What page are you on? That's the way things are now.
You don't. What's natural about that? "Science progresses one funeral at a time," to paraphrase Planck and "integral consciousness," in Gebserian terms, is something we relax into. Similarly, the maturation of our species, as I see it. A specific worldview rules over all, atm, however. Some call it the Newtonian-Cartesian worldview (with apologies to Newton and Descartes). It goes by many names, but is a permeative worldview in the West: the Cosmos -- including us -- a collection of objects to be acted upon and creatures great and small merely machines comprised of parts. It doesn't take much to see that worldview long has been changing and nobody planned it. 'The Overview Effect' touches on it along with quite a number of other contemporary treatises. A few fallible, corrupted humans can't stop it, but it may be aborted, in Gebserian terms, if we don't snap out of what he called the "mental-rational" stucture of human consciousness and realize our integral nature. (Not a scholar, so I tend to speak in terms we all know and understand...in different ways because we obviously don't all speak the same language even if it's our native tongue...and tend to draw parallels in human thought.)
Gotta nod to Ms. Le Guin again on the subject of language: "To misuse language is to use it the way politicians and advertisers do, for profit, without taking responsibility for what the words mean. Language used as a means to get power or make money goes wrong: it lies. Language used as an end in itself, to sing a poem or tell a story, goes right, goes towards the truth." I personally find Rosenstock'Huessy's "grammatical method" compelling considering I have a predilection toward language to begin with. His "cross of reality" is fourfold as are the visions of William Blake and Jean Gebser and the "sacred hoop" of the indigenous, among many, many others. I'm wont to think there is a "universal way of seeing" and a "perennial philosophy" shared by humans all across space and time.
I think I may have it embroidered and/or engraved on my tombstone, but something a mentor said -- without thinking and in passing -- has borne me through everything I've personally gone through in the past twenty years: "Our institutions will be the last to change." Makes sense. They're institutions and far slower to adapt and change than the human beings who found them.