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Science and faith: do you trust science?

@SatyrService [quote]"faith is belief without evidence or belief in the face of contrary evidence"

"Science adjusts its views based on what's observed;
Faith is the denial of observation so that belief can be preserved"[/quote]

Ideological preoccupation is the most obvious element in the atheist vs theist debate. Your estimation is biased, which isn't very scientific. More than a few problems arise; Proponents of each side of the argument aren't good representations of their respective side and even worse of the other side. They (proponents of either) politicize the issue. It's emotional, irrational, unfair.

To assume that science adjusts its views based on what's observed reads like an advertising slogan or bumper sticker. Like saying religion is based upon an unwavering morality, or God is on our side. It's empty and meaningless. A quixotic pipe dream. Faith is never without evidence, contrary or otherwise. Evidence isn't a synonym of truth, though atheists seem to use it as such. The same thing that corrupts evidence corrupts science, faith and everything else. Some call it human nature, others call it sinfulness. It manifests itself in many forms; greed, power, ignorance, fear, xenophobia. Science depends upon tax payer funding like religion enjoys tax exemption. Science depends upon publishing, tenure. and peer review. Subject to conformity. It all sounds very scientific but the similarities between science and religion are obvious to anyone outside looking in.

Ignaz Semmelweis and Ancel Keys are good examples of science being neglected and abused for long periods of time. Semmelweis (late 1800s) at the tail end of the miasmatic school of medicine of the dark ages and Keys being the poster boy for dietary misinformation. Bad science no one corrected for decades. Both resulting in the death of millions. Denial of observation so that belief can be preserved.

But that isn't to say science is without faith or that faith is a bad thing. Faith is trust. Belief. Much like the Latin word credit. The atheist who uses science in the paradoxical criticism of religion, theism, theology, the supernatural and the Bible have no scientific credentials to reach outside of what isn't even their realm, let alone their field. It isn't an argument. It's uninformed ideological struggle, a sociopolitical frustration. On both sides faith is in use but faith isn't necessarily a good thing, either. Anyone can misplace their trust or lazily adhere to blind faith. Of and in both science and religion.
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Renaci · 36-40
"Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen."

That is literally the exact opposite of the observation step of the scientific method.

After tens of thousands of years I expect faith to have more to offer the world besides just terrorism.
@Renaci [quote]"Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen."

That is literally the exact opposite of the observation step of the scientific method.[/quote]

What is the objective?

[quote]After tens of thousands of years I expect faith to have more to offer the world besides just terrorism.[/quote]

Tens of thousands? Your science take your observations outside the realm of recorded history or did you clever folks invent the time machine like I saw on TV? How much terrorism has religion allegedly wrought compared to - lets say - biological and chemical weapons created by science?
@AkioTsukino asks [quote]How much terrorism has religion allegedly wrought[/quote] DUUUDE!!!
Lemme guess - you never studied European history.

The Romans spent about three centuries using terror to suppress a religion called "Christianity." Then, after the emperor Constantine converted to Christianity, they spent several more centuries using terror to impose that religion called "Christianity."

Ever hear of The Crusades? 200 years of religious wars there.

How about all the wars in Hispania/Spain as Muslims invaded and imposed their religion on the Roman colonies, then wars between tolerant Muslims and hardline Muslims, along with 7 centuries of the Christian Reconquista.

How about the Spanish Inquisition?

How about the Conquistadors imposing their religion on the New World via Terror?

How about the Thirty Years war over religious differences between Protestants and Catholics?

How about the English Civil War from 1642 to 1651, and the French religious wars from 1562 to 1598?

How about the The Ottoman-Habsburg wars spread over two centuries?

That's just the low hanging fruit. Religion has been involved in many many wars over the last two millenia.

Now let's hear your 'no true Scotsman' fallacy about why those religious wars weren't really religious wars.
@ElwoodBlues [quote]DUUUDE!!!
Lemme guess - you never studied European history.[/quote]

You didn't finish reading the question I asked? Compared to biological and chemical weapons created by science.

[quote]The Romans spent about three centuries using terror to suppress a religion called "Christianity."[/quote]

Why? Your lumping obvious political disputes between religions using terrorism as a tool of terror would be like me comparing science to the medical horrors committed by Joseph Mangala or Anthony Fauci. It misses the point. The tool isn't the point, the abuser is the point. Science and religion aren't sentient beings. They don't do anything. Besides, I'm the most harshest critic of organized religion. I think it's dangerous and should have been completely abandoned centuries ago. Science, abused and neglected, is as tangible a godhead as any other.

[quote]Then, after the emperor Constantine converted to Christianity, they spent several more centuries using terror to impose that religion called "Christianity."[/quote]

Constantine converted to Christianity? The author of his biography, Eusebius of Caesarea, says that he became a Christian in the last moments of his life. Did he? The day before he had made a sacrifice to Zeus as the Pontifex Maximus. Chief of the Roman pagan religions.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pontifex_maximus

[quote]Ever hear of The Crusades? 200 years of religious wars there.

How about all the wars in Hispania/Spain as Muslims invaded and imposed their religion on the Roman colonies, then wars between tolerant Muslims and hardline Muslims, along with 7 centuries of the Christian Reconquista.

How about the Spanish Inquisition?

How about the Conquistadors imposing their religion on the New World via Terror?

How about the Thirty Years war over religious differences between Protestants and Catholics?

How about the English Civil War from 1642 to 1651, and the French religious wars from 1562 to 1598?

How about the The Ottoman-Habsburg wars spread over two centuries?[/quote]

Yes. Do you think that is the terrorism the poster @Renaci was referring to? everyone was religious. everyone warred against everyone else. Religion was only the primary tool because science didn't have any power.
newjaninev2 · 56-60, F
@AkioTsukino [quote]biological and chemical weapons created by science?[/quote]

Such weapons are not created by science... they result from technology
@AkioTsukino [quote]everyone was religious. everyone warred against everyone else. Religion was only the primary tool because science didn't have any power.[/quote]
Yeah, I knew that 'no true Scotsman' fallacy was coming, [b]LOL!!![/b]

[quote] The author of his biography, Eusebius of Caesarea, says that he became a Christian in the last moments of his life. Did he?[/quote] Are you thinking of Constantine I or Constantine II? Or perhaps Constantius I or Constantius II? The dynasty spanned nearly 60 years.

[quote]The day before he had made a sacrifice to Zeus[/quote]
The Romans always prayed to multiple Gods. As part of their pattern of conquest and rule, they would ease some gods in and ease other gods out. A sacrifice to Zeus might have been politically expedient. Don't expect Constantine's Christianity to match Southern Baptists or Jehovah's Witnesses or whatever flavor of today's Christianity you subscribe to.

[quote]or Anthony Fauci. [/quote] Wash your mouth out with soap. Anthony Fauci is a data driven scientist who saved over a million American lives. I have the data to prove it, and I'm happy to do so in a different thread.

[quote]Science, abused and neglected, is as tangible a godhead as any other. [/quote] Lemme guess - you didn't major in a STEM field, you've never studied stats, and you've never written a scientific paper where you had to calculate the probability that your results were only due to random chance (that's a non-zero probability for every scientific result, and every scientist knows it). Belief is the only tool in your personal toolbox and so you see everything thru that lens. The fact is, skepticism and doubt are the most important tools in the scientists' toolbox. You clearly can't appreciate that fact, and instead you project your religious tunnel vision on everything you don't understand.
Gloomy · F
@AkioTsukino [quote]medical horrors committed by Joseph Mangala or Anthony Fauci.[/quote]

This stupid and disrespectful comparison right here invalidates anything you write on the matter.

[quote]Science and religion aren't sentient beings. They don't do anything.[/quote]

Like saying "guns don't do anything"
Human create and operate making the human component a necessity for basically everything because our perception and consciousness is what our reality is based on.

and now comparing the two concepts with each other we can say that religion offers conclusions without backing them up and claiming absolute truth while science can outline how conclusions were reached.

Religious scripture dealing with outdated concepts and making things up to fill gaps in knowledge are not a valid source to base ones behavior on. Theology is a mixture of history and philosophy. Analysing religions through the lens of history is very interesting yet when it comes to the philosophical aspect it bases everything on the hypothetical and narrow concept of a God making it less insightful and again much more dogmatic.