Religion
In reply to the discussion: List of religion's tangible accomplishments and advances for humanity [View all]MarkCharles
(2,261 posts)opposed to their roots in ancient Greek religious thought and ways of categorizing the quest for knowledge.
While it is true that, for most of the history of mankind, religious institutions of ALL sorts have been associated with humankind's desire for categorizing and imparting SOME seeds of knowledge, there are as many instances wherein religion squelched the desire for pursuit of knowledge, accusing such figures of all forms of religious blasphemy along the way, executing some, imprisoning others, and burning the written "scientific" records of even more.
I would hardly lay claim that academic learning, nor the archiving of knowledge and discovery in museums really has deep religious causation and universal support.
But then there's those creation museums, of course.
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