Go Back   Science Forums > General Science Forums > Philosophy Forums > Theology forum
Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old 12-24-2005   #1 (permalink)
HydrogenBond's Avatar
Creating


 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Faith and Science

Faith is the belief in something that can not be seen or directly proven. Religion is usually equated with faith since it is difficult or impossible to prove God to the skeptical rational mind since direct data is lacking. This is not to say God does or does not exist, only that it is hard to prove in a scientific way.

Although one may exclusively equate religion with faith, science is often based on faith. For example, nobody has ever been able to prove the existance of the strings of the String Theory of physics. The strings are based on faith that they exist and will someday be demonstrated. Nobody has even been to the center of the earth or has collected direct data from the center of the earth. Yet, most scientists have faith that the center of the earth contains and iron core. The BB theory is based on faith since there is no way to collect direct data. Many scientists have lost faith in BB and have exchanged their faith for the newest theories, which also cannot be proven 100%.

One of the keys for a peaceful cooexistance between science and religion is to understand what is common to both. The faith within science is connected to its many theories of external reality, while the faith of religion is based on its many theories of the inner reality of human nature. The rivalry between the two is based on the fact that science is unconscious of its dependance on faith.. While religion is unconscious of its dependance on logic and reason when attempting to prove things using the bible. It is love/hate relationship where one is not able to see how they use the strengths that stems from their rival.
Reply With Quote
Old 12-26-2005   #2 (permalink)
Boerseun's Avatar
Phantom Cow of Justice

Moderator

Location:
Hartbeespoort, South Africa
 
Boerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond repute
 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Re: Faith and Science

Good post.

I don't understand why there should be a competition between Science and Religion at all, though. Science isn't competing for souls, and doesn't care whether God exists, or not. The only people trying to force such a competition onto Religion and Science, are those who find a lack of proof to their deeply held views regarding Religion to be a bit unsettling.

String Theory is a hypothesis. It's not verified or proven, but competes with other hypotheses in order to explain the universe at a very minute level. String Theory competes with my theory about little green turtles swimming around sub-atomic particles. But my turtle-theory makes zero predictions. String theory has amazing mathematical implications, and predictions extrapolated from it seems to be right on the money. So, it raised a few flags that got scientists' attention. But - at the point where it is presented to the science community, it is no more nor less valid than my turtle-theory.
Science explains most of what has transpired since a few millionths of a second after the Big Bang. Actually explaining the Big Bang would be a leap forward in human understanding. And God might very well have something to do with that.

Religion is competing on a moral field. Science has absolutely nothing to say about moral issues. Morality is subjective. Science is empirical.

Evolution is a theory. But it explains so many different things seen on Earth that it's raised plenty of flags for the science community to ponder. This is not to say that it won't be toppled by a better, more comprehensive theory tomorrow.

Science is the asymptotic approach to physical truth about the universe, and a continuous process as more and more discoveries are made, and possible explanations put forth and tested, validated or disproved.
Religion is an attempt to supply human beings with some sort of Moral guidance, and an attempt at approaching some sort of spiritual truth. Religion can hardly progress, because no new discoveries can be made - only new interpretations of existing scripture can be made.

Science and Religion competes in such diverse fields that any competition between the two (or even comparison) would be meaningless. It would be like comparing horses with fruit flies.


----------------
Hypography Forums Moderator

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII



Ecce bos taurus justitia
Reply With Quote
Old 12-26-2005   #3 (permalink)
HydrogenBond's Avatar
Creating


 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Re: Faith and Science

I agree with you that science is often based on empiricsm, especially when we reach the frontiers of knowledge. But such theories are never presented with the footnote; "this is only an empirical theory that correlates the data and may or may not represent truth". Yet, it is often treated and taught as though it represents truth. This may be part of the sales pitch to give it more prestige in the quest for research funds.

I consider myself a conceptual modeler. I look at things in simple ways using logic and common sense. In my own experience, conceptual inconsistencies do not seem to matter to scientists that attached to their preferred theories. I wrongly assumed that science is looking for truth.

For example, if all scientists realized that all fontier theories do not necesarily reflect truth, there would be more freedom for others to look for other alternatives. If one creates the subjective feeling, these are truths in the making, anyone going in another direction will be viewed as out their minds. This is good for beaurocracy and the chain of command but it makes seeking the truth or pointing out flaws an offense against science.

Last edited by HydrogenBond; 12-26-2005 at 04:05 PM..
Reply With Quote
Old 12-26-2005   #4 (permalink)
TheBigDog's Avatar
Doing the Impossible

Moderator
Gallery Curator

Location:
Madison, OH (when not in fantasy land)
 
TheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via MSN to TheBigDog
 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Re: Faith and Science

HB, I had begun trying to articulate a similar post, and fell well short of your elegantly phrased prose.

I would like to pose a couple of questions...

Quote:
Originally Posted by HydrogenBond
Faith is the belief in something that can not be seen or directly proven. Religion is usually equated with faith since it is difficult or impossible to prove God to the skeptical rational mind since direct data is lacking. This is not to say God does or does not exist, only that it is hard to prove in a scientific way.
If God were to be proved scientifically, and His role in the creation of the universe were found to be limited in scope (Creation of the Universe - Yes, Creation of man - NO), who would have the more difficult time in accepting His existence? Religious zealots who would need to scope down the role of God, or atheist scientists who seek for Him to have no role at all?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Boerseun
Science isn't competing for souls, and doesn't care whether God exists, or not. The only people trying to force such a competition onto Religion and Science, are those who find a lack of proof to their deeply held views regarding Religion to be a bit unsettling.
When scientists discount long held religious beliefs, and mock the believers as being uneducated dolts in every manner available, both subtle and overt in an intentional effort to diminish the acceptance of that faith, and that faith by its own definition is the only path to salvation, then science is indeed competing for souls. Because even if there is no afterlife, what right is it of science to deny people the comfort of such a belief in this lifetime?

Bill
Reply With Quote
Old 12-26-2005   #5 (permalink)
lindagarrette's Avatar
Explaining


Location:
Maryland Heights, MO
 
lindagarrette is a jewel in the roughlindagarrette is a jewel in the roughlindagarrette is a jewel in the rough
Send a message via ICQ to lindagarrette
 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Re: Faith and Science

Quote:
Originally Posted by webenton
Because even if there is no afterlife, what right is it of science to deny people the comfort of such a belief in this lifetime?

Bill
Science is just a field of study. Education shows people that their beliefs are unfounded. If that's uncomfortable, to bad.


----------------
If god existed then science would be meaningless
Reply With Quote
Old 12-26-2005   #6 (permalink)
Boerseun's Avatar
Phantom Cow of Justice

Moderator

Location:
Hartbeespoort, South Africa
 
Boerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond reputeBoerseun has a reputation beyond repute
 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Re: Faith and Science

Quote:
Originally Posted by webenton
When scientists discount long held religious beliefs, and mock the believers as being uneducated dolts in every manner available, both subtle and overt in an intentional effort to diminish the acceptance of that faith, and that faith by its own definition is the only path to salvation, then science is indeed competing for souls. Because even if there is no afterlife, what right is it of science to deny people the comfort of such a belief in this lifetime?
Science don't go about mocking believers in any religion, to the best of my knowledge. What Science does, is to say "If you want religion credited by Science, bring a piece of God to the lab so that we can test it". Religion have failed to do so up till now. Therefore, Science has absolutely nothing to say on the matter of religion. Science doesn't say God exists or not, Science can't offer any opinion of any kind regarding the matter. But Science needs an answer as to where we come from. Biology, geology, anthropology etc. have brought forward credible evidence that was hypothesised and tested for in the lab. And Science had to come up with theories, not referring to God at all - after all, you cannot be consistent about the scientific method if you introduce elements that hasn't been tested for nor available for experimentation.
Therefore, the only reason Science cannot include God in any explanation, is the fault of Religion. They're not coming up with the evidence.
For all we know, God did indeed do it. Religion might come with the evidence tomorrow, so we can test it. But up until that point, Religion has no place in Science.
You can't demand recognition from any institution by ignoring and disregarding the laws and rules of that institution.


----------------
Hypography Forums Moderator

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII



Ecce bos taurus justitia
Reply With Quote
Old 12-27-2005   #7 (permalink)
TheBigDog's Avatar
Doing the Impossible

Moderator
Gallery Curator

Location:
Madison, OH (when not in fantasy land)
 
TheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond reputeTheBigDog has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via MSN to TheBigDog
 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Re: Faith and Science

Mullet, please note that I said "Scientists", not science. Science is only effective when practiced in an unbiased manner. When its practitioners begin to carry a bias toward or away from any particular answer, the results are tainted and biased. It begins with an attitude that Science and Religion are mutually exclusive. The bias that disturbs me on this site is that of overt anti-religion. "If God exists then there is no science." The assumption is that science will never prove the existence of God. Yet, for all of our science, we have yet to absolutely disprove God. So scientists, instead of relying upon science, take it on FAITH that God does not exist, and then disallow any proof of God as erroneous by means of any convenient reason.

The same problem persists in all sciences where an agenda is being pursued instead of unbiased rational discovery. Look at the drum beaters for the whole in the ozone layer. We have never measured a time when there was not a hole in the ozone layer. Yet we assume that we caused it about the time we started to take the measurements. Is this good science, or use of bad science to promote an agenda? How about global warming? Does anyone doubt the evidence provided by ice core samples from the poles that our world temperature has taken wild swings in both directions for the past several hundred thousand years? Yet a swing in our current time is entirely the fault of man. Where was man for the cataclysmic weather events of the past? Yet with bad use of science and an agenda to pursue, suddenly mankind is the chief villain.

No one has ever proved life on other planets. Nobody has ever brought a piece of an alien into the lab so it could be studied. Yet the search for life on other planets is not a taboo notion. The notion that there is life on other planets is accepted at face value because statistically it must be true. No proof, just faith.

Hawking is considered one of the greatest minds of our time and has invested a great deal of in intellect in describing black holes. Yet black holes are not conclusively proved to exist to the satisfaction of all scientists (as I have been informed on another thread). Does that make him some kind of witch doctor for believing in the unproved? He himself asserts that some of what he has hypothesized could never be proved through experimentation. CRACKPOT! I guess you have to have some element of faith for the pursuit of science.

Bill
Reply With Quote
Old 12-28-2005   #8 (permalink)
stevencarrwork's Avatar
Thinking


 
stevencarrwork is an unknown quantity at this point
 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Re: Faith and Science

Quote:
Originally Posted by webenton
Mullet, please note that I said "Scientists", not science. Science is only effective when practiced in an unbiased manner. When its practitioners begin to carry a bias toward or away from any particular answer, the results are tainted and biased. It begins with an attitude that Science and Religion are mutually exclusive. The bias that disturbs me on this site is that of overt anti-religion. "If God exists then there is no science." The assumption is that science will never prove the existence of God. Yet, for all of our science, we have yet to absolutely disprove God. So scientists, instead of relying upon science, take it on FAITH that God does not exist, and then disallow any proof of God as erroneous by means of any convenient reason.
If there are supernatural beings that can affect the results of any measurements or change the results of any experiments at will, then there is no possibility of obtaining laws which apply.

There have been millions and millions of experiments. None has ever been affected by a god.

Every time you turn on a light switch, you must have faith that God has decided not to interfere with the electricity. He could easily do so, but you have to have faith that either there is no God or that he is never going to do anything.

Otherwise every time your car stopped , you would have to call in a priest to exorcise it, before considering whether or not you have run out of petrol.
Reply With Quote
Old 12-28-2005   #9 (permalink)
Tormod's Avatar
Hypographer

Administrator
Senior Editor
Editor
Dev Team Member

Location:
Oslo, Norway
 
Tormod has a reputation beyond reputeTormod has a reputation beyond reputeTormod has a reputation beyond reputeTormod has a reputation beyond reputeTormod has a reputation beyond reputeTormod has a reputation beyond reputeTormod has a reputation beyond reputeTormod has a reputation beyond reputeTormod has a reputation beyond repute
 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Re: Faith and Science

Quote:
Originally Posted by stevencarrwork
Every time you turn on a light switch, you must have faith that God has decided not to interfere with the electricity. He could easily do so, but you have to have faith that either there is no God or that he is never going to do anything.
This actually also implies that I must not believe (or choose to believe) in an *infinite* amount of gods, and that every action I take *might easily* be controlled by any or all of those gods.


----------------
Your Friendly Neighborhood Administrator

Want to lose the advertisements? Become a Sponsor!

Join our Facebook group or follow us on Twitter

Science is not only compatible with spirituality; it is a profound source of spirituality.
- Carl Sagan
Reply With Quote
Old 12-28-2005   #10 (permalink)
stevencarrwork's Avatar
Thinking


 
stevencarrwork is an unknown quantity at this point
 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Re: Faith and Science

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tormod
This actually also implies that I must not believe (or choose to believe) in an *infinite* amount of gods, and that every action I take *might easily* be controlled by any or all of those gods.
That would be a belief that would be disconfirmed by every experiment that shows no trace of supernatural intervention.

Has there ever been a case where a natural explanation of a phenomenon has ever had to be replaced by a supernatural explanation?
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Is Jesus' Resurrection Plausible? Biochemist Theology forum 124 11-21-2007 03:32 PM
Science Cannot Replace Religion Antti Theology forum 50 06-14-2006 12:22 PM
Presuppositions and Free Will bumab Philosophy Forums 108 06-17-2005 04:30 PM
Fair play; infamous Watercooler 33 01-21-2005 12:16 PM

» Advertisement
» Current Poll
Who's the sexiest man alive? Johnny Depp or Robert Pattinson?
Johnny Depp - 27.27%
3 Votes
Robert Pattinson - 0%
0 Votes
Someone else (please specify) - 45.45%
5 Votes
I'm too macho to think a guy is sexy - 27.27%
3 Votes
Total Votes: 11
You may not vote on this poll.


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 05:00 PM.

Hypography?

Hypography [n.]: A combination of "hyperlink" and "bibliography" - ie, a list of links to electronic documents. Comparable to discography and bibliography, but not cartography.

We have been online since May 2000, and aim to be the best place to find and share science-related content of all kinds.

Share the love!

Please add more science to your life. Use our RSS feeds on your blog, your portal, or your favorite feedreader!


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.3.2
Copyright © 2000-2009 Hypography
Part of the Hypography - Science for Everyone Network