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(Q) said:the vast majority of Christians in prison ended up there while they were agnostic or atheistic.
Perhaps a few, but most were Christians when they commited their crimes.
Nearly all the convicts who profess Christ through this ministry never return to prison. The percentage is very low.
Can you show any relevan statistics to back up your claim or is this merely your opinion?
The only reason Christianity isn't expressed in public schools is because of an
NON-unanimous rulings by the Supreme Court.
Your lack of understanding of the Supreme Court decisions is equaled only by your delusion that everyone is a Christian. Christianity is not the only religion, you know?
SPLogan said:Science: The observation, identification, description, experimental investigation, and theoretical explanation of phenomena - American Heritage Dictionary
TRUTH should be taught in the Science Class. If it were apparent that scientific data and a particular religious philosophy aligned and complemented one another because both are TRUE representations of reality then so be it. Science should not be tweaked to conform to any religious bias. (Including atheism, deism, or orthodox teaching)
If you want to remove anything whatsoever that resembles religion from the science classroom then you would have to drop the sciences altogether from your curriculum. It is impossible to teach any form of science without simultaneously conveying religious presuppositions. Theology is a science. Religion is no more excludable from science than history is. Science is a religious endeavor in that it observes and investigates creation.
Basically to ask the question Should religion be taught in the science class? is the same type of absurd question as Should history be taught in the science class? or Should math be taught in the science class? You cannot teach science without those subjects. History and religion are both the backbone and the specimen of all science. They are inseparable.
You should, however, not confuse your sciences. But, ultimately their mutual exclusivity is limited at best.
If you bring science completely into the investigation of religious truth, religion crumbles.
Finally, in science 'what' and 'how' is the goal, not 'why'. "Why" is the goal of philosophy and religion, not science, because science does not assume there has to be a "why" at all.
I don't think so. I'm pretty sure scientists can make observations, formulate hypotheses, test them, make conclusions, and use the knowledge gained to build microchips or space shuttles without consulting religious leaders about 'why' the universe is the way it is. What you are talking about is teleology, which science wants nothing to do with.If what you say is true then scientists must consult religious leaders in order to make any application to there studies or to form any theories.
I don't think so. I'm pretty sure scientists can make observations, formulate hypotheses, test them, make conclusions, and use the knowledge gained to build microchips or space shuttles without consulting religious leaders about 'why' the universe is the way it is.
And yet in college you can choose to major in one and not the others, thereby exluding one from the group....interesting.I believe that religion IS in the science class always, weather you admit it or not. Science, religion, history, math, language, and art are never exclusive of each other. Each of those subjects is contained within all of the others.
You have yet to demonstrate any specific religious thought imbedded in science. Please do so.
And yet in college you can choose to major in one and not the others, thereby exluding one from the group....interesting.
Personally, I don't think my math grade would suffer without an art class and vice-versa.