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I think Science and religion can stregthen each other, for example, Evolution theory and creation theory can go hand in hand. While Christian accounts give the outline of how God created the world, science tells exactly how it was done.

"Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind" - Albert Einstein.

2007-12-08 07:35:29 · 18 answers · asked by B's Knees 4 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

18 answers

Neither Science, nor religion is the whole picture. Science is incomplete, and religion is inconsistent.

And they are both only parts of the whole.

[add] To those of you who are staunchly married to either science or religion, let me make a subtle point.

If your devotion is science: You must be aware that science is not a finished product and that there are forces, phenomena and concepts that we are only now just beginning to comprehend. Do you seriously think that the theories of today will remain unrefined as our understanding grows?

To those devoted to Religion: I can only say that religion, like many things in life, evolves. Many of the religions of today bear little resemblance to their origins. Consider that when you pray to your god/s tonight.

2007-12-08 07:41:08 · answer #1 · answered by Gee Whizdom™ 5 · 4 1

If you want to throw around Einstein quotes, here is another one:

"It was, of course, a lie what you read about my religious convictions, a lie which is being systematically repeated. I do not believe in a personal God and I have never denied this but have expressed it clearly. If something is in me which can be called religious then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it." --Albert Einstein, 1954

The conflict between science and religion is at the epistemological level. Epistemology is the philosophy that seeks to discover how humans acquire knowledge. Religion holds that faith is an acceptable means of acquiring knowledge. That is, knowledge that can be ascertained without use of the senses. Science holds that knowledge flows from the senses. Wether you believe that science is evil, science is reconcileable, or that science is the only truth, depends wholly on your faith. Because faith does not require evidence of the senses, your decision was made psychologically, thus there is really no way to convince you of anything other than the conclusions that you have come to internally.

2007-12-08 08:01:56 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 6 0

If religion makes claims about the world that can be tested, and when tested lead to conclusions that conflict with the claims of the religion, then the religion must change it's claims to fit the evidence. If religion does not do this, then it is worthless. If religion does do this, then it is perfectly compatible with science.

If science remains a method for ascertaining truth then it will remain a viable tool. If current scientific paradigms become dogma, then it is just as useless as the religious kind.

2007-12-08 11:15:19 · answer #3 · answered by Sophrosyne 4 · 2 0

There cannot be a compromise because although you can find some parts of religion which do not conflict with some aspects of science, there are many outright contradictions where one or the other must be false.
In your example of creation and evolution you can avoid conflict only because they cover two different areas, how life began and how it changes. If you were to look at creation and the scientific theories of how the universe and life arose there is no way to avoid contradiction.

2007-12-08 07:42:54 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Religion is INSIDE science but each variety does not reach the right conclusions. In fact as science never reaches the ultimate conclusion, there is a lesson for everyone there. Best to be an agnostic which is the stance of every true scientist.

2007-12-09 17:46:02 · answer #5 · answered by David M 2 · 2 0

Perfect example is the book Angels and Demons by Dan Brown (author of the Da Vinci Code). It signifies the ordeal between Science and Religion.

2007-12-08 07:44:21 · answer #6 · answered by phoenixstripes2002 2 · 1 0

This all began because evil Boethius told his school, the Scholastics, "In so far as is possible, join faith to reason." We've been trying it ever since (1600 years) and arguing about it ever since.
The Franciscan Wm. of Ockham had it right when he said there is no theological argument for, nor scientific proof of, God's existence, and that belief must be based wholly on faith--which it was before Boethius.
Boethius ruined faith by injecting a factor that could not prove or disprove God's existence; and in doing so he ruined reason by tainting it with faith.

2007-12-08 10:38:54 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I tend to agree with Einstein on that quote--though I know many others will not.

I think Einstein meant that no matter how many things can be proved scientifically, there are still those things that no one can explain.

I agree with you that science and religion can strengthen each other. For instance, I believe in evolution, but also believe that was in God's plan.

I suppose I'll receive hate mail for this answer.

2007-12-08 07:43:22 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 4 1

I think the two are separate entities, and most of the time are completely separate from each other, some science leaks into religion (the nature of man/universe/etc), some religion leaks into science (cosmological argument), but for the most part religion deals with the noumenal, and science with the phenomenal.

2007-12-08 07:40:28 · answer #9 · answered by aaron.brake 3 · 0 1

For the main area faith and technological information are at the same time incompatible. in basic terms study truly some the solutions one gets from one area to the different. exciting thought arising 2 human beings and watching to make certain what occurs. Inbreeding easily will teach a huge step to conquer.

2016-11-14 22:13:22 · answer #10 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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