For those who see it, they choose faith in the realization that there will always be a domain outside of science that is un testable through experimentation. For those who choose to remain hard-core science advocates, however, they are the ones who choose to believe that everything is testable and that everything within the universe must fall underneath the limitations of human logic..
Assumptions assumptions assumptions. Putting aside the "unknowable" (or the
un-understandable might be a better description) why assume that a religious faith must have any answers (other than for the reasons I make below), let alone better ones. I am sure there will be many scientists who condider certain questions to be outside "human logic", but they wouldn't then jump to the ridiculous conclusion that because of this there
must be a God creator. That would certainly not be "human logic".
I know that some things are provable, yet I also believe that some things are not.
Really Aphie come on........
Unless you continuously test and question the things you believe to be non provable, then you will never be aware of them being proved.
Were someone to tell you that which you knew to be impossible or improvable, had now been made possible and proven, you would have to either dismiss your previous 'not proven' understanding, or at least test it against the new knowledge made known to you !
you are able to do so because of physical laws which god created that allow your mind to have control over your muscles -- not to mention that very atoms within your hand that are able to impart energy into the rock.
You see Aphie, you do assume......"which god created" Your statement
assumes the existence of God to be true and you therefore draw a conclusion. Science will always require much better than that from you.
The very fact that it is impossible to prove god's existence is also a very good reason why science is driven so hard.
Strange point .....Your previous statement doesn't relate to science properly so how does this one? "Science is driven because we can't prove that God exists." I don't think so. Science and god beliefs are separate. Science (knowledge) is far superior to religion as a rational ethic.
the end of science will be that wall of "not knowing" and science will forever be trying to find a window within that wall to see the very thing that, although unable to test, science demands to know.
How can the end of science be the continuance of science demanding to know????? What are you saying? That in the event of the unknown, ignore science and "believe" in a God? Because science, according to your statement above, will always demand to know and as there are some things it doesn't know, therefore there must be a God? This is very obscure.
Instead, he has amazingly sprinkled enough ontological evidence to suggest his existence without giving away the entire gig.
This is strange.....another rather massive assumption however if I try to interpret your assertion correctly... it is because it can't be proved that God exists, it must therefore be the case that the God we can't prove exists.... created metaphysics ????
Now that to me is just some crazy logic.
Knowledge is all well and great, but even if you knew everything, where would that get you? I'm going to wave my magic wand and suddenly Longshot now knows everything there is to know about the universe. Is there one question you can now think of that your absolute knowledge could not answer? This goes back to Godel.
If you were to âknow everythingâ wouldnât you be the God which you choose to believe exists anyway ? Not such an impossible a thing afterall perhaps. Godels incompleteness theorem suggests we can never be anything else than what we are now. Did you not think as a theoretical possibility that Cloning may evolve humanity into acquiring an âintelligenceâ for an understanding that doesnât yet exist to us. One which you say this God of yours must already have ? I think it unlikely that Godel took too seriously a. Cloning b. Conquering death into his equations
Religious faith is a weak belief, as you have to dispel or ignore all the tests and disciplines which science or even
sound basic human judgment requires. Such tests are applied by science to all things including those that are held initially only as 'faiths' , but are not accepted until they become verifiable facts. In the world of true science, these verified and verifiable facts are still held on condition that they can be continuously revisited if new evidence or knowledge affects them. Religion/ belief in a God comes no where near. It is simply a comforter for those who care not to examine and analyze the known, the unknown, or the so far unknowable and who prefer to ignore, or simply can't understand, the in-courteous indifference with which the universe contends with humanity.
All Churches assume the mantel of morality so they may attempt to wield an authoritative control over people. Cloning has a moral emphasis which should be addressed but it is a morality for humanity to decide. Religions have no track record to offer on what is right for mankind .