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The New Retrovirus Thread
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<blockquote data-quote="joshua 1 9" data-source="post: 69515326" data-attributes="member: 376633"><p>Francis Collins is the former director of the human genomes project. Let's look at what he has to say about it. I can pretty much retire because he says everything that I have been trying to explain to people. For example I have tried to tell people: "<strong>there are limits to the kinds of questions that science can answer." </strong>According to Collins: "that's where I have to turn to God and seek his answers."</p><p></p><p>"Well, as a scientist who's also a believer, the chance to uncover the incredible intricacies of God's creation is an occasion of worship. To be able to look, for the first time in human history, at all three billion letters of the human DNA--which I think of as God's language--it gives us just a tiny glimpse into the amazing creative power of his mind. Every discovery that we now make in science [is], for me, a chance to worship him in a broader sense, to appreciate just in a small bit the amazing grandeur of his creation. It also helps me appreciate though that as a scientist, <strong>there are limits to the kinds of questions that science can answer.</strong> And that's where I have to turn to God and seek his answers."</p><p></p><p>Read more at <a href="http://www.beliefnet.com/News/Science-Religion/2006/08/God-Is-Not-Threatened-By-Our-Scientific-Adventures.aspx?p=2#WO2rVcCe8O3MyzJW.99" target="_blank">http://www.beliefnet.com/News/Science-Religion/2006/08/God-Is-Not-Threatened-By-Our-Scientific-Adventures.aspx?p=2#WO2rVcCe8O3MyzJW.99</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="joshua 1 9, post: 69515326, member: 376633"] Francis Collins is the former director of the human genomes project. Let's look at what he has to say about it. I can pretty much retire because he says everything that I have been trying to explain to people. For example I have tried to tell people: "[B]there are limits to the kinds of questions that science can answer." [/B]According to Collins: "that's where I have to turn to God and seek his answers." "Well, as a scientist who's also a believer, the chance to uncover the incredible intricacies of God's creation is an occasion of worship. To be able to look, for the first time in human history, at all three billion letters of the human DNA--which I think of as God's language--it gives us just a tiny glimpse into the amazing creative power of his mind. Every discovery that we now make in science [is], for me, a chance to worship him in a broader sense, to appreciate just in a small bit the amazing grandeur of his creation. It also helps me appreciate though that as a scientist, [B]there are limits to the kinds of questions that science can answer.[/B] And that's where I have to turn to God and seek his answers." Read more at [URL]http://www.beliefnet.com/News/Science-Religion/2006/08/God-Is-Not-Threatened-By-Our-Scientific-Adventures.aspx?p=2#WO2rVcCe8O3MyzJW.99[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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