I wouldn't say they solve themselves so much as society brings forth what needs to be remedied. If starving on the streets reaches a certain level riots ensue. Heads get chopped off. The society, in essence, has a redefining of its existence. You are right, as was rama, that I need to assess this mindset into the mindset that I am a part of these societies and not an enemy or objector. However the weight of such action and ill is far too much for me to carry alone or to even act on alone. Not until society is ready will any action be reasonably possible. Until then, it is beyond my rights to act as it could cause further paradox.
I'm all for inciting activism through greater evils when necessary, but it's not necessary to feed the starving and to stop killers. The argument that, because society isn't responding to the issue neither should you, is entirely fallacious. You are a part of society, so you not responding to the issue is part of the reason isn't responding to the issue. Do you see how ridiculous that is?
Oil use is entirely due to science, and as such is responsible for any wars caused for oil. Much like one would blame the Crusades on the peoples religious motivation.
But science itself didn't motivate wars, science uncovering a new combustible substance did. A war over resources, not ideology as in religion or who has the better way to perform experiments and processes.
I honestly believe some need religion beyond secular means at times - though thats not to say that secular experience can not be defined as religious experiences at times further muddying the issue.
Again, we must be using different definitions here. Secular, as in not overtly or specifically religious, is how I intended that.
As for some people needing religion, perhaps. There haven't been any studies stating for or against such, so I hold that any religious solution can be mirrored in a secular solution with proper effort and ingenuity.
Religion is one of the only sources that we have (and have had in the past) for solving these flaws. A religious worldview solves several issues that academic research hasn't. For example, reincarnation solves the outstanding issue of lucky morality. Much of modern psychology can be found throughout the religion of the ancients as well as the texts of various buddhist sects.
But again, it doesn't solve the flaws, it only makes people feel better about them being there and perhaps inspires activism. I'll grant you that science hasn't in the past and by it's nature likely can't or won't solve psychological issues. But the scientific approach isn't the only secular approach. Trial and error is generally a terrible way to do science, but it works very well for psychology and requires no religion to speak of. I'll also grant you that many Buddhist sects got psychology right, but that still doesn't mean Buddhism is required to do so.
The issue in part is that these ideas are destined to change with time as we better grasp the issues. Religious experience is the natural phenomenae, I believe, that deals with this on a personal level - that triggers a reorganization of the mind and how it views the world - whether pleasurable or discontent. Now this could be described in psychological or physical terms, but in essence it If this is true on the level of how the mind functions, it is likely true on a higher level. It is quite possible that science needs to have a crisis of its own existences and view to improve itself.
I'm afraid you've lost me for a bit here. I was speaking about how teaching enjoyment of everyday life and altruism can make for more contented masses. This will obviously not work for everybody, but it doesn't have to and really shouldn't or humanity would stagnate. Those who it doesn't work for will go onto become the innovators, those that change everyday life and how we enjoy it. In other words, a solution in the form of teaching different morals and behaviours isn't a solve-all, but nothing should be.
I never thought religion was a solve all for societies problem, though if used properly it can be the solution to all a persons problems.
Again, if that were true, society would have no problems. Each person's problems contribute to the next person's, and societal problems are the problems of large amounts of individuals. As it is, religion can't give a starving man a meal, can't stop the oceans acidifying, can't do a great many things. It can motivate people to give a man a meal, and to work to stop pollution, but the means themselves aren't religious.
Religious experiences I would define as those experiences that are removed from the mundane life. Examples include : Night Terrors, Automatic writing, revelation, conversion, mysticism, or even a eureka moment. This is in contrast to the organization of religion and those in such organizations indoctrinated or otherwise holding to beliefs given by those religions which are almost more of "echos" or ripples of the original experiences that lead to the organizations. It may be outside the reach of some to have a religious or non-mundane experience themselves and so they reach for it through established social organizations that attempt to (in part) endow this.
In short the difference between religion and experiences to me is one is the reaction of an individual to irreconcilable truth, and the other is the reaction of a society to this individuals truth.
There is an order to religion and religious experiences and as such we should be searching for a better religious science.
I feel like you use a different definition of religion than I do. My definition of religion being something along the lines of, worship or observance of the supernatural. Your examples of night terrors, automatic writing, and a eureka moment are all explainable by secular and even scientific means without requiring the supernatural. Technically mysticism, revelation, and conversion don't require anything supernatural to occur either, only for one to believe such happens and so can be explained as secular processes to reach these conclusions. They're all rather mundane, if not common, occurrences even though some are fueled by a belief in the supernatural.
The only truth is objective truth, and here's where I think we hit a snag in the conversation. Morality, opinions, hallucinations, and subjective truths, are not true any more than a thought is a physical object. This is simply demonstrable by having two different people have conflicting views at the same time, with as much evidence for one as the other. Both sides are true with mutually exclusive truths, which makes no logical sense.
I would agree that it would befit humanity to better study psychological occurrences, but I wouldn't claim that they have an order to them more so than the cause or are religious in any way.