Yes! Our species is the only example I know of for sure though.
What part of humans is the spiritual part? If something in the world can be both physical and spiritual, and science can study the physical world, does that mean science can study spiritual things as well? After all, if humans are spiritual, and science can study humans, then science can study at least part of the spiritual, no?
I keep trying to return this thread to it's purpose. I hope you see that?
Well, it's my thread (courtesy of Maxwell), and 'Ask a physicist anything' means that the topic is
anything.
Anyway, maybe some of this is in some small way at least tangentially related. The context here is you showed the attitude that if G-d exists, science will find Him. I find this to be admirable, and rare! I said science has been finding Him via His works, with said works being ... anything with physical existence, apparently. If He is creator of all that is, seen and unseen, that includes laws of physics.
True, but the problem is that if God
doesn't exist, then we would still be able to study the physical universe. There's nothing we observe that is contingent on the existence of a deity. So God
may have created the universe and its physical laws, and so studying physics is studying God's works - but there's nothing about physics that really tells us that we are, in fact, studying God's works.
I should interject this comment I just stumbled upon in another thread, to see what you might make of it:
"As a man who has devoted his whole life to the most clear headed science, to the study of matter, I can tell you as a result of my research about atoms this much: There is no matter as such. All matter originates and exists only by virtue of a force which brings the particle of an atom to vibration and holds this most minute solar system of the atom together. We must assume behind this force the existence of a conscious and intelligent mind. This mind is the matrix of all matter." - Max Planck
Obviously I will point out some similarity with at least 2 notable passages of Scripture, but do you discredit Planck?
He was a brilliant scientist, but that alone doesn't make him right in all things. Even Einstein been proven wrong. However, Planck's religious views are as subject to change as anyone else's: shortly before his death, in response to rumours that he had converted to Catholicism, he said he did not believe "in a personal God, let alone a Christian God". So what to make of his above comment? Perhaps he was being poetic, like Einstein when he said "God does not play dice". Perhaps he was once genuinely religious, and had change his beliefs in his later years. Perhaps the 'concious and intelligent mind' refers to sum total of
human minds, along the lines of the observer effect, rather than the individual mind of God.
So, not only did Plank not believe in God at the end of his life, neither is it clear he believed in God when he made this claim. And even if he
did believe in God, well, great men have been wrong before.