Well, science is in conflict with religion. Fortunately, Christians always have their Church officials around to revise silly claims like the Biblical claim that the first people lived to be 800-900 years old. Now, that stuff is merely held to be symbolic. But hey, that’s religion for you: today’s assertions are tomorrow’s symbols. You do realize that such things were not always considered symbolic, right? Those were serious claims back in the day, until science came along.
So what? A religious person will believe many things that are false that are caused by his religious beliefs. But these false-hoods are not necessarily part of his Official Doctrine, but just a function of their own ignorance. Ptolemy use to think the sun revolved around the earth too. But that doesn’t discount all the other beliefs he held. Further, scientific theories in future will likewise be tomorrow’s symbols as well, just like the Caloric Theory of Heat is today.
So yes, I disagree that science and religion should work in conjunction.
This is because you don’t understand HOW they can work in conjunction. When I became baptized, I didn’t suddenly abandon all science. LOL! But this is what you are implying everyone who is religious DOES. I am saying you are making too many generalizations that are clearly false.
I didn’t deny that the scientific method was based on philosophies.
But I didn’t even say this. In fact, you are saying the opposite of what I just said. Scientific methodology is NOT base on any philosophical system. Rather, philosophers construct unscientific philosophical theories from science which scientific methodologies clearly do not support either, e.g., “all that exists is material,” “empirical evidence is the only standard of justification and warrant for
all domains.”
What we see before us is this cycle: religion makes outrageous claims, science demands evidence, religion claims to be above providing evidence, then some discovery makes the religion backpedal, claiming that the previous claim was meant to be understood symbolically.
I don’t deny some of this. But give me one instance where science has falsified the Apostle’s Creed which is core tenant of all Christian Doctrine.
Religion is constantly receding from the advance of science in panic, and everybody who can read a history book knows it. The God of the Gaps is running out of gaps.
hahaha! :clapping: Nice sweeping Dawkins-style generalizations! Oh, you’re so qualified to know what you’re talking about…
You guys are making claims, and all scientists want is evidence to support those claims. If **you feel offended **by that request, then please feel free to migrate to a place that doesn’t require such a high standard of evidence, like a third-world country. Have fun.
“You feel offended” “migrate to third-world countries where everyone is ignorant”…
You repeatedly result to character bashing when you are out of anything worthwhile and intelligent to give. This is a clear indication that you have nothing interesting to say at all.
I don’t have to pander to this nonsense.
Logic and math deal with concepts, not with the natural world. Religions claim that there is more than the natural world and that the beings in that supernatural world react with this world. They then claim that they need not provide evidence for this additional world they posit. If that’s so, then I should be able to posit a separate universe consisting of unicorns, goblins, and fairies while using the very same tactic: “I discovered this world through reason, but I can’t be expected to provide evidence for it.”
This is a poor argument. You need to do much better than this. First, spiritual beings are incorporeal, so they are, in principle, empirically unverfiable. Second, you just flattly
assume that empirical standards of warrant should be applied to spiritual claims. Third, you
assume the belief in God is on par with a belief in fairies and goblins–for which you lack an argument. Fourth, you
assume the religious believer (such as myself) lacks ANY reason for believing that God exists at all–another false assumption for which you clearly lack any evidence. So whatever, Sherlock…just go about your merry way making stupid generalizations, just like AlbertBall and the rest on here. Where are your arguments anyways?? I haven’t seen even ONE argument put forth on the table yet at all. If you want to discuss about ME, instead of putting me into the camp of every other ignorant fool, then address ME, not other people! I know just as many atheists who can’t even tie their shoes. But I don’t lump you into that category, now do I? NO. So stop doing that to me.
Yes, but I’m saying that discrediting some propositions of a theory does not amount to discrediting all propositions. This doesn’t mean that the propositions that remain are unfalsifiable, only that they haven’t been falsified.
Just like philosophy and religion. Why are you holding a double standard?? You clearly think that it is perfectly permissible to trash **all **religious propositions if one or another is falsified. But then you claim that we shouldn’t be trashing all science because some of these other propositions may very well be true.
In fact, I don’t think I can come up with a scientific theory that didn’t correctly account for at least one aspect of what it intended to explain. Can you? How many theories have been all wrong?
Again, utility is not synonymous with truth. Newtonian mechanics still “works” on terrestrial planes, but it doesn’t work for the grand cosmological scale. And we’ve abandoned Newtonian mechanics as being capable of saying anything about the “deeper truth” about how things work. It is useful, not true. But false beliefs are very useful too. Interestingly enough, you accuse religious people of the this exact same error that I accused you of.