There are many religious perspectives that conflict with each other.
Yes. I agree that this is true.
Then I would appreciate you explaining in precise terms how science should conduct its investigations with respect to "religious perspectives" as you put it.
When a scientist looks down a microscope or into a particle accelerator how should religion come into play?
I definitely sense that I am experiencing something when I look into the night sky, but the big bang just doesn't seem to explain that experience.
The big bang is not meant to explain the experience. That's something for the psychologists to hammer out. But it explains the observations that you make. It explains, for example, why the sky is largely black, why there are stars and clusters of stars.
I also experience something when my daughter says a prayer or when I watch a brilliant sunset. My experiences don't fit within the scientific method because their impact cannot be measured. So I can understand why they may seem trite and silly to you.
Actually the impact
can be measured. During my post graduate research I used (and helped to extend) a number of psychometric techniques for quantifying such experiences. I'm not saying that we can currently explain why experiences like the ones you describe occur, but we can certainly measure their effects.
I've experienced peace at times when chaos surrounded me. I've been calm in the middle of a crisis. I had a dream house come back on the market after being sold right out from under me. I've adopted without going through the process (i.e. circumstance fell into my lap) and I've met and married the woman of my dreams in a sea full of women who did not fit. These things can't be measured by science. I've had family members healed from incurable. To you, such things may be nothing more than the folly of a silly Christian. And that's OK. But to me, they mean something . . . and the big bang just doesn't answer my questions.
You are making too much out of the big bang theory. It is a description of the development of our universe, not of personal experiences. Trying to apply it as you have is like trying to use a saucepan to watch television.
You've indicated that creation isn't a science and I am beginning to see your point. However, that doesn't perplex me because I don't really feel the need to explain all experiences through the lens of science.
BFA
Fair enough. I've been there too. The mystery to me is self awareness. It seems to me to be something greater than the sum of the constituent atoms that make up my body and brain. This mystery was one of the things that compelled me at one stage to be a believer. However, I began to realise that it might very well be explainable by natural processes.
There is a field of science that is devoted to exploring this. I've read some of the literature, but don't find it terrible convincing at this early stage in its development. Nevertheless, a compelling argument for the natural, rather than supernatural, explanation is the fact that our self awareness disappears when we are administered certain drugs (anaesthetics) or when or brain function is severely disturbed; as in the case of trauma and even drinking large amounts of alcohol.
AL