 What we produce, I'm just going to say this and then maybe flush it out a bit more later, the problem is that what we produce from that system of mythology, from that reality, bears the imprint of its assumptions. So one of the core assumptions is the separation of subject and object and a conception of itself that holds us as separate beings, separate individuals, interacting with each other in an objective universe. That is one of the deep assumptions and we can see how that precept of separation has materialized in the works of our civilization. For example, the disintegration of communities, the concentration of wealth that comes through the competition that is inevitable when we see ourselves as separate from each other. For example, ecocide and the destruction of nature, which is an out-picturing of the view of ourselves as separate from nature, turning nature into an object of utilitarian self-interest maximization. It becomes an instrument of our utility when we see it as something separate from ourselves and as something that can be reduced in essence to the sum of its parts. So where is the sacredness? If at bottom, if it's nothing but varying permutations of atoms and void, varying combinations of protons, neutrons, and electrons. So the imprint of our metaphysical scientific assumptions plays out in the works of a civilization that draws from that science. So that might make us want to question the religion of science.