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Russell Kirk's critique of this blog entry: "This view of the human condition has been called - by C. S. Lewis, in particular - reductionism: it reduces human beings almost to mindlessness; it denies the existence of the soul. Reductionism has become almost an ideology. It is scientistic, but not scientific: for it is a far cry from the understanding of matter and energy that one finds in the addresses of Nobel prize winners in physics, say. ... "What ails modern civilization? Fundamentally, our society's affliction is the decay of religious belief. If a culture is to survive and flourish, it must not be severed from the religious vision out of which it arose. The high necessity of reflective men and women, then, is to labor for the restoration of religious teachings as a credible body of doctrine." From "Civilization without religion?" http://theroadtoemmaus.org/RdLb/21PbAr/Hst/Civ&~relig.htm
This discussion reminds me of Frithjof Schuon's "The Transcendent Unity of Religions", in which he argues that a metaphysical unity exists which transcends the manifest world and which can be "univocally described by none and concretely aprehended by few".