Archaeopteryx
Wanderer
I asked you what I did in the hopes that you would come up with something other than the Galileo affair.
While I wait for you to furnish me with examples of those parts of history that indicate Christianity was a hindrance to scientific progress, I will ask that you explain why you think the Galileo affair was an instance where Christianity hindered science.
One need not look far into history for examples of religion hindering science, Christianity included. In fact, one need only look across the country, to Ken Ham's Creation museum; to creationists systematically degrading the school curriculum in an effort to "teach both" evolution and creationism; to dubious objections to stem cell research; and to the hollow promises of faith healers.
The Galileo affair is one example of where a thinker was accused of heresy because his or her thinking was not in line with Church doctrine. In case you wondered whether the problem were merely confined to the Catholic church, here is what Martin Luther had to say on the causes of illness: "Idiots, the lame, the blind, the dumb, are men in whom the devils have established themselves: and all the physicians who heal these infirmities, as though they proceeded from natural causes, are ignorant blockheads " Helpful, or a hindrance to science?
Certain religious mindsets are indeed antagonistic and unconducive towards science. I already stated this.
Religion seeks to answer the fundamental questions posed by sentient human beings. Science is one of several methods at the disposal of said beings which allows them to acquire knowledge of the natural world in which they exist. Some religions are inherently unconducive to this method. They may stress for instance that there is no need to engage in scientific pursuits due to the fact that the natural world can never really be understood for what it is. They may stress that nature is sacred and must not be profaned by inordinate curiosity and spurious experimentation. They may stress, as many animist religions which still exist in Africa, that nature should be feared and worshiped and never subjected to the prying eyes and inquisitive minds of mere mortals.
These views and those like them are conspicuously absent from the views presented to us in the New Testament. In the latter we have an omnipotent, omniscient Creator bringing into existence a natural world of order and beauty with a specific end in mind. We have a loving Creator creating man in His own image and likeness and who is the one upholding and sustaining all that is by His mighty power. We have order, we have purpose, we have meaning, we have intention, and we have God back of it all who is the very grounds for the justification for what we call "induction" in the first place.
You are still confusing the issue. The argument was not over whether Christianity in particular is antagonistic toward science - in some respects, it clearly is; in others, not so much. Instead, the point centred on how being religiously committed to an idea differs from being scientifically committed. leftrightleftrightleft's posts provide further clarification.
It was the Judeo-Christian worldview that functioned as the womb wherein modern science as we know it was birthed and it was Christians who believed that there was a world of order and beauty that existed outside of themselves sustained by an unchanging God that were the catalysts for the spread of this thing we call science.
In fact sir, science is only possible for the one whose worldview can account for this grounding of induction.
So it is for good cause that when we hear atheists claim they do not believe in God we simply smile and recall what Paul says in Romans 1.
Anytime anyone uses inductive reasoning, they are assuming God exists. This means that everyone assumes God exists because everyone uses inductive reasoning. God has made life in such a way that reasoning itself is evidence of His existence. God is literally undeniable.
Has the rotten stench of presuppositional apologetics all over it.
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