charlou wrote:
I think this is because religion has evolved with us.
So following on from my previous post, it is using the authority of God that capitalism imposed the ideological discipline necessary to guarantee its survival. In this sense, christianity as we know it was designed by capitalism to serve capitalism's ends; as long as this deference to religious superstition under capitalism remained strong, no amount of rational argument against capitalism being the optimal ideology for our civilisation could make any headway. The deference to authority in capitalism replicated the deference to authority in christianity.
For this reason I say that capitalism and religion are inseparably intertwined. One cannot survive without the other. That would not be the case for someone who thought that capitalism can be justified on rational grounds, in which case they won't think the evaporation of religion from the scene matters in the slightest. I am not of that school; I think capitalism is irrational, inefficient and unjustifiable for the demands of the world's population. Capitalism has moulded religion as a servant for its own ends, and wrapped religion around itself as protection.
This is not to say that the content of christianity was wholly invented by capitalism; obviously the stories have been co-opted by capitalism, and of course moulded by capitalism. By the way I maintain that Roman empire was the dominant force in the spread of religion; capitalism's intertwining with religion heavily co-opts Rome's intertwining with religion, through obviously Rome wasn't a capitalist civilisation as such. (I don't know where you all got to with the 7-day names debate. My argument was that it was a North European gloss on a Roman system, I hope that answered the question, I forget who asked it).
Given all this, I don't think that religion has evolved with us as you say. The religion we know is wholly an invention of civilisation, and has nothing to do with any religions that prehistoric humans might have known. Even if there were linkages of holy names or stories between the religion of those times and the religion of today, the accompanying belief systems themselves are impossible to trace and have no connection to each other. I say this partly because I think it's a feature of the progression of time that each generation invents its own culture, but partly because I resist any idea that our human freedom is constrained by any such evolutionary legacies.