It's a choice on your part to consider that disrespectful. I consider it descriptive.I have had to endure the disrespect of hearing someone say that my mother is an ape. That is simply unacceptable
It's interesting that you find offense in your mother (and presumably yourself) being an ape. What if I told you things that some find even more embarrassing about themselves, such as pooping their diapers, vomiting on themselves, and throwing tantrums? What if you had too much to drink at a party and did all three of those things? Would it embarrass you to wake up in a pile of vomit and stool with dozens of people angry at you? Hopefully, it would.
But you've outgrown that, just as your ancestors outgrew flinging feces and picking vermin off one another.
In the West, rational skepticism and the idea that the world might be godless, regular, and comprehensible was first introduced by the ancient Greek philosophers, whose skepticism about the claims that natural events were punishments from capricious gods led to free speculation about reality. Thales (624 BC - 546 BC) suggested that everything was a form of water, which was the only substance he knew of capable of existing as solid, liquid and gas.An interesting side note here is that all of the major sciences were all founded by men who believed in a conscious God. They believed that because He was a God of wisdom, knowledge and power, that His creation would therefore be be reflected in this and could consequently be understood in a consistent, rational, logical fashion. It was in this basic framework that all of the sciences which we have come to understand are founded.
What is significant was his willingness to try to explain the workings of nature without invoking the supernatural or appealing to the ancients and their dicta. The more profound implication was that man might be capable of understanding nature, which might operate according to comprehensible rules that he might discover. Eventually, Thales went on to be the first to accurately predict the time of an eclipse. I expect that his religious neighbors were busy offering sacrifices at the time. The two traditions have nothing in common.
Jump ahead a few millennia, and Christians are trying their hand at that. When they were doing science, Christians left religion at the door like Thales did. When they introduced religion (magic) to their science, it was because they had run out of ideas.
In Newton's Principia, which was groundbreaking science, he describes the celestial mechanics of the solar system in a way any equally talented atheist would then or today - a way atheists still point to as good science.
None of that came from his Bible or his belief in original sin or the resurrection of Christ - Christian contributions to the Western intellectual tradition. If he was influenced by the past, it was by people like Thales.
However, when Newton reached the limits of his knowledge - his mathematics predicted that Earth should have been thrown into the sun or out of the solar system by now - here's where Newton's Christianity and magical thinking take over. He inserts the hand of God to nudge the smaller planets back into their orbits. That's when his science became religion, and his useful ideas ended.
LaPlace came along a century later and supplied the mathematics Newton was missing - perturbation theory - and Newton's religious addition was replaced with science as the god of the gaps lost yet another job to blind nature.
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