I think science and religion serve 2 different purposes for humans so I can't see science replacing what religion offers people any more than religion can replace science offers people. Science gives explanations for how things happen. Whereas a lot of humans have a need to ask and seek some sort of understanding of abstract constructs of why and what does it mean. The why and what does it mean questions require abstract ideas, which science has limited answers for.
If there are ‘limited answers’, or if there is a total lack of evidence for the objectivity of the idea, then that idea and all abstract ideas are produced by the brain and are a product of the imagination. There is no need for a supernatural something to fill the imagined gap
I certainy do not think that science will
take the place of religion, but the need for a totally faith belief should lessen and lessen as it is more and better understood that so much which used to have a god-did-it answer has now been rationally explained. I will give an example.
The book I am now reading is called ‘Bird Senses’ and the author has been talking about, how in the past – and up to not so long ago either – people were still saying that the eye could not possibly have evolved, but that is of course incorrect; the evolutionary process is well understood and the process has varied according to species.
Society requires a background, which can be called a cultural background. If the one that has been in place for so long were to be removed, a vacuum and chaos would result.
The abstract concept of the supernatural is just a different spin on these abstract answers. We cannot know anything about the supernatural, including whether it exists. What we perceive with our brains is limited by the laws of the natural world they inhabit, but because we can conceptualise the supernatural as being something not bound by the laws of the natural world, we cannot rule out the possibility of the existence of the supernatural - which then leads to our brains fleshing that out with supernatural concepts of gods as they serve a purpose.
Well put – I nod in agreement.
I find religion a very useful way to combat consumerism. I am constantly been told by people trying to sell me something that I am deficient in some way or that my life is lacking something. Religion also pushes that message but keeps me occupied in trying to bridge that deficiency or whatever is lacking by doing something that does not involve spending money. For example I spent hours over lockdown reciting the Quran in Arabic - cost me nothing, improved my brain functioning, gave me a sense of achievement as I became more fluent, I could participate in the extended family ritual of reciting without feeling embarrassed by my lack of proficiency. I was supposedly earning blessings by doing it - it's useful concept in religion because you focus on "earning" something other than money.
For me, I've spent more time on the forums I belong to, crosswords and walking up and down outside here in this lovely weather. Not that I'm a spender anyway!