zippo9211989
New Member
Science attacks religions. Religions attack each other.
How do you feel about this?
How do you feel about this?
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Science attacks religions. Religions attack each other.
How do you feel about this?
science - belief in things that are proven
religion - belief in what you've always been told
Many things in science are not 'proven', but rather evidenced.science - belief in things that are proven
religion - belief in what you've always been told
Science is the effort to understand the how of things.
Religion is the effort to comprehend the why?
What is most interesting to me is the "moral" indignation from those that claim nothing is to be gained by considering why?
Zadok
Science attacks religions. Religions attack each other.
How do you feel about this?
science - belief in things that are proven
religion - belief in what you've always been told
Science attacks religions. Religions attack each other.
How do you feel about this?
Sorry, but I disagree. Science concerns itself with anything that can be falsified. That I believe is the main qualification for calling an idea as scientific. What you have described is physics, not science. God maybe beyond physics but He is not beyond science. Therefore in my opinion the idea of an omnipotent being should be put under the same scrutiny as any other scientific idea.By definition (God as spiritual entity, bodiless, outside space/time) it is not possible to test ('prove') whether or not such a deity exists using 'science' as a method. Science confines itself only and solely to the natural world of our space/time. 'Things' (or beings) outside that (wholly or only partially) are not subjects of scientific enquiry.
You may certainly use 'science' (or logic, or archeology or whatever) to test ('prove') CERTAIN CLAIMS which religions make, about the world or about God, but you can't actually test 'god' (the question of the existence or nature of deity). In my opinion.