Well, yes. I said "The extent to which religion is merely a primitive or naïve science, however, is dubious." Then I outlined some examples of how religion is (or seems like) primitive science.
In addition, when it comes to the Laws of Nature (I said "natural law", but that's unclear because that phrase has another, idiomatic meaning), my thinking is a little unclear. Did humans "invent" or "discover" the laws of nature? I'd suggest that by thinking we merely "discover" them, we are suggesting some Cosmic Clockmaker, who established them in the first place. If nature is purposeless, then the planets proceed on their cosmic dance because of "gravity", not because of "the law of gravity". The law of gravity is a cultural construct we have developed to describe how the planets (and other things) move. It's a minor disinction, but a reasonable one.
You seem perilously close to advocating for the airhead actresses whom AuntShecky and JHG deplore in the other thread for calling herself, "Not religious, but spiritual." We literary types do have transcendent, overwhelming and emotional experiences triggered by art. Such expereinces mght also be triggered by falling in love, or breaking up with our lovers. But why should that make us pooh-pooh religious experiences? I'll grant that facile religious experiences (from reading the Bible, perhaps) may be similar to experiences derived from reading other books. However, to think your experience of art comparable to that of the Buddhist monk who practices meditation for thirty years and then crawls across the Himalayas on his hands and knees on a spiritual pilgrimage smacks of hubris. Religions have, over the years, developed sophisticated techniques for facilitating mystical, transcendent experiences. The saint who practices these techniques daily for decades, flagellating himself all the while (OK, I just put that in for humor) can surely experience something that you and I cannot. The reason the air-head actress who claims to be "spiritual" is objectionable is that she hasn't studied or practiced the techniques of spirituality. She's a dilettante, and I'll grant, Morpheus, that you are just as spiritual as she is. However, the notion that a non-religious person can be just as spiritual as the Saint (without the practice, faith, or talent for it) is ludicrous. It's like suggesting that an illiterate person can be just as good a poet as Walt Whitman.
Christians think that FAITH (and the transcendent experience that accompanies it) is a gift from God,and that only by asking for His help can one become the new and differant person who can achieve salvation. Even if God is no more than a culural construct, it is certainly possible that there is a great deal of truth to this belief. Why couldn't there be? Why can't careful study of culturally constructed concepts be enlightening?



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