i've noticed alot of people who think themselves to be very intelligent because they reject all forms of organized religio in favor of their own specific brand of spirituality, which usually involves poorly thought out ideas and no real philosohpical value whatsoever.
I like to think these people alot more intelligent than any follower of the catholic church, which claims to have a monopoly on truth, forces their followers to dogmatically accept their vision of the truth, for the major part of their history claimed that anyone who did not accept the catholic way of thinking would be excluded from heaven and indeed persecuted and killed those they did not agree with.
Let's get one thing straight here: you can not claim to have figured out the absolute correct interpretation of reality and how God (or whatever you like to call it) thinks humans should live their lives.
That is a deeply personal conviction that is up to every human being to figure out for him/herself. I don't see any reason why someone should blindly adopt the spiritual viewpoints of someone else over taking his own feelings, wisdom and experiences and figuring out what he believes for himself. Perhaps because he lacks the integrity and inspiration to do so?
Because I know about the Catholic Church most, I'll use it as an example. The only two systems that use the idea of accepting and working off of previous ideas to create new concepts and to thus progress knowledge are the scientific community (with the scientific method) and the Roman Catholic Church (with it's history of doctrine and tradition). Scientists are able to develope new ideas because they have old ideas to work off of, For example Einstein couldn't have developed his theory of relativity if it hadn't been for Copernicus, Gallileo, and Newton, developing their own theories centureis earlier. The same is true about the Chruch, theologians such as St. Thomas Aquinas progress offthe work of earlier theologians. Now imaine if there as a scientist, and he said "Nope, the scientific method is all wrong, I have a better idea" and he started from scratch to create his own version of science. That would be absolutely ludicrous and he would be seen as a pseudoscientist or worse. "Free thinkers" who reject millenia of theological and philosophical thought in favor of their own personal religion are committing the same logical fallacy.
Mathematics, physics and science are indeed a pyramid of theories, concepts, etc. completely based on
objectively proven empirical evidence. Spirituality and philosophy on the other hand, are entirely based on
subjective personal opinions.
It's ironic that you mention Copernicus and Galileo because the theories of those very people were considered herecy and anti-christian by the catholic church when they were originally published. What's worse is that you're saying that someone who breaks with the catholic religion and starts his own religion, based on new ideas and new viewpoints should be discredited on the grounds of it being a pseudoreligion? News flash, there are thousands upon thousands of wildly different religions, yet there is only. one. science.
I was raised a catholic and in a way still live by some of its most important rules, such as most of the ten commandments, not because I care for catholicism, but because they happen to fall in line with my personal spiritual beliefs. Does that make me a "bad" philosophical thinker? I'm sure it doesn't, because I'm just doing what my conscience tells me. There you have the truth: just do what your conscience tells you is the right thing to do, everything else is superfluous and bullshit.