It is a chain: ignorance >* knowledge > ignorance > it goes on and on
Has one seen any end to knowledge, please?
Good grief...
Did you really just say all that codswallop?
Due to the complexity of nature and the fundamental mechanisms behind that nature, there would be always be some unknown factors that natural/physical scientists wouldn’t know or understand at the time.
So it would take time to learning more about what scientists are investigating/researching.
What you are basically saying in your reply, that man should stop learning. That’s sort of nonsense that I would expect from SOME theists, who preferred ignorance over knowledge, because it would clash with your religious belief.
You are sounding like a YEC creationist or like a literal fundamental. Creationists and some theists are so insecure in their faiths that people like yourself, don’t like scientific knowledge to exceed the boundaries of your respective scriptures.
Knowledge are never perfect. There will always more to learn, more to add to knowledge. There are always better ways to explain what we learn and know, and better ways to test any “knowledge”.
I said “some” theists, because it is obvious NOT ALL theists would think or feel as you do. Other theists, thrive in the unknown, and wanted to uncover the mysteries, through learning, researching and testing.
Scientific theories, every single one of them, are provisional knowledge only. New and better observations and evidence, better explanations or explanatory models can question and challenge existing theories.
Old theories can be replaced, if it is outdated. But it could also be corrected, improved, modified or expanded. That’s the beauty of science, the self-correcting mechanisms of science, and advances that can be made, by learning more.
Knowledge that don’t change, will eventually become outdated, and will stagnate and become irrelevant.
The Bible, the Qur’an, and all other ancient and modern scriptures are not perfect, and have become outdated when it come to describing natural phenomena. The descriptions in the passages in scriptures are often vague, imprecise and often incorrect.
The people who contributed and wrote scriptures like bible and Quran, were still believing the ancient (Bronze Age) Babylonian astronomy, that the earth was fixed, and the Sun and planets moving across the sky - hence the Geocentric Model of Planetary Motion.
Heliocentric model was first theorized and predicted by Greek astronomer and mathematician Aristarchus of Samos during the 3rd century BCE, where the planets, including Earth itself orbited around the Sun.
But Aristarchus’ heliocentric model was so unpopular, that geocentric was considered science for another 1700 years. Nicolaus Copernicus would revive Aristarchus’ heliocentric model, and the discovery would be made about 50 years later by Galileo. Then Johannes Kepler and Isaac Newton contributed to the Copernicus’ heliocentric model, with Newton adding gravity into heliocentric motions.
Each people who contributed to the existing science, will help science progresses and advances our knowledge. And that’s a good thing.