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Harijan wrote:Science is a religion for many people, nothing wrong with it as long as people admit it. The problem is that for many people, they cannot come to terms with their faith in science because it means science requires the same kind of belief required for religion.
I do find it entertaining that the more our knowledge grows the more convergent religion and science become. It is disturbing to the extremist of both camps (atheist and Godders) that the more we learn the closer and closer science and religion become.
Somewhere in modern Christianity the logical conclusion of the belief that we are all children of God got lost.
Every parent wants their children to grow up and be as smart, wealthy, successful, happy as the parent. The two conclusions that get lost by most Christian faiths are:
1. If we are children of God, we will eventually grow up to become like God.
2. We are going to have to grow up and get to the reality of our potential by research, experience, and education.
As a Christian and a firm believer in science and evolution I am disturbed by mainstream Christians willing ignorance of our responsibility, potential, and purpose as children of God. Christianity has been twisted into an excuse as to why we do not have to work, and why our spiritual and intellectual laziness is exactly what God wants.
Not all Christians think this way, but the Christian religion of excuses is the most popular interpretation.
Religion, like science, is not supposed to be easy.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
nmhunate wrote:Speak English... It is the language that God wrote the bible in.
Neoteny wrote:I'm not sure how much I want to get into this with you, because your use of complete sentences is intimidating, but I'd like to reassert that religion and science are different in the realm of repetitive testing. We can define science as a religion all we want; the main factor is that one is based (not necessarily entirely) on revelation, and the other is based on observation. Neither of those is infallible, but one is certainly more reliable, taken on the whole (all of science as compared to all, particularly the most popular, religions), than the other.
Guistard wrote:Ummm...I really trying to find a history book about these "facts" of yours, but cannot locate any...please make sure that you cite any of your "knowledge" with the appropriate references from a well-known historian.
mmmk?
Guistard wrote:Ummm...I really trying to find a history book about these "facts" of yours, but cannot locate any...please make sure that you cite any of your "knowledge" with the appropriate references from a well-known historian.
mmmk?
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
Harijan wrote:Neoteny wrote:I'm not sure how much I want to get into this with you, because your use of complete sentences is intimidating, but I'd like to reassert that religion and science are different in the realm of repetitive testing. We can define science as a religion all we want; the main factor is that one is based (not necessarily entirely) on revelation, and the other is based on observation. Neither of those is infallible, but one is certainly more reliable, taken on the whole (all of science as compared to all, particularly the most popular, religions), than the other.
Your argument is valid. However, I would counter that we, as a species simply are not yet intelligent or competent enough to replicate and test what religion asserts to be true. Even according to scientific law, we can neither refute or accept those hypotheses that we cannot test. Science cannot touch religious theory because of this basic scientific rule....yet.
On the flip side, religion has millions of scientifically valid observations, but cannot test those observations because humans lack the ability to replicate such complicated conditions for a test.
And so the debate will continue.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
got tonkaed wrote:harijan i feel like its worth mentioning....i didnt want to call you out. I was just surprised given the amount of things that were brought up in collapse that you remembered a seemingly less relavant thing such as sexual procivility and the fall of said civilization. It was more a testament to your powers of retention than a shot.
Harijan wrote:got tonkaed wrote:harijan i feel like its worth mentioning....i didnt want to call you out. I was just surprised given the amount of things that were brought up in collapse that you remembered a seemingly less relavant thing such as sexual procivility and the fall of said civilization. It was more a testament to your powers of retention than a shot.
yeah, except I tried to find the section last night and couldn't. Now I have to figure out where I pulled that from and correct myself.
khazalid wrote:...a bit like donkey sex on a sunday... keep it lively gents
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