There is no worldwide conspiracy of scientists, however, since on another post you claim that most persons, since they believe in God, are deeply invested in magical thinking, it would be a safe assumption, based on your own words, to presume scientists also take leaps of faith. This explains some of the differences in data interpretation, say, between creationists and secularists, however, reputable scientists don't claim to disprove Jesus or any deity via science--and countless scientists believe in God.
Are you a scientist, rigorously trained in non-biased, dispassionate thought, or are you among the many you accuse of being deeply invested in magical thinking?
It is the opposite of a safe assumption.
No matter how you try to drag others down into
the hole you are in, it is still nothing but your
very unsophisticated projection.
Here is a basic concept:
Religion is a culture of faith
Science is a culture of doubt.
Now, pure and complete objectiveism
is not possible to achieve.
A scientist, Christian, or whatever sort,
knows this, and applies it to his work.
Hard as it is scientists must do their utmost, do their due
diligence, understand that they are they
themselves are the easiest persons to fool.
They look for all the ways they could be
wrong and test them rigorously.
They are the good researchers. Others may
fall short.
But objectivity is a highest value.
Religion as a culture of faith does the exact
opposite. Hold fast the faith, no matter
the adversity, no matter the evidence.
That is a highest virtue, in religion.
eta, I am in fact rigorously trained in
objective thinking, tho I am not a scientist.
But seriously,
must you try to drag others
into your hole?
And I did notice your evasion of most of what I said in the
post you responded to.