If you are interested in reading a fascinating discussion on the ways we think of god now in relation to the way our forefathers used to think on god then I really recommend joining the debate that John Hobbins hosts at his blog.
There are many discussions that link the scientific thought to the religious one, one of this attempts that I happened to read recently is a doctoral work exposing the religious cosmological setting of Newton.
I never knew that Newton has writings other than the strictly scientific ones but I guess that each scientist can have a separate set of moral, spiritual or religious believes that co-exists with his scientific work.
I believe that there is a basic bridge between both ways of thinking that we find at the individual scientist and in the society as a whole as the expansion of science co-exists with the expansion of moral, spiritual and religious thought.
Can we create a balanced middle? I guess we’ll have to to avoid expanding the split between our rational part - in kabbalah terms the masculine part and the spiritual part - the feminine part.
They are both important, they are both wise and they are both in a state of separation and in desperate need of the sacred marriage of the masculine and feminine so they can give birth to something new the balanced embodiment of our divine qualities.
You can see it in the tree of life with the right and left side merging in a balanced way in the Malchuth

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