I've noticed this is how most people view science but I would argue this is a mistaken perspective. Science is best viewed as a methodology to arrive at explanations of natural phenomena. It does so by first recognizing that we have cognitive biases and make errors quite often. We are prone to confirmation biases, selection biases, social desirability biases, among others. Even when we have solid data, this would be useless in the hands of a person who is incompetent when it comes to valid and sound reasoning skills -- which we are very prone to making. Understanding fallacies is important. We also have sensory limitations, blind spots and such. We can also misremember things or be led by our cursory impressions of something and infer causality on the basis of assumptions we aren't even aware we're making.Science does much to explain natural laws and invent nifty doo-dads to make life more comfortable.
Science proceeds, then, by creating clever and nifty work-arounds for these errors. It stresses empiricism but in a directed and refined way. It takes into account, for example, spuriousness. It takes into account falsifiability. It also creates an environment whereby individual reasoning is moderated heavily by rigorous scrutiny from your peers, skeptically poking holes repeatedly at your work to see if it stands up to scrutiny. The acquisition of knowledge is hard and a rigorous methodology is thus warranted.
By contrast, religion proceeds by doubling down on many of our cognitive weaknesses (given that our minds are prone to fallacies, illusions and superstitions). As psychologist Steven Pinker once put it, "Most of the traditional causes of belieffaith, revelation, dogma, authority, charisma, conventional wisdom, the invigorating glow of subjective certaintyare generators of error and should be dismissed as sources of knowledge. To understand the world, we must cultivate work-arounds for our cognitive limitations, including skepticism, open debate, formal precision, and empirical tests, often requiring feats of ingenuity." Just recall the story of Doubting Thomas, who was derided for being a skeptic and only accepting the truth claim he was initially doubting until he was able to get more concrete evidence. This religious story embodies the problem with religious thinking. It instructs people to view skepticism as the enemy, and to view dogma as virtue. Dogma is by definition the antithesis to an open mind willing to have one's beliefs challenged by new incoming evidence.
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