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TA1LGUNN3R wrote:crispybits wrote:This depends on how broad your definition of science is (as in would the printing press count? I mean we needed to do science, though we didnt call it that back then I guess, to experiment with melting ores and producing metals, and to make the engineering of the machine work, etc).
Technology=/=Science. Science may lead to new technologies and practices, but the two are different. Are the Archeulian hand axes of H. erectus science? No, just a technology that was discovered by some individual and later set into widespread practice.
-TG
Gillipig wrote:Yes, religion is compatible with science. That's why I believe in Tzor.
All hail TZOR!!
crispybits wrote:A quick related word on the matter from Carl Sagan
crispybits wrote:The point of the Sagan clip (at least the bit I thought was relevant to this discussion) is that in a technologically advanced society such as ours, we need to retain the education and the skepticism to be able to question things instead of just accepting them.
crispybits wrote:This goes for things like evolution (though the creationists really need to start actually listening to the answers instead of making up a bunch of stuff) AND things like religion.
crispybits wrote:OK I think we're mostly agreeing here - skepticism is a good thing (in the context of either science OR religion).
So back to the OP and the conflict between the two in the political arena with particular focus on the US and creationism today. Which system, science or religion, within that context, is also of the opinion that skepticism is good? Which thrives on constant questioning and which holds fast to some unquestionable dogmas?
crispybits wrote:So back to the OP and the conflict between the two in the political arena with particular focus on the US and creationism today. Which system, science or religion, within that context, is also of the opinion that skepticism is good? Which thrives on constant questioning and which holds fast to some unquestionable dogmas?
crispybits wrote:The origin of the universe and the nature of reality are not irrelevant, neither are the origin of life or the mechanism of evolution. There are many different ways in which these things could have a real impact on how we understand the universe and new technologies we can design to make life materially better for the human race.
crispybits wrote:On these issues I'm not willing to give courtesy to any old ideas just because they've been passe down for a long time or are written in some book.
crispybits wrote:I don't think anyone would claim that science now has all the answers, that's not the point of it, the point of it (apart from creating new technologies and increasing understanding) is mainly to show which answers are not true. It's essentially an idea destroying mechanism, and the ideas it cannot destroy we tend to accept as having validity (up to the point where someone comes along who can destroy that idea).
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