That’s better Icon, you are at least more focussed. However your
reasoning still does not flow from statement based on evidence to a logical end.
Indeed science does have limitations, doesn’t everything? But at least
whatever is determined scientifically has to be on a more reliable footing than
any religious superstition.
Let me illustrate: You quote Jesus and his quotation inserted into the
Biblical text for the purpose of perpetuating and keeping air-born as it were,
the hope of immortal life. Jesus could never literally have been quoted in
saying this since it was written years after he was supposed to be alive and by
someone who never heard him speak. (You cannot believe the Bible for evidence since it is a collection of fables re-worked for historical plausibility). The
origin of this idea of the “seed” as an illustration of life continuing after
death was part of the agricultural mythos in the religious beliefs of the earliest
farmers back in the late New Stone Age. It resonated with all farming folk as
their hope for something better than the “short and brutal life” to which they
were born. The Goddess Ceres (as in cereal)
represents this ancient belief.
You say with reference to the seed myth; “This kind of reasoning will
only help us (never harm us)” I have to strongly disagree. Holding on to myths
and folk-lore can harm people immensely,
it ignores reality. It has no basis for human progress or logical thought.
Conversely, “this kind of reasoning” has the makings of collective delusions
which result in religious obligations which are then commandeered by temporal
lobe defective authority figures to form crazy cults. It results in mental
slavery.
Medicine can scientifically i.e. reliably and accurately, describe the
process of death, it is emotionally devastating for the bereaved... but it is final,
it is an incontrovertible truth. The quest for cheating death is perhaps the
driving force for all religious straw-clutching, the very reason why religion
exists; to soften the blow of the pain of death.
You are fooling yourself if
you think you can overcome death. From among the 105 billion people who have
lived so far, there is not one reliably recorded instance of overcoming it. Are
you going to be the first?