Destructionator XIII wrote:Even the Greeks in the BC era had a better idea: their philosophers argued that it was the human ability to reason that put us on a different level, and by extension to that, a human who does not use his mind to reason about the universe is no different than any other animal.
Quite the opposite to religion, really.
Isn't organized religion just another outcome of reasoning? If you are thinking in political terms. Reasoning that creating a religion of your own to ensure the population will follow them more err strictly?
I mean...isn't there example of animals being taught to count? If we are using patterns as part of maths, does that mean animals can count? We got animals that know how much distance to travel, when to stop and find the mating ground and etc. Isn't that 'counting' in a way?
Look, I'm not saying that acts like breaking the atom, travelling to the moon isn't impressive as a race or species.
'Biologically' in a way, like when we are just some pre-historic tribe to who have yet to make full use of cultivation and growing crops, where humans may have yet to developed the idea of mathematics...what really separate us from 'normal' animals?
How do you put it...like what makes a difference between a Homo erectus, Homo habilis and a Homo sapiens?
I wanted to say things like culture, agriculture or maybe the ability to shape their environment...but the 'lesser' homids seems to have it as well. In case of agriculture, doesn’t an insect 'farm' in a sense?
Also, in terms of shaping the environment, doesn't ants and birds built nest and shape the 'natural' look? The only main difference is we shaped MORE.
MAYBE I jumped to fast to conclusion, but religion seems to be the only thing that is against nature in a way. Maybe I can't see it, but to
me I can't see why would nature give birth to the idea of afterlife and a higher being.
Religion is the thing that will seem 'unnatural' in some way. How do we know that what thing isn't 'built in' for other kind of animals and what is? Mathematics can be 'built in' from a certain point of view.
Well, feel free to say I'm wrong, but can you at the least tell me what separate us from other animals? What makes us have the right to view animals as a 'lower' form of living things?