KWCrazy
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- Apr 13, 2009
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There is no singular mentality in science and no singular reason people choose it as a profession.This totally mischaracterizes the mentality in science and why people go into science.
Speculation. You can't judge the motivations of others. The private sector is more lucrative, academia is safer.Top scientists invariably _could_ have done something that made them a _lot_ more money. They choose not to.
You also see scientists complaining that if they speak up against the fabricated evidence regarding global warming that they will be ostracised and will lose grant money. If your faith is based on what can be conclusively proven you don't have any faith in the first place. Faith is the acceptance of things unproven. As for the mercenary scientists, it's all about the grant money. No crisis, no grant money. No grant money, no job.These kinds of arguments may work in creationist circles, but it's also probably related to why people leave Christianity when they discover how specious all of the reasoning is about mercenary scientists.
Conjecture. You don't know what they'll discover. They may discover, for example, that life after death has a MUCH more significant body of evidence than anyone wants to let on. As for the relationship between science and reality, my grandchildren will know that science is the study of the physical world and is limited to that. Period. If a scientist says that there is no proof of the supernatural the logical response is "Really, Sherlock? What gave you the first clue?"If you have a child who goes into science at a top school, he or she will quickly find out that what you've been telling him or her about scientists is totally bogus.
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