Science is my first religion: Difference between revisions

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My parents were both non-religious intellectuals who cherished reading;  we had books in the house on science, technology, art, history, war and peace, religions, philosophy, cooking, herbalism — all very eclectic.
My parents were both non-religious intellectuals who cherished reading;  we had books in the house on science, technology, art, history, war and peace, religions, philosophy, cooking, herbalism — all very eclectic.
By age five, maybe six, I was confidently saying things like "E equals Em See Squared" and "matter can neither be created nor destroyed, only converted to energy and back again" and "Two plus two divided by two is *still two!*", etc.
By age five, maybe six, I was confidently saying things like "E equals Em See Squared" and "matter can neither be created nor destroyed, only converted to energy and back again" and "Two plus two divided by two is *still two!*", etc.


That is my bedrock, my foundational self, still informing my mind.  Science;  reason;  rational thought:  these are vessels which deliver my prayers, so to speak.
That is my bedrock, my foundational self, still informing my mind.  Science;  reason;  rational thought:  these are vessels which deliver my prayers, so to speak.


Now, when I say that "the human condition is my religion," I am entirely sincere, and serious:  this is no mere figure of speech.   
Now, when I say that "[[the human condition]] is my religion," I am entirely sincere, and serious:  this is no mere figure of speech.   


As I approach the  age of sixty, while I have my health, I find my thoughts gradually turning from science, with its implicit determinism, towards the human condition, with its bewildering variety of uncertainty and contradiction.
As I approach the  age of sixty, while I have my health, I find my thoughts gradually turning from science, with its implicit determinism, towards the human condition, with its bewildering variety of uncertainty and contradiction.
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* [[Gnomon algorithm]]
* [[Gnomon algorithm]]
* [[Gnomon Chronicles]]
* [[Gnomon Chronicles]]
* [[The Human Condition]]
* [[The Human Condition 2]]


== Nonfiction cross-reference ==
== Nonfiction cross-reference ==

Revision as of 09:26, 15 February 2021

"Science is my first religion" is a short essay by Karl Jones.

Science is my first religion

just between you and me and anyone else who reads this:

Science is my first Religion.

My parents were both non-religious intellectuals who cherished reading; we had books in the house on science, technology, art, history, war and peace, religions, philosophy, cooking, herbalism — all very eclectic.

By age five, maybe six, I was confidently saying things like "E equals Em See Squared" and "matter can neither be created nor destroyed, only converted to energy and back again" and "Two plus two divided by two is *still two!*", etc.

That is my bedrock, my foundational self, still informing my mind. Science; reason; rational thought: these are vessels which deliver my prayers, so to speak.

Now, when I say that "the human condition is my religion," I am entirely sincere, and serious: this is no mere figure of speech.

As I approach the age of sixty, while I have my health, I find my thoughts gradually turning from science, with its implicit determinism, towards the human condition, with its bewildering variety of uncertainty and contradiction.

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Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference

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