Science vs Religion - There is room for both.

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Sand
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28 Jul 2010, 10:52 am

sartresue wrote:
visagrunt wrote:
I am astounded that all of the so-called rationalists deal with religion so irrationally.

To suggest that "Religion" views the universe through one lens is to uncritically tar all with the same brush. Even to reduce the criticism to "Catholics," or, "Fundamentalists," is still too uncritical.

True, there are those who choose to view Scripture as a literal record. For these people, the intersection of science and their religious beliefs is extremely limited.

On the other hand, there are those who view Scripture as allegorical--even so far as some Christian teachers rejecting the literal resurrection, and questioning the existence of a historical Jesus.

If you are looking to find the intersection of faith and science, you must look at the faith of the individual believer. To do otherwise is to commit an error that would offend any adherent of the scientific method.


Facts and feelings topic

I think when religion becomes politicized and oversteps its sphere of influence, this is where problems come about. when religion is used to fill a void, it becomes an obsession, drug. This is the danger inherent in religion.

Some questions science cannot answer. Instead of religion, I prefer philosophy to assist me. I suppose religion could be an answer, but the person must understand that it is not the answer to every question, and there is the danger of becoming a bully with it. For this reason I was turned off faith communities. At first I adopted an eclectic approach to religion, in addition to philosophy, but I still realized that most religions just had too many historical faults for me to work with, and even to take bits and pieces from many faiths was not going to be an answer. This was an individual choice, and as Visagrunt stated, you must look at the faith of the individual believer.

Above all, religion is a choice, and at best should be a priviate, individual practice.


You are not dealing with the real world. Aside from whatever cosmological or private moral odd concoctions religion serves up religion is a huge social and even financial enterprise and interpenetrates all phases of a person's and a community's life with all sorts of auxiliary functions both helpful and detrimental. There is no way to confine this beast into the cage of individual philosophical viewpoint.



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28 Jul 2010, 11:00 am

iamnotaparakeet wrote:
Francis Bacon. Louis Pasteur. James Clerk Maxwell. Werner von Braun. A. E. Wilder Smith. Jonathan Sarfati. Tas Walker. Do you know what these scientists have in common?

Only one of those is a biologist, and Pasteur was not a creationist. Smith, Sarfati, and Walker are all minor figures within their fields (Walker isn't even a researcher at all). Bacon predated knowledge of evolutionary biology. You may as well cite brilliant 19th-century physicists who didn't believe in quantum mechanics.


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ruveyn
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28 Jul 2010, 11:32 am

Orwell wrote:
iamnotaparakeet wrote:
Francis Bacon. Louis Pasteur. James Clerk Maxwell. Werner von Braun. A. E. Wilder Smith. Jonathan Sarfati. Tas Walker. Do you know what these scientists have in common?

Only one of those is a biologist, and Pasteur was not a creationist. Smith, Sarfati, and Walker are all minor figures within their fields (Walker isn't even a researcher at all). Bacon predated knowledge of evolutionary biology. You may as well cite brilliant 19th-century physicists who didn't believe in quantum mechanics.


Quantum Mechanics was invented in 1900 by Max Planck.

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28 Jul 2010, 11:57 am

Orwell wrote:
iamnotaparakeet wrote:
Francis Bacon. Louis Pasteur. James Clerk Maxwell. Werner von Braun. A. E. Wilder Smith. Jonathan Sarfati. Tas Walker. Do you know what these scientists have in common?

Only one of those is a biologist, and Pasteur was not a creationist. Smith, Sarfati, and Walker are all minor figures within their fields (Walker isn't even a researcher at all). Bacon predated knowledge of evolutionary biology. You may as well cite brilliant 19th-century physicists who didn't believe in quantum mechanics.

Albert Einstein didn't "believe in" quantum mechanics, especially the part where reality is, at base, a matter of probabilities. His most famous quote in that regard was, "God does not play dice with the universe."

Incidentally, it is possible to possess religious faith, and yet not be a Creationist. As I have pointed out, Genesis ch 1, if taken as an allegory, pretty well matches our current understanding of cosmology and the origins of the universe ("the Big Bang" and "Let there be light!" are, let's be honest, semantically pretty much equivalent, especially since the conditions at the time of the Bang were too chaotic for any laws of physics to apply). And do you really think that a tribe of itinerant goatherds would have understood if someone had told them that fourteen billion years ago, all of what would become the Universe was packed into a singularity of infinite density and infinite mass, until something happened that caused to to explode, eventually cooling to the point that subatomic particles could coalesce from the chaos?

Now, YEC and Biblical Fundamentalism are completely incompatible with a scientific worldview - but at least judging by the thread title, that's not how the question was framed...


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28 Jul 2010, 11:58 am

ruveyn wrote:
Orwell wrote:
iamnotaparakeet wrote:
Francis Bacon. Louis Pasteur. James Clerk Maxwell. Werner von Braun. A. E. Wilder Smith. Jonathan Sarfati. Tas Walker. Do you know what these scientists have in common?

Only one of those is a biologist, and Pasteur was not a creationist. Smith, Sarfati, and Walker are all minor figures within their fields (Walker isn't even a researcher at all). Bacon predated knowledge of evolutionary biology. You may as well cite brilliant 19th-century physicists who didn't believe in quantum mechanics.


Quantum Mechanics was invented in 1900 by Max Planck.

ruveyn


Surely, that's Orwell's point?

(Honestly, it's hard to work on a forum full of the irony-impaired! ;) )


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28 Jul 2010, 12:03 pm

Sand wrote:
You are not dealing with the real world. Aside from whatever cosmological or private moral odd concoctions religion serves up religion is a huge social and even financial enterprise and interpenetrates all phases of a person's and a community's life with all sorts of auxiliary functions both helpful and detrimental. There is no way to confine this beast into the cage of individual philosophical viewpoint.


To what extent is 'science' similarly described? Research no longer takes place in the individual conception of the thinker, but is now permeated by the politics related to public and private funding, commercial viability, the Zeitgeist? That is not to suggest that the work is not, in and of itself, valid; but rather than the work has begun to serve interests outside itself.


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28 Jul 2010, 1:24 pm

visagrunt wrote:

Surely, that's Orwell's point?


It is?

ruveyn



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28 Jul 2010, 2:16 pm

visagrunt wrote:
To what extent is 'science' similarly described? Research no longer takes place in the individual conception of the thinker, but is now permeated by the politics related to public and private funding, commercial viability, the Zeitgeist?

All of these statements are BS and indicate me you spend way too much time in conspiracy forums.


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28 Jul 2010, 2:31 pm

ruveyn wrote:
visagrunt wrote:

Surely, that's Orwell's point?


It is?

ruveyn

Yes. YECs often cite famous scientists who "support" creationism by virtue of having lived and died before Darwin put forward his ideas. It's a ridiculous claim to say that Newton or Bacon rejected evolution; just like it would be ridiculous to say that Newton rejected quantum mechanics.


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visagrunt
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28 Jul 2010, 4:05 pm

Vexcalibur wrote:
visagrunt wrote:
To what extent is 'science' similarly described? Research no longer takes place in the individual conception of the thinker, but is now permeated by the politics related to public and private funding, commercial viability, the Zeitgeist?

All of these statements are BS and indicate me you spend way too much time in conspiracy forums.


All of them are BS? Is that truly what you believe?

Are you suggesting that research money is doled out exclusively on merit? That who's in favour and who is out of favour within a University has no impact on who gets time with critical equipment? That private funds are not going to come forward on the the basis for potential return on investment?

I'm not suggesting conspiracy, simply suggesting that the competition for patronage has made researchers (and hence research) subordinate to those who control the resources.


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28 Jul 2010, 4:44 pm

visagrunt wrote:
Vexcalibur wrote:
visagrunt wrote:
To what extent is 'science' similarly described? Research no longer takes place in the individual conception of the thinker, but is now permeated by the politics related to public and private funding, commercial viability, the Zeitgeist?

All of these statements are BS and indicate me you spend way too much time in conspiracy forums.


All of them are BS? Is that truly what you believe?

Are you suggesting that research money is doled out exclusively on merit? That who's in favour and who is out of favour within a University has no impact on who gets time with critical equipment? That private funds are not going to come forward on the the basis for potential return on investment?

I'm not suggesting conspiracy, simply suggesting that the competition for patronage has made researchers (and hence research) subordinate to those who control the resources.

You appeared to be suggesting that this is somehow a departure from historical norms. Nothing could be further from the truth.

But anyways, that is only one small part of the dynamic in the research community. Researchers are driven by what they find interesting, and they will often write... shall we say... creative... grant applications to convince others that their projects are worth funding and will produce viable rewards.


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28 Jul 2010, 5:54 pm

Orwell wrote:
visagrunt wrote:
Vexcalibur wrote:
visagrunt wrote:
To what extent is 'science' similarly described? Research no longer takes place in the individual conception of the thinker, but is now permeated by the politics related to public and private funding, commercial viability, the Zeitgeist?

All of these statements are BS and indicate me you spend way too much time in conspiracy forums.


All of them are BS? Is that truly what you believe?

Are you suggesting that research money is doled out exclusively on merit? That who's in favour and who is out of favour within a University has no impact on who gets time with critical equipment? That private funds are not going to come forward on the the basis for potential return on investment?

I'm not suggesting conspiracy, simply suggesting that the competition for patronage has made researchers (and hence research) subordinate to those who control the resources.

You appeared to be suggesting that this is somehow a departure from historical norms. Nothing could be further from the truth.

But anyways, that is only one small part of the dynamic in the research community. Researchers are driven by what they find interesting, and they will often write... shall we say... creative... grant applications to convince others that their projects are worth funding and will produce viable rewards.


Right. documentaries can be similar. I once watched an awesome one on whales, and in the last 2-5 minutes or so they had a little spiel about global warming, showed sky scrapers hundreds of feet under water, whales swimming above them. It felt very tacked on, and it was blatantly obvious they did it for funding.


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28 Jul 2010, 6:17 pm

Orwell wrote:
ruveyn wrote:
visagrunt wrote:

Surely, that's Orwell's point?


It is?

ruveyn

Yes. YECs often cite famous scientists who "support" creationism by virtue of having lived and died before Darwin put forward his ideas. It's a ridiculous claim to say that Newton or Bacon rejected evolution; just like it would be ridiculous to say that Newton rejected quantum mechanics.


I see now. I thought there was a mistake on the dating of things.

ruveyn



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28 Jul 2010, 6:18 pm

There is enough room for both science and religion on the head of a pin.

ruveyn



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28 Jul 2010, 7:01 pm

visagrunt wrote:
To what extent is 'science' similarly described? Research no longer takes place in the individual conception of the thinker, but is now permeated by the politics related to public and private funding, commercial viability, the Zeitgeist?

Quote:
All of these statements are BS and indicate me you spend way too much time in conspiracy forums.


Quote:
All of them are BS?

Definitely, because you generalized. There is research subject to politics and funding, but thinking all of it is subject of such is BS.

Quote:
Are you suggesting that research money is doled out exclusively on merit? That who's in favour and who is out of favour within a University has no impact on who gets time with critical equipment? That private funds are not going to come forward on the the basis for potential return on investment?

This is all BS. Your assumption is that just because there is money required for research it means the studies are flawed. But accepted studies have always had to disclose bias and it is always the case that they go through review by scientists associated with the other side anyway.

There are always going to be biases everywhere. But science's method works in a way that it is very hard to just fabricate something just because you got funding from it. Because before gaining acceptance you would have to made your research in a transparent way, so much that the people not liking to accept your conclusion will be ready to bury you professionally if they find fraud.

There is a large amount of fraudulent research and data, but they are caught up almost instantly. The "Vaccine causes autism" ones are a great example. Mr. Wakefield had a lot of personal interests (related to winning lawsuits) in making his theory that vaccines caused autism look legit. He commited a lot of fraud, but nevertheless, he got caught, 10 years later he lost his doctor license.

There is always going to be fraud, but science has plenty of ways to detect it, and the research and data that is generally accepted have gone through strong inspection and repetition of experiments.


Quote:
I'm not suggesting conspiracy, simply suggesting that the competition for patronage has made researchers (and hence research) subordinate to those who control the resources.

This generalization is BS. Simply as that. It shows that you are against all sort of evidence. In fact it indicates me that you have been supported the sides that have had no evidence whatsoever in favor for so long that you have a need to use "money" fallacies to attack the whole bunch of scientific studies made. My question is why are you afraid of evidence?


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28 Jul 2010, 11:41 pm

ruveyn wrote:
There is enough room for both science and religion on the head of a pin.

ruveyn


I may or may not agree depending on the status of the Higgs boson.


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