(November 24, 2023 at 10:24 pm)SimpleCaveman Wrote:(November 24, 2023 at 7:32 pm)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote: Of course sociology is much more than religious beliefs - I don’t think anyone can sensibly dispute that. But it seems difficult (if not impossible) to study a society (sociology) without taking religion into account. To do so, it’s not only needful to study what people believe (religion), but why they believe it (theology).Yep. Not disagreeing, Boru. Seems like the question left is how much of Theology is “why they believe”. Do you think that “why they believe” is all of Theology or a portion? I would say it's a small part of Theology.
I’m not saying that theology is the most important part of sociology, or even a major part. But I do think it’s a vital part - attempting to understand a society without considering why it believes what it believes does a disservice to both.
I think that 'why' falls under psychology and/or neuroscience. So many diverse/detached cultures have created similar supernatural belief systems that there has to something that they all had in common. That would be the human mind.
https://www.americanscientist.org/articl...pernatural
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