming a
collateral casualty of resistance to secularism.
Turkey provides an even more revealing case. Like
most pioneering nationalists, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder of the
Turkish republic, was a committed secularist. Atatürk believed that
science was destined to displace religion. In order to make sure that
Turkey was on the right side of history, he gave science, in particular
evolutionary biology, a central place in the state education system of
the fledgling Turkish republic. As a result, evolution came to be
associated with Atatürk’s entire political programme, including
secularism. Islamist parties in Turkey, seeking to counter the
secularist ideals of the nation’s founders, have also attacked the
teaching of evolution. For them, evolution is associated with secular
materialism. This sentiment culminated in the decision this June to
remove the teaching of evolution from the high-school classroom. Again,
science has become a victim of guilt by association.
The US represents a different cultural context,
where it might seem that the key issue is a conflict between literal
readings of Genesis and key features of evolutionary history. But in
fact, much of the creationist discourse centres on moral values. In the
US case too, we see anti-evolutionism motivated at least in part by the
assumption that evolutionary theory is a stalking horse for secular
materialism and its attendant moral commitments. As in India and Turkey,
secularism is actually hurting science.
In brief, global secularisation is not inevitable
and, when it does happen, it is not caused by science. Further, when the
attempt is made to use science to advance secularism, the results can
damage science. 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. The science and secularism
pairing is so awkward that it raises the question: why did anyone think
otherwise?
***
Historically, two related sources advanced
the idea that science would displace religion. First, 19th-century
progressivist conceptions of history, particularly associated with the
French philosopher Auguste Comte, held to a theory of history in which
societies pass through three stages – religious, metaphysical and
scientific (or ‘positive’). Comte coined the term ‘sociology’ and he
wanted to diminish the social influence of religion and replace it with a
new science of society. Comte’s influence extended to the ‘young Turks’
and Atatürk.
The 19th century also witnessed the inception of the
‘conflict model’ of science and religion. This was the view that
history can be understood in terms of a ‘conflict between two epochs in
the evolution of human thought – the theological and the scientific’.
This description comes from Andrew Dickson White’s influential A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom (1896),
the title of which nicely encapsulates its author’s general theory.
White’s work, as well as John William Draper’s earlier History of the Conflict Between Religion and Science (1874),
firmly established the conflict thesis as the default way of thinking
about the historical relations between science and religion. Both works
were translated into multiple languages. Draper’s History went
through more than 50 printings in the US alone, was translated into 20
languages and, notably, became a bestseller in the late Ottoman empire,
where it informed Atatürk’s understanding that progress meant science
superseding religion.
Today, people are less confident that history moves
through a series of set stages toward a single destination. Nor, despite
its popular persistence, do most historians of science support the idea
of an enduring conflict between science and religion. Renowned
collisions, such as the Galileo affair, turned on politics and
personalities, not just science and religion. Darwin had significant
religious supporters and scientific detractors, as well as vice versa.
Many other alleged instances of science-religion conflict have now been
exposed as pure inventions. In fact, contrary to conflict, the
historical norm has more often been one of mutual support between
science and religion. In its formative years in the 17th century, modern
science relied on religious legitimation. During the 18th and 19th
centuries, natural theology helped to popularise science.
The conflict model of science and religion offered a
mistaken view of the past and, when combined with expectations of
secularisation, led to a flawed vision of the future. Secularisation
theory failed at both description and prediction. The real question is
why we continue to encounter proponents of science-religion conflict.
Many are prominent scientists. It would be superfluous to rehearse
Richard Dawkins’s musings on this topic, but he is by no means a
solitary voice. Stephen Hawking thinks that ‘science will win because it
works’; Sam Harris has declared that ‘science must destroy religion’;
Stephen Weinberg thinks that science has weakened religious certitude;
Colin Blakemore predicts that science will eventually make religion
unnecessary. Historical evidence simply does not support such
contentions. Indeed, it suggests that they are misguided.
So why do they persist? The answers are political.
Leaving aside any lingering fondness for quaint 19th-century
understandings of history, we must look to the fear of Islamic
fundamentalism, exasperation with creationism, an aversion to alliances
between the religious Right and climate-change denial, and worries about
the erosion of scientific authority. While we might be sympathetic to
these concerns, there is no disguising the fact that they arise out of
an unhelpful intrusion of normative commitments into the discussion.
Wishful thinking – hoping that science will vanquish religion – is no
substitute for a sober assessment of present realities. Continuing with
this advocacy is likely to have an effect opposite to that intended.
Religion is not going away any time soon, and
science will not destroy it. If anything, it is science that is subject
to increasing threats to its authority and social legitimacy. Given
this, science needs all the friends it can get. Its advocates would be
well advised to stop fabricating an enemy out of religion, or insisting
that the only path to a secure future lies in a marriage of science and
secularism.
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