7%... 14%....I like numbers. Difficult to argue with them.
By the way found this on the same website, loved it!
https://www.salon.com/2014/05/19/cr...se_neil_degrasse_tyson_explained_electricity/
In making a statement like this, you jump into the lake of fools without a lifebuoy, or a fireproof cocoon for that matter, and make yourself no different from, say, a medieval statist who simply saw the innumerable clerics invoking God's hand in the affairs of men. How could everybody just be wrong.
Throughout all of the history of mankind, when it comes to "theories of everything" to explain the Cosmos, the Universe, or even the weather, the "life span" of those theories has consistently declined. Which is to say, people are finding it necessary to move on to some better understanding more and more rapidly. . . .
Organized religions don't deal with those changes in information the same way, say, a university faculty might. Sometimes university faculties take a generation to make the transitions needed. Organized religions sometimes just ignore, or seem to ignore, changes in technical or scientific information. .. . but mostly they just accept it without changing their focus. . . . which that information really doesn't impact. . . . like the life of Jesus, or Mohammad for that matter. Most of the appeal of religion is not going to be affected by scientific progress.
Mormonism will survive the entire deconstruction of the coming forth of the Book of Mormon and the Restoration of the Gospel of Jesus Christ in its two first decades because none of that is actually relevant to the belief set that has come as the result of some original thinking almost two hundred years ago. Original thinking that might have come from Sydney Rigdon, a devout socialist par excellance, about how we humans can put some notions in the centerplace of our lives, about helping one another and functioning as a community. Original thinking that might have come from Joseph Smith about how a common reading of Bible texts can show God as the father of mankind, and Jesus our brother, as both an example of the way to live and a bridge back to the goodness of God.
As is always the case, the chaff of error will ultimately be lost in the dustbins of history, and the serendipity of hope will shine on through the ages. . . .
We didn't give up on science because of alchemists, wizards, or witches. . . . or because of the abuses of it by dictators like Hitler, either, for that matter. and why should we.
Science and religion are two names we give to the same thing. . . . . our effort to understand life and the world around us. . . . sometimes coming from different approaches, but both loved within our souls for the same hope.