Behind fundamentalism, which would take the second-place position as the greatest inhibitor of progress and science? I'll list a few contenders in rough order of potency as I see it:
- Secular blue-collar/redneck population:
Working-class roughnecks with no religious affiliations who nonetheless despise science as the product of people who "don't work" or "mess up the world". Seldom, if ever, organized into an effective lobbying force, but possibly a larger voter demographic than the devoutly religious and a strong voting base for conservatives or any party that benefits from long-dead myths about their assumed predilection to cut taxes on behalf of the workin' man. In my native Alberta, and possibly Canada overall, this easily takes the number one role ahead of our faint fundamentalist presence. - Religious moderates:
With respect to members of this board who qualify as religious moderates, this group tends to be a legitimizing force for fundamentalists. In political climes where fundamentalism is not already in favor, the interest in public dialogue with secular government that religious moderates present often opens a door for fundamentalists that they alone could not open. Possibly a brainbug on my part. - New Agers/hallucinogenic drug users:
An admittedly limited portion of the population that perceives science as being stodgy, closed-minded and incomplete without contributions from "spiritual" thinkers, or as the primary force behind the devastation of the environment. An often unaddressed segment of the population whose proselytizers have free reign to misinform people at will with little in the way of informed rebuttal. - Feminism:
Likely a long-extinct greivance that, even in it's height, was likely confined to select elements within the feminist movement, saw science as essentially male and chauvinist.