Thoughts on non-overlapping magesteria (NOM)
I've been reading the threads on religion vs science and the debate is fascinating. Before I commence with my post, I'd just like to say I'm an agnostic of the "Well, fairies might exist for all I know" variety. This shouldn't really matter, but I hope it will head off an possible ad-hominems.
Now, my post is sort of an invitation to all interested in exploring/discussing the issue further, argument isn't really my aim though if it occurs, well that's life. I believe there is a way in which science and religion could be considered NOM. Namely, the fundamental aims of science and religion differ. This may seem like a trivial observation, but I feel it's significant for the following reason: While science systematically studies/observes the world in order to make "truth claims" about it, the truth claims of religion are, in a sense, incidental to it. Granted, it's difficult to consider claims such as "God created Adam and Eve" "incidental" to Christianity, but nevertheless I can conceive of a severely stripped down version of Christianity which made no supernatural claims at all but was still *more* than a collection of moral precepts/history/literature/what have you. Exactly what that *more* would be, I'm not sure, but I feel it would be there. This *more* is, I believe, the proper aim of religion. This is very touchy-feely stuff, I know. I'm having a hard time marshaling support for so nebulous a concept. Perhaps a real-world example would be something like Zen, which is very "spartan" i.e. it makes very few "truth claims," it doesn't really offer clear-cut ethical guidelines, knowledge of its history/mythology is considered non-essential to its practice-- and yet it's doing something. I'm not implying that a similarly stripped down Christianity would resemble Zen, or that all religions are the same underneath or any such guff. I'm basically inviting interested posters to give their thoughts.
Hope this fosters some interesting discussion!