Skip, I apologize for a point-by-point response. I'm trying to avoid those but don't always succeed. The way i see it, there are two main questions here if you just want to skip further point-by-point responses and ru with those:
1. Is it reason or instinct that animals follow?
2. Does science
operate as a religion for some/many?
Skip wrote:What makes you think that? Even if rats, crows, dogs and elephants lack the concept of logic, they nevertheless use logic.
That's a strong statement. I'd like to read some scientific studies showing animals use logic rather than responding to training and/or instinct. But even so, it's the
concept that would ultimately matter for my point.
Skip wrote:That's an anthropocentric definition. I wouldn't claim a monopoly. Certainly, the activities of other species don't appear irrational, and I can see a clear line of development from those activities to our own.
Anthropocentrism doesn't necessarily equate to "incorrect." It doesn't mean we're not right to consider ourselves to be the only (Earth) animals "endowed with the capacity to reason." So again, I think we're stuck instinct verses reason, with the latter, in my experience, meaning that one can choose not to act on instinct.
Skip wrote:RelStuPhD wrote:Of course, this doesn't necessarily undermine your whole argument, but I think it does call into question whether religion is really the result of our being an imaginative people, or being a rational one (though it certainly doesn't show it's the result of rationality).
Did that question just trip over itself? In nature, we can see other animals use reason to solve practical problems...
I don't think so, but I'm definitely interested in chasing this one down as far as we can on an internet forum.
Skip wrote:Bird example: There is a grub in a deep hole. I want it. I can't reach it. What is there in the vicinity that would help? There is a stick. Is it narrow enough to fit in the hole? Yes. Is it long enough to reach the grub? Yes. Holding the stick in my beak increases my reach. Now I can get the grub.
That's certainly how a human would think through it. But the bird? Wouldn't it be more like "I use this stick to get the grub. I don't why, though. I just know I'm compelled to get a stick. But I also get the grub, so woohoo!" And what if the getting at the grub didn't require a stick but string? Would the bird think through the problem and go get that piece of string?
Skip wrote:If gods are the result of rational enquiry, what was the problem? What were the questions? Where were answers found? And why did people come up with so many improbable solutions? .... which, as you say, don't appear to have worked.
Well, I think the problem/question was simply "why?" That is to say, the very questions that drive us to understand why a feather and a ball fall at the same speed in a vacuum drive us to ask "why something rather than nothing?" And since can't answer that latter question with science, religion works. As for why we've come up with so many different answers (I think "improbable" is the wrong word here), I think we can ask the same of science. It could just be that finding out the answers to "why" aren't as easy as we think. The path trod by science is similarly littered with all sorts of errors, so I see no reason why religion shouldn't be afforded the same access to trial and error. (Though, of course, religion claims "God said so," so there's a higher egg-on-face ratio there than with science.

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Skip wrote:Of course it's the product of the same inquisitive imagination. And they don't even need to be in competition: they both come out of "Why?" and "What if?" The answers have different applications, and they are both effective.
Yes. I agree wholeheartedly.
Can we? If we confuse coveting with worshipping, maybe.
No, not quite this. More a misunderstanding of what science can and can't tell us, taking it as the ultimate authority in any problem, acting on its "dictates" (bad word, I know) as if there were supreme law, etc, etc, etc. I linked it above, but "scientism" is what we could call science operating as religion. (nb I'm not saying science
is religion, jut that it
operates as such for some/many).