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I just think it funny that without the notion of god, these guys wouldn't have a job. Who should they be thanking for their job, god or the non-existence of him???
Please don’t comment here just to argue my right to believe
I just think it funny that without the notion of god, these guys wouldn't have a job.
The scientists that study this for a job, wouldn't have this job if there was facts.
Originally posted by CherryDuck
I'm talking about the scientist who specialize in say evolution, and topics which as well as trying to find information, would debunk religion in the process.
Take evolution: IF we were able to work out how it happened, we would have descovered it years ago. (in my opinion) But we haven't.. There are THEORY'S but no straight FACTS. The scientists that study this for a job, wouldn't have this job if there was facts. Do you understand>? Sorry, sometimes i'm a little backwards in coming forward
Cherry
Originally posted by CherryDuck
So many scientist get paid to "debunk" god and religion,
Most of the time the stuff they dig up usually gives Christians more things to believe in.
I just think it funny that without the notion of god, these guys wouldn't have a job.
Almost 52 percent of scientists surveyed identified themselves as having no current religious affiliation compared with only 14 percent of the general population. And while nearly 14 percent of the U.S. population who responded to the GSS describe themselves as "evangelical" or "fundamentalist," less than 2 percent of the RAAS population identifies with either label.
The concept of God is often invoked to explain phenomena. If the phenomenon is one that has a scientific explanation, then it is possible to compare the scientific merits of the two explanations, one based on science and the other or God or, more generally, on faith. The nature of what constitutes a good scientific theory is not universally understood. As a result, sometimes reasoning based on faith is seriously promoted as scientific. Scientists tend to judge scientific theories on their accuracy, simplicity, and suggestiveness. Any faith-based theory that is represented as scientific should be subjected to those three criteria. We will illustrate this point with some very simple, perhaps trivial, examples. Not all phenomena can be successfully explained by science. In some cases a scientific explanation is possible but not yet available. In others, such explanations will never exist. In still others, people will have different opinions as to whether and when such explanations will be developed. In cases where science does not (yet) have a needed answer, what are we to do? We scientists use scientific theories as long as they seem to do the job. In the same spirit, we can use arguments based on faith so long as they seem to work, and as long as we keep in mind the assumptions made. Without this kind of approach we would be severely limited in what we could do. Much of the work of many professions, including engineering, deals with human nature, for which we have no scientific theories. In addition, science itself rests on assumptions about nature and the rational thought process that are not, in the final analysis, provable. Finally, we scientists are ourselves humans, and so our activities "off the job" require dealing with matters for which no scientific theory will work.
Your 'stance' that scientist are bottom feeders is quite ignorant... But then again, you believe in a god...par for the course IMO.
Take evolution: IF we were able to work out how it happened, we would have descovered it years ago. (in my opinion) But we haven't.. There are THEORY'S but no straight FACTS.
The scientists that study this for a job, wouldn't have this job if there was facts.
So many scientist get paid to "debunk" god and religion, but in that aspect aren't' they contradicting themselves??
Most of the time the stuff they dig up usually gives Christians more things to believe in.
I just think it funny that without the notion of god, these guys wouldn't have a job. Who should they be thanking for their job, god or the non-existence of him???.
Originally posted by CherryDuck
So many scientist get paid to "debunk" god and religion,
Originally posted by CherryDuck
but in that aspect aren't' they contradicting themselves??
Originally posted by CherryDuck
Most of the time the stuff they dig up usually gives Christians more things to believe in.
Originally posted by CherryDuck
I just think it funny that without the notion of god, these guys wouldn't have a job.
Originally posted by CherryDuck
Who should they be thanking for their job, god or the non-existence of him???