It is well established as an experience and billions of people regard it as 'fact'.
And contradictory 'spiritual' explanations are equally well-established and equally regarded as 'fact' - and they can't all be right.
Scientifically unproven is neither here nor there.
Well it is, but only in the absence of any other equally reliable method of ascertaining likely facts. If there were a reliable non-scientific derivation - pure logic, for instance - that would suffice. Currently there isn't.
Now...I know you will tell me this is an ad populum fallacy! Go ahead, tie yourself in knots.
It's not an ad populum fallacy, you aren't suggesting that it's actually true just because people believe it; however, you're suggesting that because people believe it we shouldn't be worried whether it's true or not? I'm not sure exactly what your point is, I think that's it, but please correct that if I'm wrong.
I have already explained what I mean by 'divine'. You can call it 'civilized' or 'enlightened'....if you want.
But it's just making reference to other unestablished concepts. If I define 'divine' in terms of souls, and souls in terms of nature spirits, and nature spirits in terms of unexplained phenomena, then the whole thing has no basis - it doesn't matter how convoluted or long-standing or intricate the web of inter-supporting logical references is, so long as it's based on nothing it means nothing.
You again make the mistake of connecting this to religions, religious heads and extremists. These have nothing to do with what I am saying.
They are the social and cultural equivalent that I'm used to - different names for the same nothing.
There is no denying that some people are more civilized and self disciplined than others....and we as a global society are more civilized and universal than people were centuries ago.
In my experience 'civilised' tends to mean 'most like my cultural definition of appropriate' - I'm not sure there's an objective definition of 'civilised' any more than there's an objectively better 'culture'. As to self-discipline, yes you can be more or less self-disciplined, but I fail to see how that's relevant.
O.