seebs
God Made Me A Skeptic
- Apr 9, 2002
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I think science acknowledges the gaps, but proceeds to ignore them.
Theology does not (for me, anyway) answer questions like "what is the boiling point of lead" or "how can I predict the effects on a species of geographical isolation for a few hundred years". These are "gaps" in theology - but they aren't, really, because they aren't gaps in the areas it proposes to address.
I see science and theology as essentially unrelated fields, like poetry and biology. I don't object to science not answering non-scientific questions, any more than I object to theology not answering non-theological questions.
If you feel that you need answers, you will of course seek for them, but this doesn't mean that people who don't feel the need for those answers are making a logical error; it means they have different needs than you do.
Theology does not (for me, anyway) answer questions like "what is the boiling point of lead" or "how can I predict the effects on a species of geographical isolation for a few hundred years". These are "gaps" in theology - but they aren't, really, because they aren't gaps in the areas it proposes to address.
I see science and theology as essentially unrelated fields, like poetry and biology. I don't object to science not answering non-scientific questions, any more than I object to theology not answering non-theological questions.
If you feel that you need answers, you will of course seek for them, but this doesn't mean that people who don't feel the need for those answers are making a logical error; it means they have different needs than you do.
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