I would say yes -- and no.
In one sense, it has: most people place a certain amount of "faith" in science and its conclusions. After all, how many of us have a full genetic laboratory or particle accelerator in the basement? For the most part, the pronouncements of scientists are taken at face value, with a faith that has certain similarities to religious belief. Also, science has for many people relaced religion as a framework for understanding the universe and how it works.
On the other hand, religion touches parts of the human heart and science, for most people, just doesn't reach. There is a hunger for transcendence, for a sense of being part of something larger than ourselves, for experiences that engage the hindbrain as well as the forebrain -- and this is the strength of spirituality. Granted, many atheists and agnostics satisfy this hunger by considering themselves part of the structure of the universe, and this is a perfectly valid approach. But for many, prayer and meditation and contemplation of God/Goddess is the path to achieving that fulfillment.
Good question! I look forward to seeing other peoples' answers.
2007-02-02 07:37:58
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answer #1
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answered by prairiecrow 7
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Many people having replaced God with science in their hearts and minds. God cannot really be replaced by anything.
2007-02-02 07:48:29
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answer #2
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answered by happygirl 6
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Science IS the new religion. However, it is a different kind of religion - one in which truth is obtained not from some ancient text, but by examinging objectively the world around you, making guesses as to how it works, and then testing those guesses with a rigid system of measurement known as the 'scientific method'. When a guess passes the test it is incorporated into the "doctrine" which is often refered to as the Standard Model. When a guess fails the test it is tossed aside. It has the additional feature of new guesses being put forth continously and even allowing guesses involving previous guesses that passed the test. In other words Science is a process of constantly testing what we know to see if it is still true.
2007-02-02 07:38:50
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Science has changed the definition of what god is. People will always believe in a "god" of some kind. There is some ultimate purpose or driving force behind everything.
2007-02-02 07:35:58
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answer #4
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answered by martin h 6
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Science is replacing God as an explanation for physical phenomena.
You may still have use for God for other matters.
However, if your main use of a God was to explain things that once were mysterious but are not being understood, then you may not need one anymore.
2007-02-02 07:41:22
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Maybe science helps explain how God works
2007-02-02 07:34:10
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answer #6
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answered by hansblix222 7
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this is genuine easy to declare god warned them in hindsight. there is not any historic data that any of those activities occurred. there is achieveable data of a city that replaced into destroyed by potential of hearth interior the part of the place Sodom and Gomorrah might have been, yet no data that it replaced into led to by potential of holy intervention. If a mass exodus or flood had occurred, there could be a record of it someplace in egyptian historic archives (marvelous historians) or interior the Earth's crust, interior the case of the flood. additionally, by using fact the flood supposedly got here approximately for the duration of a time the place people populated the Earth, and historic archives have been being stored, clarify to me how historic cultures, such by using fact the chinese language, Sumerian, Indian, etc, have been able to no longer in basic terms shop their lifestyle in tact yet shop their archives and homes in tack if there replaced right into a international huge flood that wiped everybody out.
2016-12-16 19:41:41
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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no,although science will forever try it is impossible God is the creator of all things and will never allow that to happen /science will always be there and God gives us choices and science is an option thats why faith is the substance of things hoped for but unseen
2007-02-02 08:41:06
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answer #8
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answered by loveChrist 6
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I think that science IS proof that there is God. We are still trying to find out where everything came from, where it's going and how it's put together.
2007-02-02 07:36:55
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answer #9
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answered by ? 5
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Not yet, but it's working on it. It isn't replacing religion, it is shoving it back into the Dark Ages where it belongs. The more science explains, the less need there will be to attribute what is not understood to "the god of the gaps."
2007-02-02 07:34:44
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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