Religion remains among the most powerful and conceptually contested phenomena in human civilization. It has shaped moral systems, legal orders, political legitimacy, educational traditions, metaphysical worldviews, and collective identities across history, yet no prevailing definition has adequately captured its full structural reality without either narrowing the category excessively or dissolving it into conceptual vagueness. This paper proposes a unified explanatory framework for understanding religion as a structured and recurring civilizational response to enduring dimensions of the human condition. It introduces the concept of the Foundational Security-Seeking Impulse to describe the recurrent human tendency to seek security, legitimacy, continuity, meaning, moral orientation, self-knowledge, and enhanced flourishing through alignment with realities greater than the isolated self. Within this framework, religion is understood as an organized spiritual-cultural expression of this broader human pattern. The paper further integrates both external structural analysis and internal phenomenological religious interpretation, recognizing that for many adherents religion is experienced not merely as symbolic or social structure, but as longing for sacred reality, developmental path toward truth, self-knowledge, and ethical participation in a divinely or metaphysically ordered creation. The broader aim of the paper is civilizational: to provide a rigorous conceptual framework capable of improving understanding between religious and non-religious populations, reducing conceptual hostility surrounding belief systems, and supporting the foundations of a more coherent, pluralistic, and flourishing civilization.
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Moutsopoulos et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69df2c2fe4eeef8a2a6b12cc — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19552339
Dimitrios Moutsopoulos
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