Nathan Poe
Well-Known Member
Science is the study of the natural world and the laws by which it runs.w81minit said:Kudos! Excellent Post!
OK. So then would you agree that God equates to divine intervention? Meaning - it is God that needs to be left out of all science?
Or is it that God is unecessary for the process of life? Please clarify this point.
God is, by definition, supernatural, and science is unequipped to study Him, so science remains agnostic.
Maybe there is a God, and maybe there is not. But what scientists study are processes that work whether or not God is involved.
I drop a rock; gravity makes it fall. Is God responsible for gravity? Doesn't matter. We're studying gravity, not God.
Is God necessaryfor the process of life? Is that a question we can even answer scientifically? If we can't even determine if God's responsible for gravity, how can we know if He's behind the processes of life.
The answer is the same as for gravity: It doesn't matter. If God is behind it, He's working from deep behind the scenes. Until He decides to step out from behind the curtain (assuming He ever does, and why should he?), The processes work the way they always have.... easy enough to study.
As I said, we seek natural explainations before invoking the supernatural. And we can never rule out natural explanations because we can never eliminate the answer of : "We don't know; we can't figure it out."Agreed (-1). If as it seems in this context supernatural equates to God then yes it is faith. The -1 intrduces a greater topic for discussion: is the supernatural any less a part of reality than the natural? Are they not boud to eachother in the same way that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction? Wouldn't even science have to conclude that the universe is far more than we can see? Far more than natural explanation? (But I digress)
And "We don't know; we can't figure it out" is not the same thing as "Goddidit." God-of-the-Gaps is bad science and worse theology.
So it's something of a catch-22: Since we live in the natural world, the supernatural is something beyond our understanding. We need faith to assume it even exists. And science is founded on skepticism, not faith.
1: I wasn't always an Atheist.AWA. I thought you were an Atheist?
2: I can play Devil's Advocate... no pun intended.
3: Even though I personally don't believe in a god, I have more respect for the idea than to reduce Him to an intellectual cop-out. "Oh, well, we'll never understand it; God works in mysterious ways..."
Maybe we never will understand it; but that's not excuse not to try.
I used to have this quote in my sig:
"Men think epilepsy divine, simply because they do not understand it. But if we were to call everything divine which we do not understand, why, there would be no end of divine things." --Hippocrates.
Reducing God to an excuse for the things we don't know -- God-of-the-Gaps -- means that believers will be looking for "God" in anything we don't understand. That makes an idol out of ignorance.
Christians are supposed to be against idolatry, and I can't stand ignorance.
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