ChiMan 18 minutes ago

The monks likely have the time to think about implementation, and feeling like they’re part of an institution that transcends them and that they value for its own sake, they likely have an incentive to invest effort into maintaining and improving it.

Both of these are unlike, say, corporate environments, where the core work uses up almost all available time and where most people are looking mostly to extract something from the organization.

bxk76 27 minutes ago

Whats is always interesting about monestic life and its emergence (minus light sabers) is that society across cultures has created spaces for people who dont fit. This need has been recognized and supported for thousands of years.

  • MrBuddyCasino 22 minutes ago

    And there hasn’t really been a replacement for that in modern times. This is a problem.

    • lukan 2 minutes ago

      There are still plenty of religious cults out there if that is your thing, probably more than have ever been. Otherwise the "misfits" are nowdays also organizing themself to indeed fit somewhere and don't just accept to be outcasts.

      Sorry, but the whole concept of "place for people who don't fit" - is really not appropriate for monasteries in general. Because they have been very strict about who can fit. Only those who are fine with this special lifestyle and fixed rituals (and fixed hierachy and dogma). And most monks had to adopt to accept, whether they liked it or not, as the alternative was starving.

blackoil 2 hours ago

Religion is one of the best at marketing and fund-raising since millenias. Why is it surprising that they adapt to new tech? They have done it for printing press before that.

wartywhoa23 an hour ago

Well, AI is the New Messiah, and very VC backed at this point, so no surprise.

recurseP 2 days ago

In my country most monasteries are becoming luxury hotels so yes, they are adapting remarkably well to these times.

  • Keirmot 31 minutes ago

    That is not a new phenomenon, per se. The hospitality industry was shaped by monasteries, based on the Rule of St. Benedict.

steve1977 an hour ago

Religion was behind the spread of printed books, at least here in Europe, so this seems in line.

  • andrepd an hour ago

    It was also behind unspeakable acts of massive cultural destruction, so there's that.

    • forgetfreeman 30 minutes ago

      So was the search for condiments.

      • defrost 28 minutes ago

        The Spice must flow.

    • otabdeveloper4 17 minutes ago

      Source? Proofs?

      Do communism and secular humanism count as "religions" here?