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Science needs religion to have something to prove didn't happen. Religion needs science to prove it did.
Einstein said "Science without religion is lame. Religion without science is blind."
I chose not to be lame or blind.
Science is only telling us what we already knew. Newton, Einstein and whoever else are only giving names to theories that have been thought of for many years.
But they are still just theories.
Some bigger, smarter nut is going to come along and blow that theory out of the water with his own who will later be refuted by some other bigger and smarter nut, who will...ect.
I didn't quite understand this. Could you explicate? Thanks.Science needs religion to have something to prove didn't happen. Religion needs science to prove it did.
rakhel said:Science needs religion to have something to prove didn't happen. Religion needs science to prove it did.
Self-correcting, basically, is saying that science can be refuted. People always knew that when something went up in the air it always came down but not always in the same locations. A recent scientific study came out that said if you drink hot liquids in the onset of illness you were more likely to get better fast.We didn't already know this?
Certain foods grow better in this climate then over in that one. Or grow better with this much water. Or quarantine this illness or it will spread and some will die. Better yet, that we didn't always know that the earth was round or that time is relative.
Science is only proving what was already known.
Those of us that understand this are laughing right about now.
Self-correcting, basically, is saying that science can be refuted. People always knew that when something went up in the air it always came down but not always in the same locations. A recent scientific study came out that said if you drink hot liquids in the onset of illness you were more likely to get better fast.We didn't already know this?
Certain foods grow better in this climate then over in that one. Or grow better with this much water. Or quarantine this illness or it will spread and some will die. Better yet, that we didn't always know that the earth was round or that time is relative.
Science is only proving what was already known. Those of us that understand this are laughing right about now.
Self-correcting, basically, is saying that science can be refuted. People always knew that when something went up in the air it always came down but not always in the same locations. A recent scientific study came out that said if you drink hot liquids in the onset of illness you were more likely to get better fast.We didn't already know this?
Certain foods grow better in this climate then over in that one. Or grow better with this much water. Or quarantine this illness or it will spread and some will die. Better yet, that we didn't always know that the earth was round or that time is relative.
Science is only proving what was already known. Those of us that understand this are laughing right about now.
One can definitely hear some very hearty laughter right now.Science is only proving what was already known. Those of us that understand this are laughing right about now.
What's interesting is how you decided that Ray Rogers is right, and the overwhelming preponderance of scientific papers from several different fields are all wrong. Since you know nothing about this artifact, how did you come to this conclusion?I was watching an interesting tv show the other day about the Shroud of Turin. Now, I know next to nothing about this artifact and have never considered it holy, but what I found interesting was how stubborn the scientific community seemed to hold to incorrect data. "STRP" had concluded that the Shroud was dated somewhere around a millenia ago, but they had dated a part of the Shroud that had been restored with dyes in the 1500s, thereby ruining the results. Worse, it was non-scientists who were simply curious that were able to realize this by simply taking a closer look at the data STRP had collected. And yet, you will find it easy to find members of the scientific community who hold the original STRP conclusions to be true, even though they have been admitted by its own original members with access to the original data to be faulty.
It is relevant, toms. It's a good example of how bad science can be accepted uncritically by people eager to bolster their faith beliefs, while they simultaneously reject the scientific process itself, and the majority of mainstream scientists who question it.Just thought it was relevant to this topic. Doesn't it seem like certain people just love to say that people's faith is a lie, even if they themselves are speaking out of faith?