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Faust,
Clarence H., The Search for Answers in An
Outline of Mans Knowledge of the Modern World
[abstract
250 words]
We have
vastly extended our ability to adapt the forces of the
universe to our own purposes yet human beings are not
at all confident about ourselves and our place in the
world. We are less sure of the meaning and purpose of
human life than our ancestors were. We need guiding
principles that will give us a sense of direction in
the universe.
Religion
used to provide a conception of human beings relation
to the universe which gave life meaning and established
a relationship between human purposes and aspirations
and the scheme of the universe. In its failure to provide
these people turned to the authority of the physical
and social sciences.
But there
still exists an unease. The modern world which science
presents to us is conceptually alien. We are benumbed
by its size and defeated by its complexity.
What is
sought is a new relation between humans and their universe.
A path which could hopefully would bring people into
harmony with the nature of things. There is a increasing
tendency for people to turn from religion to achieve
harmony and to seek relief from the stresses of modern
life in psychology.
Psychiatry
proposes an insight which seems to hold out the prospect
of becoming a guide to good and evil in human feelings,
thoughts, and conduct. Humans will be restless until
they can form a satisfactory picture of themselves in
the kind of universe which science has revealed. Religion
must turn to this task.
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