I think it's a little like saying if ants are ever going to discover that the world is round. I think the question is always going to be philosophical no matter how many incredible discoveries are made about the universe, matter, string theory, parallel universes. I think science eventually will get pretty close, though, it will find that life and the universe are sort of two different aspects of the same mysterious something.
2006-08-15 16:03:36
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answer #1
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answered by SkyRaider 4
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Science can't venture into proof or disproof of something that is essentially non-dualistic and, while its purported effects (us, the universe) are physical, is outside of form, time, thought, imagination (anything conceived of by our dualistic minds about anything of form, concept, etc.). Science -- as well as religion -- is a mechanism/activity that is engaged in by minds that are based in dualism; therefore, while both religion and science can provide models, descriptions, concepts, and mechanisms that can POINT to the divine, only direct experience that results in a transcendence of self and realization of complete non-duality can prove it. No belief, thought, idea, reasoning, etc. can enter that area because all of those things are formed from a dualistic mind in a world of form...
2006-08-15 04:18:35
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Scientists can only prove what is natural.
God is a supernatural entity, beyond the ability of science or scientists to fathom.
Besides, the point of science is not to prove or disprove anything.
It is the purpose of science to help us understand.
2006-08-15 04:02:44
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answer #3
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answered by Adyghe Ha'Yapheh-Phiyah 6
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You are taking science out of its proper sphere. Faith and science do not contradict each other, but can compliment each other.
We know, in fact, that truth cannot contradict truth (cf. Leo XIII, Encyclical Providentissimus Deus). http://www.catholic.net/RCC/Periodicals/Inside/01-97/creat2.html
Science can purify religion from error and superstition; religion can purify science from idolatry and false absolutes. Each can draw the other into a wider world, a world in which both can flourish.... We need each other to be what we must be, what we are called to be." (-Pope John Paul II)
2006-08-15 04:08:31
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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To prove the unseen the unseen most first reveal itself.Since the unseen in this case is a Deity that has been described differently by many religions and faiths I doubt that the real Deity will make itself available for study because in the end there isn't one to begin with.
2006-08-15 04:11:34
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answer #5
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answered by EasterBunny 5
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Sorry, this sentence is not coherent in english. I believe you're basically asking if scientists are close to explaining our existence. Of course, they're not.
2006-08-15 04:03:22
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answer #6
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answered by jeffo 3
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Science? Does not talk about it at all, despite what people would have you believe about evolution.
You see, God is something that you can not get to systematically do anything, and science talks everything that is systematic, but nothing else.
2006-08-15 04:03:16
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Hey, go back to school and learn some English. Does your mommy know you're playing on her computer?
2006-08-15 04:10:40
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answer #8
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answered by MaqAtak 4
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