Religion offers no such explanations to natural phenomena apart from the claim that the world was created by God. — invicta
In general the mindset of the atheist is ignorant — invicta
In any case the scientific mindset and the religious one are not mutually exclusive, you can be both a Christian and a Scientist. — invicta
. Science knows how to do: how to make a computer, an aircraft, bombs. But it sometimes lacks the wisdom of what to do and what to leave undone. — Art48
A scientific is always in continuous skepticism, but a believer believes in God blindly. — javi2541997
Religion, on the other hand, is the same old, same old. The crucifixion of Jesus. The raising of Lazarus. The loaves and the fishes. I heard those stories as a child. They are still around today, same as ever. Same as they were a thousand years ago. Religious people may spin those facts as an advantage. “See,” they might say, “the unending power of God’s Word. Indeed, his word shall endure forever.” But the foundational religious texts are still a finite resource.
Few people today believe that there really once was a garden with a talking serpent and a naked couple
Most Christians ignore the teaching of Jesus that disease is the result of demons and sin
Again, as i said earlier, not all religions have a God. Buddhism, taoism, jainism and many more do not have a Godhead. We must not assume that religion automatically means there is a blindly followed/obeyed God. — Benj96
They are still around today, same as ever. Same as they were a thousand years ago — Art48
Science-based explanations might gradually become simple & common enough to replace ancient bed-time stories, of how the world works, for the average Joe. But, as you implied, the material success of Science has been largely due to its focus on "how" facts, instead of "why" questions. Those perpetual philosophical issues are perspectival & interpretational, hence resistant to impersonal pragmatic nailed-down fixed facts.It seems that science is in need of religions’ values, ethics, and morals. Might science absorb values, ethics, and morals from religions? From purified religions, of course.
Or might science somehow evolve to address the concerns and questions traditionally addressed by religion? That seems to be on science’s trajectory. — Art48
Scripture is at most interpretative today, at worst completely lost/mis-translated. Every copy of the Bible/Torah/Quran etc is a lesser version of the previous due to human error/misunderstanding and general societal change. Just as when you repeatedly feed something printed back into the printer, the definition, the visibility of the text, is lost to imperfect reproduction. Loss of resolution.
I've watched Christian/atheist discussions (for example, the 'atheist experience' videos on YouTube) where time and time again the atheist knew more about religion than the Christian, perhaps because many atheists were once believers who bothered to critically investigate their beliefs.In general the mindset of the atheist — invicta
:pray: Let's hope not.Might science absorb values, ethics, and morals from religions? — Art48
IME, science is to experimental medicines as religion is to ritual placebos/nocebos. The latter tricks many into ignoring their symptoms whereas the former contributes to the health of most. However, philosophy – what we do with (or practice) either of them – often promotes 'proper diet & exercise' as a daily fitness regime – "a way of life" – which cultivates / reinforces flourishing (i.e. well-being).Or might science somehow evolve to address the concerns and questions traditionally addressed by religion?
Just as astronomy has not replaced astrology, planetology has not replaced flat earthism, evolution has not replaced creationism and cognitive neuroscience has not replaced spiritualism (i.e. belief in ghosts/souls), I suspect modern technosciences will never totally replace supernatural religions as such. :eyes: :mask:Science will never eventually replace religion. — Benj96
It may be that our role on this planet is not to worship God - but to create him. — Arthur C. Clarke
Belief in the big bang, a theory supported by solid evidence, for example, the cosmic background radiation,isn't much more rational than the belief in a creation myth, for example, the Genesis stories which include a talking serpent? I have to disagree.For example, a belief in the big bang isn't much more rational than the belief in a creation myth. — Tzeentch
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