You are very confused. When we did not do so we did not dominate.
No there is only a case for consciousness, the human population when writing was developed was minuscule by comparison and they were already building cities.
We only dominate our environment through conscious manipulation it is our thing.
When we were proposed to be specialized at long distance endurance running our population was not what I would term dominant.
Again, we seem to be talking of different things. I fully agree that consciousness plays a significant part in human dominance, but this does not mean it arose for that purpose. To me, the fact that so much of human endeavour is opposed to our 'dominance' or 'survival', like suicide or much of our culture or celibacy or religion on occasion, certainly shows something else is at play here also. You would write this off as byproduct, or a form of secondary selection or whatever, but this is just your preference, as it cannot be shown to be such, really.
We are going around in circles though, so I am not going to reply further on this point.
Whatever. If the ability to accurately describe reality and further manipulate it is not part of the utility and validity of consciousness I have no idea where to begin with you. Your philosophy is a bunch of senseless mush.
That is the whole point, that you cannot determine whether you are accurately describing reality. This is why it is just utility, as claims that it reflects reality are merely grounded on usefulness and predictive power - as I illustrated with Roman hydraulics and Galenic Physiology in this thread, neither of the latter necessarily equate to Reality as such. Even if we think we know how something works and our understanding renders positive results, it does not mean it was correct.
I was using Gods as an example of past attempts to get at what we're describing.
Do you deny that that is what they were? (later on you expand so OK, we're on the same page)
You were making the point that we should not expect religions such as christianity to be made up out of thin air, and I agree, we should not expect that.
It's not what we see either, the ideas of Gods and "spirituality" are concepts that have definitely evolved over time with many influences.
Emphasis on unexplainable.
Gods being indefinite don't actually explain them either.
They were real observations, but so were the ones that overturned them.
The theory of the four elements had a key feature that Gods don't have, they can be shown to be false through further observation.
They contribute to the advancement of knowledge as their attempts to explain things fail and are replaced with better ideas.
No such process works for religion, it changes when people decide it does.
Poseidon hasn't been demonstrated false, it just fell out of favor.
Where religions and spirituality make predictions that actually advance our knoledge they can sometimes be evaluated, but modern practitioners of religion like to make sure this rarely happens.
You are working from the bias where spirituality is written off as false data. If you do not, then the conclusion is very different.
Roman Paganism was dying out long before Christianity - that is why mystery religions and pseudo-religious philosophy was rife in the Empire. It no longer reflected the intellectual realm of the Empire, its developed ideas of existence and form. This was new data added to the equation, which Christianity fit into and explained - hence its growth and displacement of the previous systems.
Ongoing collection of Spiritual evidence leads to improvement of religion - this is why we get Theology being developed and discussed. On top of this we get revelation on occasion, in some form, with it being even more in tune with individual experience. While I have to take much of Science on authority as I will never be able to test the experiments or results obtained, I can measure my own spiritual qualia to what I am presented on Authority. From a personal perspective, I therefore have far more reason to trust this if in accord, as I can verify it myself - while theoretically I could do the same for the Sciences, this is practically impossible, except in very limited circumstances.
We are not going to agree, as you are working from the axioms that sense-data is fundamentally reliable and spirutual perception fundamentally not, which is just an unwarranted assumption.
It seems like a natural reaction to the unknown to me, and it is a known part of human psychology. When we can't explain things we make stuff up to fill in the gaps.
The personification of the unknown is also well known, and it might even be particularly useful.
Your idea that any of this would be strange if the world were made of material things is just a strange and unsupported assumption.
This is why I went to some effort to explain that such a view is retrospective bias. Make up a system for me that is neither Spiritual nor Material. That is decidedly hard, and would be sort of the same thing as our hypothetical materialists would need to have done when 'inventing' the spiritual.
Of course it is part of human psychology, because Spirituality is part of humanity, and this acts as the substrate, the example, for us to make such further allusions. To conceive such psychological concepts with no basis, from just material data, would be conceptually difficult.
It is fine though. This is difficult to grasp, as we see the world through our own cultural and contextual lense. Again, I do not think either of us will gain more here by continuing the discussion in this vein.
Yes, people need to organize and control, so religion and theology are the natural outgrowth of spirituality and the unexplained.
Science isn't the enemy of theology, it's problem is self inflicted. When science started to encroach on religious ideas, it showed it's notes, and religion defends it's territory with philosophy, rhetoric, and feelings.
Hence arguments like yours.
I don't consider Science the enemy of Religion. In fact, it seems to be its friend. Whenever Science advances, it seems to me to support the more developed religious ideas or at least be irrelevant to it. I find it odd, and poor philosophy, that people think otherwise. We see this in scientific investigation of consciousness or the things like Science eventually agreeing with ideas such as the universe having a beginning.
While some basic mythology falls by the wayside, like rotating heavenly spheres, this doesn't actually touch the religion itself. This is why such ideas were often conceived and advanced by devout men - many scientists were Churchmen afterall, and oddities like the persecution of Galileo are the exception that proves the rule - such often due to secular concerns, rather than the sacred.
Oh no the problem is that the ancient myths aren't nessisarily false. Nothing is clearly false with religion. It is conglomeration of connected ideas that come into and fall out of favor.
The problem is that if there IS a God you have no reason to think that you are closer to it's truth than you are close to the Greeks describing Poseidon.
There are no real signposts here, no real evidence, no experts. We can't tell if the God you describe is real or a figment of the imagination that made humanity so successful but there are some clues.
I for one always thought it was unlikely that the unimaginably powerful loving creator of the universe was overly concerned with human sexual politics, but that's just me. Poseidon might have a trident or a more useful harpoon for all I know.
Again this is the problem of Cartesian Anxiety. Fact is, we have no way of determining truth, hence we cannot determine if anything is closer or further from it. This is equally true for materialistic explanations as for religious ones. Both try and solve this by ideas like plausibility and probability, but these are just reframing the problem into a system. The fundamental inability to confirm everything, to anchor something as true, remains. I find the argument that all humans have mythology and that their ideas are best reflected in the form of the philosophical metaphysics as adopted by Christianity, very compelling. You will disagree, but neither of us can truly disprove the other; just as Science cannot disprove such metaphysics or its own axiomatic basis, which needs to be assumed; nor Buddhist Sunyata ideas, either. Our probabilities reflect where we assume the answer lies - essentially playing a game of soccer, but each drawing the lines in dramatically different ways and placing the goalposts at different places - so we shall disagree when or even if a goal is scored.
I do have plenty of ground to dismiss peoples feelings, people are notoriously unreliable at getting at the truth with them.
Luckily these aren't just feelings, but Spiritual experience with tons of inter-subjectivity from all corners of the globe and all human societies.