NoHolyCows
Senior Member
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- Mar 16, 2025
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- Skeptic
Good. I want to address your points directly. My argument here is that this "rich, flawed, fascinating mythologies of human history" is the reality of the ancient mind. They are not constructing mythology, they are expressing and explaining the world as they see it. Not only that, this "flawed" understanding of the world is in fact how we ourselves experience the world we live in today. It is our reality.
When we raise a child, it is still more important to raise them with an appreciation of art, beauty and values than to teach them science. When we are sad or happy, we still express ourselves and find comfort in song and stories than in science. We have art therapy and music as therapy and even story telling as therapy, we don't use science as therapy. Sure, we have medicine, but that heals the body, not the soul. I suggest that it is more important to teach our children about Santa Claus than it is to teach them physics. I suggest that not to believe in Santa Claus is to deprive ourselves of a deep, fundamental and important hope in life. And that this hope is the very essence that makes life worth living. This is not superstition. It is reality.
Our obsession with science has blinded us to what I see as the most glaring failure of science. It has not addressed anything of vital importance to how to live our lives. It is, I insist, about dead things not living things.
I suggest that to understand living things, we need to first see our world spiritually, the way our ancestors do. We need to revisit the world of emotions and of the soul. These things, the spirit and the soul, lie beyond science but are the very essence of life itself. To insist that life, even in ameobas, has been explained in science is, I suggest, so off the mark I can't even begin to discuss it.
To understand God, we need to step down from the pulpit of science and embrace the world we actually live in. A world that we experience through the moment of the present and through our senses and emotions and mind, and begin to understand that. A world that is captured through art and stories rather than scientific fact. I suggest that the very "superstition and mythology" that you reject is the very reality of life itself. And until we embrace and try to understand this reality, we don't understand life at all. Let alone God.
Thanks for the earnest and beautifully written reply—it’s clear this topic matters to you deeply. But for the sake of clarity, let’s untangle the important conflations at work here.
You’re absolutely right that myths, stories, art, music, and symbols express how people make sense of the world. But that’s the point—they’re expressions, not explanations. Myth is meaningful precisely because it reflects human experience, not because it reveals literal truths about reality. Calling that “reality” is to confuse subjective meaning with objective fact. We feel the world this way, yes—but how we feel about something and what is actually true are not always aligned.
When you say things like “it’s more important to teach children about Santa Claus than physics,” that’s poetic, but also dangerously romanticized. Santa Claus is beautiful as a story—but it’s not reality. We don’t teach kids fairy tales to ground them in fact, we teach them to dream, to imagine, to empathize. That’s valuable—but only if we also teach them to eventually distinguish imagination from reality. Otherwise we’re not nurturing minds—we’re misleading them.
You mention that science hasn’t addressed “how to live.” But this is a false dichotomy. Science doesn’t replace values or meaning—it helps inform them. We still need ethics, literature, psychology, and philosophy. But the difference is: science asks what is true. Story and symbol ask what feels meaningful. We need both—but we need to know the difference.
And when you say we should see the world “spiritually” like our ancestors did, what you’re really asking is that we return to a mode of thought that blurs metaphor and fact, subjectivity and truth. That may feel comforting—but it’s also how people ended up believing in curses instead of medicine, in demons instead of trauma, in floods that covered the Earth instead of local river overflow. That’s not wisdom—it’s projection.
Science does study living things—including emotions, cognition, even meaning-making itself. The claim that it’s “about dead things” is simply false. Neuroscience studies emotion. Biology studies behavior. Psychology explores identity and meaning. Evolution explains cooperation and altruism. These fields don’t ignore life—they embrace it at every level. What they don’t do is wrap it in sacred metaphor and call it untouchable.
And finally, if the only way to “understand God” is to abandon reason and embrace the emotional stories we already want to believe, then God becomes indistinguishable from wishful thinking. If your argument is that we must step away from evidence, inquiry, and logic to find truth—then you’ve redefined “truth” as whatever makes us feel better. And that’s not a path to understanding. It’s a retreat from it.
We should absolutely value stories. But we shouldn’t mistake them for reality—or build worldviews on metaphor when what we need is method.
NHC