Religion vs. Science
By Daniel Miessler on April 16th, 2006: Tagged as Philosophy | Religion | Science
Mabye one way to judge the moral strength of mainstream religion vs. mainstream science is to compare how the objects sacred to them are treated by their devotees.
It struck me the other day that scientists find ways to share important scientific finds. They schedule time with whatever the object is, e.g. space rocks, fossil finds, etc. And for archaeologists, teams from all over the world can work onsite together doing their respective research.
Jerusalem, however, is the site of endless war. Many religious people would rather kill other human beings than share their most sacred holy land, and this to me is proof that the entire premise is faulty.
Imagine, for a second, an archaeological dig where the research team from the University of Chicago shows up with humvees and automatic weapons to remove the team from the University of Helsinki.
“We just can’t have them there, doing their impure research. They go against everything we believe and are a discrace to science. We must kill them.”
That doesn’t happen in science, but it does in religion.
In science, conficts are “squabbles”; the weapons come in the form of research and journal publications refuting the validity of various theories. That’s how civilized people wage war — they publish an opposing viewpoint and encourage public debate.
Some day everyone will settle disputes using this method, but not until religion in its current form has been seen for what it truly is — groupthink barbarism.
