D
Donald45
Guest
I agree with your first observation, that some (a relative few) scientists—particularly one or two who write popular science for the general public—occasionally allow their personal philosophies to color their use of scientific terminology (Dawkins in notorious for this). But your assumption that there is some kind of scientific conspiracy bent on spreading atheism in our public schools is manifestly rather silly. Of the some 3,000,000 or so professional scientists working today, the vast majority appear perfectly capable of keeping their science relatively free of philosophically biased language (and I’m speaking here of both theists and non-theists). Generally speaking, terms like “chance” and “random” are not used in an anti-supernatural manner, but—given the material focus of the natural sciences—merely in a non-supernatural manner.What I am saying is that even scientists are prone to using the word “random” in sloppy ways that are encumbered with their own religious biases.
I think that is a rather naïve view of science, a view that assumes that the observer is not entangled with what he observes.
No, I don’t see science as absolutely objective, though it’s a gigantic leap of logic to jump from “scientists possess personal philosophical biases” to “scientists are secular humanists out to eliminate religion.” Certainly scientists, like all of us, have their own convictions regarding non-scientific matters. Their task as scientists involves being aware of such assumptions and not allowing non-scientific elements to intrude into their work such that those philosophical ideas are confused with “science” itself. As I’ve said, most scientists (non-theists and theists alike) accomplish this task admirably. The laws and forces of nature work exacly the same for the theist as for the non-theist.
Truly,
Don