Indeed. And, for that matter:
Amusingly enough, faith in "success", "persons", "end of occupation" and "restoration of Bajor" was what was proven false in the show: all the Bajoran efforts at unity or independence or agriculture or colonization that were described were shown to be failures, all the persons the people trusted proved to be traitorous assholes, the occupation apparently did not end but only went on a hiatus, and the pre-occupation Bajor never was restored.
In contrast, every bit of faith in the Prophets was proven justified: they did accurately foretell the future, they did perform concrete if supernatural acts in effective protection of Bajor, and they did provide indirect aid and advice through an accredited Emissary whose role was accurately described in the Prophecies. And every aspect of the religious tradition proved to have a practical foundation in keeping in touch with the Prophets: they did live in the Celestial Temple, and their supernatural means of communication, the Orbs, were fully functional and did what was promised and more.
That's 6-0 for religion vs. secular pragmatism. That is, if those two were different things, which they in this case are not.
Timo Saloniemi
Faith in the possible - in success, in persons, in the end of the occupation, in the restoration of Bajor - this is entirely reasonable. But faith in the impossible, in the face of evidence that proves you wrong?
Amusingly enough, faith in "success", "persons", "end of occupation" and "restoration of Bajor" was what was proven false in the show: all the Bajoran efforts at unity or independence or agriculture or colonization that were described were shown to be failures, all the persons the people trusted proved to be traitorous assholes, the occupation apparently did not end but only went on a hiatus, and the pre-occupation Bajor never was restored.
In contrast, every bit of faith in the Prophets was proven justified: they did accurately foretell the future, they did perform concrete if supernatural acts in effective protection of Bajor, and they did provide indirect aid and advice through an accredited Emissary whose role was accurately described in the Prophecies. And every aspect of the religious tradition proved to have a practical foundation in keeping in touch with the Prophets: they did live in the Celestial Temple, and their supernatural means of communication, the Orbs, were fully functional and did what was promised and more.
That's 6-0 for religion vs. secular pragmatism. That is, if those two were different things, which they in this case are not.
Timo Saloniemi