C
Charlemagne_II
Guest
The purpose of science is to inquire, and we inquire because it serves our human purposes to do so and may be a human purpose in and of itself.
ricmat raises an interesting point
Why can humans see purposes in the things they do (science, for example) but then evade the purpose for which they themselves exist, preferring to see themselves as purposeless (atheism) in the grand scheme of things?
This reduction to purposelessness comes about through science ultimately, because science refuses to confront any possibility of metaphysical realities, so infatuated with itself that only science matters … not anything else.
Einstein’s theory of relativity was true (and respected enough to be published in academic journals) even before he was able to verify it by the fulfillment of predictions based on it.
Why couldn’t Intelligent Design be accorded some scientific respectability on the basis of fixed natural laws by which we can predict many things about the behavior of the universe (for example that some day this planet will perish)?
Nicolaus Copernicus: “The universe has been wrought for us by a supremely good and orderly Creator.”
Johannes Kepler: “[May] God who is most admirable in his works … deign to grant us the grace to bring to light and illuminate the profundity of his wisdom in the visible (and accordingly intelligible) creation of this world.”
Galileo Galilei: “The Holy Bible and the phenomenon of nature proceed alike from the divine Word.”
Isaac Newton: “This most beautiful system [the universe] could only proceed from the dominion of an intelligent and powerful Being.” Isaac Newton
ricmat raises an interesting point
Why can humans see purposes in the things they do (science, for example) but then evade the purpose for which they themselves exist, preferring to see themselves as purposeless (atheism) in the grand scheme of things?
This reduction to purposelessness comes about through science ultimately, because science refuses to confront any possibility of metaphysical realities, so infatuated with itself that only science matters … not anything else.
Einstein’s theory of relativity was true (and respected enough to be published in academic journals) even before he was able to verify it by the fulfillment of predictions based on it.
Why couldn’t Intelligent Design be accorded some scientific respectability on the basis of fixed natural laws by which we can predict many things about the behavior of the universe (for example that some day this planet will perish)?
Nicolaus Copernicus: “The universe has been wrought for us by a supremely good and orderly Creator.”
Johannes Kepler: “[May] God who is most admirable in his works … deign to grant us the grace to bring to light and illuminate the profundity of his wisdom in the visible (and accordingly intelligible) creation of this world.”
Galileo Galilei: “The Holy Bible and the phenomenon of nature proceed alike from the divine Word.”
Isaac Newton: “This most beautiful system [the universe] could only proceed from the dominion of an intelligent and powerful Being.” Isaac Newton