Tony said:
Since ancient people tried to explain the nature the best way they could, they used their then scientific knowledge. When they didn't have enough of scientific knowledge, they used their imagination to answer their questions about the nature.
ok.
(That's why we have so many different religions. Many of them are already obsolete, like ancient Greek myths, for example.)
There are other explanations, but that's another thread.
So, what we have now is the battle between the modern science and the ancient science+imagination. Since the subject of this debate is still the nature and people as part of the nature - it's exactly the same field.
No, what we have is a false dichotomy, first perpetrated by certain religious fanatics, and now taken up by certain non-theists as if it had anything to do with anything.
What amazes me is how so many of you seem to think the original theists were actually *right*. <shaking head>
Oh, and btw, it keeps being pointed out to you, repeatedly, that religion _per se_ is not opposed to science. That's a phenomon of Western Christianity that grew out of historical events in Europe and it got carried over here, unfortunately.
And then there's the rest of the world, and time, and religious belief, which doesn't subscribe to the sort of nonsense you abhor.
Scientific methodology excludes religious one.
Duh? Scientific metholodogy deals with the natural. Religious methodologies use other means, and are not interested in the natural, but the ethical.
There is no point to look for natural answer if we already have supernatural one.
It's not a purpose of science to disprove gods and religions - what's the point to disprove fantasies?
Including, I guess, the fantasy that religion is always opposed to science.
Look, a search for the truth is a search for the truth, whether the "truth" is a physical one, in which case use science, or whether it concerns other questions of life, which science is ill-equipped to deal with.
I like your opinion that religion will never be able to prove god.
I agree 100%.
So do I. I believe in God, but I am not stupid enough to think I can "prove" it in any scientific way. So clearly, there are people who understand science and don't have a problem believing in God or thinking that religion should be messing in science's business.
There nothing about religion that people can't understand. It's very simple: ancient people didn't have enough scientific knowledge, they needed answers, so they used their imagination.
Clearly there is something about religion that you don't yet understand.
They aren't all ancient, and they don't all spring from a time when people didn't understand science.
This leaves you in a position where you must explain your position in terms of modern religion.
Is the mid-1800s modern enough for you?
Please tell me how my religion needed answers to natural phenomena, and got "imaginative" and depended on supernatural ones instead.