E
edwest2
Guest
I think most people with a passion for science who go on to get degrees and work in their field of interest are interested in what their instructors have to say. I think if they picked up a copy of Nature and read that Most Leading Scientists Still Reject God, that could have an impact on them. Their instructors started pretty much the same way, and who influenced them? Both groups, teachers and students, are the end result of a mass media campaign that emphasizes and deemphasizes certain things. The media creates the mental background noise that occupies us, and our coworkers.
Unless this mental atmosphere is viewed critically, it can become the default source of answers to questions we ask ourselves and answers to questions others ask us. All media resonate off of each other. Each one reinforces and magnifies what the other one says or shows, creating a mental image of what we think most people are doing in our area and in our country.
It’s all built on trust and ego. When we go to our classes in college, we enter into a rather intimate intellectual relationship with our peers and our instructors. All of us who are studying to become a scientist in whatever specialty are not only absorbing knowledge and information, but we are also absorbing the mind-set of our instructors and the mind-set given off by our chosen field. Take biology. Leading men in this field reject God. Certainly, you must think, they can’t be rejecting such an idea for no particular reason. Could their work have something to do with it? After all, these are highly intelligent and, in some cases, egotistical people. Certainly, they can’t be wrong. Evidence is evidence after all. No evidence for God? Sure. Why not exclude Him from your private life? But it doesn’t stop there.
Take PZ Myers. On a youtube interview, he says that science and atheism are inextricably linked. “We have the data,” he says, that science is corrosive to religious belief. Data. Well. What more could you ask for?
How about Sam Harris? He tells people in a published article that his fellow scientists are actually ‘pod people’ for listening to the Pope. He mocks the Virgin birth.
Unless this mental atmosphere is viewed critically, it can become the default source of answers to questions we ask ourselves and answers to questions others ask us. All media resonate off of each other. Each one reinforces and magnifies what the other one says or shows, creating a mental image of what we think most people are doing in our area and in our country.
It’s all built on trust and ego. When we go to our classes in college, we enter into a rather intimate intellectual relationship with our peers and our instructors. All of us who are studying to become a scientist in whatever specialty are not only absorbing knowledge and information, but we are also absorbing the mind-set of our instructors and the mind-set given off by our chosen field. Take biology. Leading men in this field reject God. Certainly, you must think, they can’t be rejecting such an idea for no particular reason. Could their work have something to do with it? After all, these are highly intelligent and, in some cases, egotistical people. Certainly, they can’t be wrong. Evidence is evidence after all. No evidence for God? Sure. Why not exclude Him from your private life? But it doesn’t stop there.
Take PZ Myers. On a youtube interview, he says that science and atheism are inextricably linked. “We have the data,” he says, that science is corrosive to religious belief. Data. Well. What more could you ask for?
How about Sam Harris? He tells people in a published article that his fellow scientists are actually ‘pod people’ for listening to the Pope. He mocks the Virgin birth.