Perhaps Science and Religion are undergoing some sort of schism. Looking back several hundred years, the universities that were forming priests were also educating the elite and turning out polymaths. Perhaps there is a blossoming of specialization in these latter days, where kids don't need church or a noble family to put them on track for some really heady science work.
In fact university systems are practically religions unto themselves, with perceptible and distinctive campus cultures, Greek fraternity/sorority and what have you clubs to join, there is certainly a churchy blueprint being followed in education.
It seems to me that religion and medicine and architecture and other various sciences were tightly intertwined. It's why the reactionary Christians are rejecting Science qua Science and Scientism, because if science is not subject to religious ethics or morals, then science has power that church doesn't.
I don't know about Asia and the rest of the world, but seeing as the Catholic Church set up systems such as universities and hospitals, it's altogether unsurprising that religion is woven into the DNA of those disciplines even as they secularize and syncretize.
> Perhaps Science and Religion are undergoing some sort of schism.
There's no schism. Religion and science are both ostensibly attempting to describe the underlying truth. The issue is that any institution/engine that has money/power, will obviously attract people that want money and power too, truth be damned.
The idea that the institution is about 'uncovering truth' is certainly given lip service/held as an article of faith as this is required by the naive masses to invest themselves in to the idea (science/religion), but the underlying reality is a somewhat dirtier political jostling for money/power.
Yup, this is why I never join truth-seeking organizations. You'd be amazed how many people are only motivated to find the truth because they want to turn it to some profitable use somehow. Thank goodness number theory has no practical applications whatsoever.
I am unfamiliar with this term, and it gives me pause. If an organization does not seek truth, what does it seek? Also, religions typically consider themselves as guardians and authorities of Truth, and disseminate/preach it through leadership/missionary/evangelization activities. Surely, the seekers of truth are ones who join and follow such paths?
In terms of Christianity, "finding the Truth" involves following Jesus and sacrificing our lives to do it. Sure, a televangelist or notable preacher could line his pockets, electroplate his Learjet, and influence politicians, but a follower's "profit" is moral and intangible, in exchange for actual cash, goods, and services we donate freely, or that's not tax-deductible!
In terms of universities and science, I'm curious how you became educated in Number Theory without joining a truth-seeking university, picking up truth-seeking textbooks, and hearkening to truth-seeking professors. Science as an industry or career path attracts ordinary people trying to make a living, whether that's in a community college, a four-year, or a prestigious Ivy League or Oxford/Cambridge setting. Certainly, the money, power, and prestige are attractive and draw in followers just the same.
In fact university systems are practically religions unto themselves, with perceptible and distinctive campus cultures, Greek fraternity/sorority and what have you clubs to join, there is certainly a churchy blueprint being followed in education.
It seems to me that religion and medicine and architecture and other various sciences were tightly intertwined. It's why the reactionary Christians are rejecting Science qua Science and Scientism, because if science is not subject to religious ethics or morals, then science has power that church doesn't.
I don't know about Asia and the rest of the world, but seeing as the Catholic Church set up systems such as universities and hospitals, it's altogether unsurprising that religion is woven into the DNA of those disciplines even as they secularize and syncretize.