R
Rocinante
Guest
@all
an well-endowed organization called the Templeton Foundation gives grants to scientists who are willing to say something nice about religion. it funded research on the efficacy of intercessory prayer. apparently it doesn’t work. not only that, patients who were prayed for and knew it fared worst of all.
nytimes.com/2006/03/31/health/31pray.html
after the fact, many prayer supporters criticize the study saying the results don’t mean anything. i can’t help suspecting that the same people who dismiss such a study are the same people who would have been saying “see, i told you so” if the study had given favorable results to the power of prayer to heal people who are prayed for.
it seems to me that the question, “can science study religion?” is yes when the results favor religion and no when they don’t.
an well-endowed organization called the Templeton Foundation gives grants to scientists who are willing to say something nice about religion. it funded research on the efficacy of intercessory prayer. apparently it doesn’t work. not only that, patients who were prayed for and knew it fared worst of all.
nytimes.com/2006/03/31/health/31pray.html
after the fact, many prayer supporters criticize the study saying the results don’t mean anything. i can’t help suspecting that the same people who dismiss such a study are the same people who would have been saying “see, i told you so” if the study had given favorable results to the power of prayer to heal people who are prayed for.
it seems to me that the question, “can science study religion?” is yes when the results favor religion and no when they don’t.