The de-divinization of the world was achieved as a direct effect of the development of monotheism; a monotheism that insisted (against all evidence, in the contemporary worldview) that the one god that mattered (originally -- later, they would claim that he was the only god that was real in any sense) was emphatically not to be identified with the sun, the storm, the ocean, and other "big powers". — Mariner
I don't believe in a God at all — Wayfarer
Gods have been with us since the beginning of time. — Mariner
Perhaps. But monotheism may have played a causal role behind prosperity :D. It certainly did have a major influence in the development of science. — Mariner
I think the discovery and use of fossil fuels, the beneficence of cheap energy, is the main cause of both prosperity and the development of science. — Janus
I wonder what use would have been made of fossil fuels in the absence of engines which burn them. — Wayfarer
the argument that Western culture in particular gave rise to modern science — Wayfarer
I bet there are many monks who wouldn't reduce the history of science to the history of theology or try to defend this with something as obviously fallacious as the last sentence of my quote — Πετροκότσυφας
t's kind of funny though that at one time modern culture is secular and atheist and materialist and something's missing and all that, while now it "may yet continue to be" Christian. — Πετροκότσυφας
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