Quote from jem:
Whether you believe in a creator or not. Is not the point. Whether there is a creator is not the point. The point is that because people believed in God inalienable rights were born. (Read about John Locke.) It been a long time since I read my history but when the calls for liberty were sounding, they made appeals to peoples belief in Jesus and his teachings regarding the dignity of human beings.
It was this religious concept that freed the world.
Whether there is God or not is secondary. In fact some the leaders may not have believed in God. But Christians were rallied to support inalienable rights, freedoms, (including the freedom of religion), dignity and democracy.
So the thread started by saying religion should be done away with so that science can advance. My point is that it is religion also gave him freedom to say it should be done away with.
For a more recent understanding of liberty and Christianity. I reference you to the start of the end of communism in Poland and the Pope.
Interesting to read what Jefferson had to say about these rights.
"The principles on which we engaged, of which the charter of our independence is the record, were sanctioned by the laws of our being, and we but obeyed them in pursuing undeviatingly the course they called for. It issued finally in that inestimable state of freedom which alone can ensure to man the enjoyment of his equal rights." --Thomas Jefferson to Georgetown Republicans, 1809. ME 16:349
"Man [is] a rational animal, endowed by nature with rights and with an innate sense of justice." --Thomas Jefferson to William Johnson, 1823. ME 15:441
"A free people [claim] their rights as derived from the laws of nature, and not as the gift of their chief magistrate." --Thomas Jefferson: Rights of British America, 1774. ME 1:209, Papers 1:134
"Under the law of nature, all men are born free, every one comes into the world with a right to his own person, which includes the liberty of moving and using it at his own will. This is what is called personal liberty, and is given him by the Author of nature, because necessary for his own sustenance." --Thomas Jefferson: Legal Argument, 1770. FE 1:376
Although at the time these were written the use of God did not refer to a God of a specific religion, rather more the concept of nature.
Back to the original post, I think religion and scientific progress usually do well together. However, there are "fundies" who are out to push us back to the days of Tribal Laws where tribal leaders defined what learning was acceptable.
Now, instead of the tribal council, they get elected and try to take over shool boards and rally behind or support elections that send to DC candidates who look favorably upon either their ideas or their ability to rally supporters not to mention campaign contributions to promote their agenda.
But I think that Ann Druyan (Carl Sagan's wife) hits the nail on the head with this comment:
"
Why are people afraid of science?"
"
D: The complexity and jargon are daunting, and the knowledge has been horribly misapplied. We have weapons of mass destruction because of our fledgling knowledge of science. Furthermore, the Western religious tradition is based on a fear of knowledge. It goes right back to Prometheus and to the Garden of Eden, to Godâs threat that if we partake of the tree of knowledge, we will know only misery and death. So we keep one thing in our heads that says, yes, our cell phones work, our TVs work because of science, but we keep an infantile, geocentric view of the universe locked within our hearts."
Q&A Session DISCOVER Vol. 24 No. 11 | November 2003
DS