The fact that people (such as myself) have a strange cognitive bug that makes us feel like we’re talking to an outside entity when we aren’t isn’t something that should be protected.
Mm, okay, I think I see your point. No, it shouldn’t be protected at the expense of true understanding.
But my point is that I think the feeling of spiritual unity (which is an intensely desirable feeling) can be preserved, even while a frame of realistic cognitive understanding is added. I mean, it sounds like that’s what you’re already doing—exploiting the “hit” of religion while recognizing that it comes entirely from “material aspects of [your] own brain.” Right?
Mm, okay, I think I see your point. No, it shouldn’t be protected at the expense of true understanding.
But my point is that I think the feeling of spiritual unity (which is an intensely desirable feeling) can be preserved, even while a frame of realistic cognitive understanding is added. I mean, it sounds like that’s what you’re already doing—exploiting the “hit” of religion while recognizing that it comes entirely from “material aspects of [your] own brain.” Right?