Albert Einstein was said to be religious and his discoveries are "God's work in action".
I can't remember where I read/heard that though.
My position concerning God is that of an agnostic. I am convinced that vivid consciousness of the primary importance of moral principles for the betterment and enoblement of life does not need the idea of a law-giver, especially a law-giver who works on the basis of reward and punishment.
I think it is pretty safe to assume that Albert Einstein was an agnostic, given that the quote you gave is vauge and incomplete plus sounds alot like it could have been taken out of place.
Yeaaah I guess it's "scientific" in that it's the study of something but that's still pretty much splitting hairs. It doesn't mean that the Bible's claim have any scientific basis.
It does mean that the intrepretations ain't something someone just made up. Which was the point I was trying to prove.
Please do not try to prove a point by declaring something as being a science, which is well defined.
Religion has caused no harm that could not have been caused without religion.
really? Religion gives people a false belief in how the universe works, an outdated belief that can have been around for thousands (and even longer) of years. When people are satisfied they know all, they stop seeking out how the universe
actually works, the sort of facts that can be actually be utilised and yield something. Plus, some religions in particular
don't take well to people thinking differently to them not because they are possibly wrong, but because it is merely a
different viewpoint. This hinders progress, since it effectively places an unquestionable scaffolding in place.
People can think the world is going to end without religion (see: 2012, Y2k, etc) and want to spare their family from that. People can treat their sick family members with nonreligious snake oils and non-cures (see: homeopathy). Cultural conservativism exists outside of religion. Nonreligious societies have been just as quick to devalue human life as religious ones. I will admit that Catholic doctrine seems to promote pedophilia, but that doesn't mean the situation requires religion. Any organization could be structured as such. Are you saying it's impossible to fly planes into buildings without religion? Hitler was not particularly religious, though he was influenced by some insane supernatural and occult beliefs. Really the Holocaust was more about notions of racial purity and scapegoating than it was about anything religious.
Never did anyone say that religion is the
only cause of bad things, but that it can lead to and contribute to bad things. "Are you saying it's impossible to fly planes into buildings without religion" I don't know how you could work this implication from the quote you are responding to. Micro102 is neither saying that nor implying that.
Also, I find the idea that progress in all cases is greater than art to be a little brash. Art inspires and is inspired by progress just as much as anything else and progress has caused problems as well as given us solutions. I also think art is more important to society than you're giving it credit for.
"Art inspires and is inspired by progress just as much as anything else" is an assertion.
Causality=/= Correlation. Do you have any scientific studies to prove these things.
This study on Christian Science may be quite interesting.
Religious art is a major factor of art history. Can't just ignore it.
Of course it is. But like you said Causality !-> Correlation. Perhaps Art in a significate form may have existed without religion?
Also, I am not sure what the big deal over Art is in respect to religion is.
Large portions of historical art are religious, so they certainly are archaeologically important at the very least. The foundations of Western classical music lie in religious art. Religious art can be just as innovative and influential as nonreligious and often has been. It can say just as much about the world and it can be just as bleak and as grotesque.
Think of all the myriad paintings depicting religious scenes (even discounting the ones done of dubious faith), the masses of Bach and Mozart and the requiems of Brahms and Faure, much of the great architecture of the ancient world was for religious structures and much early literature has origins in transcribing religious tales. To say that religious art isn't important is to not understand art.
I
think what the person you were quoting was trying to say is that the religious aspects of Art are not beautiful, but the art itself it. That is, religius art is important, but its the art itself, not the religiousness of the art that is important.
But again, why the focus on Art? I think it is pretty safe to say that without religion, art would have existed.