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Samwise21
Guest
I’m struggling with a very apparent viewpoint from the scientific community that religion/faith and science can never be compatible due to what they see as conflicting worldviews or a presupposed stance on what can and can’t be tested, or that religions (mainly the Abrahamic ones) are incompatible with each other, let alone science. This stance gets thrown around by the like (Richard Dawkins, Jerry Coyne, Lawrence Krauss, Sam Harris), to the point where it goes beyond scientists addressing stuff like fundamentalism and becomes an order to submit to a materialist worldview, where art, literature and philosophy are useless and all that is true is only what they declare to be.
And then I see how the Catholic Church has the Pontifical Academy of Sciences and how Pope Francis advocates against climate change. How Pope John Paul II championed Galileo and held evolution to be fact. Bishop Robert Barron and his addresses on science and scientism, Father Georges Lemaître and his discovery of the Big Bang, and all those Vatican astronomers.
So how in the heck do people keep thinking that these two can’t ever be incompatible?
And then I see how the Catholic Church has the Pontifical Academy of Sciences and how Pope Francis advocates against climate change. How Pope John Paul II championed Galileo and held evolution to be fact. Bishop Robert Barron and his addresses on science and scientism, Father Georges Lemaître and his discovery of the Big Bang, and all those Vatican astronomers.
So how in the heck do people keep thinking that these two can’t ever be incompatible?