Quote from Yannis:
Wrt the first statement above, I believe that all scientific knowledge we've accumulated throughout the centuries is perfectly consistent with religion, as it regards a different sphere of human experience. A religious man prays to thank God for his life, and then builds a chair out of wood, explains the role of the speed of light to his children and then ponders the way stars are pulled together though gravity, etc etc... No problem here, no collision of ideas and experiences: science helps him in his "external" life and religion guides him in his "internal" life.
In your example you are keeping science and religion separate one from the other, that does not make them compatible. With respect, it is nonsense to say science, or scientific knowledge, is perfectly or otherwise compatible with religion when it patently is not. There is nothing remotely scientific about imaginary supernatural deities or their fanciful miraculous doings.
Quote from Yannis:
In your second statement, ..., you've got something there: quantum burp/jump, a fundamental source... all this sounds familiar. That's the domain of religion: what could that source have been? How do we perceive it?
No, not the domain of religion. In science the explanation comes along with proof, though without certainty. In religion that source is thought certain but arrives without proof. That's what faith is, what religion is. But it's no explanation.
Quote from Yannis:
Your last statement is also close to my understanding: people tried for a long time to grapple with the question of, essentially, what created this universe and what makes it tick, and made some progress along the way. Some better than others. Don't misunderstand the Thor thing, it's a lot deeper than you think, as it postulates that the source of everything must be above/beyond what we humans can understand and control. If a 'scientist" thinks that researchers like Maxwell, with the theory of eletromagnetism in the 19th century etc etc, explained Thor away, they are badly mistaken. Modern science is just another way of postulating a different Thor, perhaps with more experiments and tangible logic in the manual, but leaving the fundamental question unanswered: what/who/how/why created the E&M field, the space it manifests in and the time it feeds on? My younger brother, a judge, an agnostic, whose intellect I respect a lot, answers "I don't/can't know and I don't care." I take the opposite path.
People have not made some progress. They have made amazingly extraordinary progress, especially considering the sheer enormity of the haystack they look for needles in. I don't think you have a clear perspective if you think only
some progress has been made.
For goodness sake, just look at the amazing technology of the last 100 years alone, which even establishes the workings of the universe down to the tiniest fraction of time. None of it did religious belief explain.
God did it was never an explanation at all.
The Thor thing suggests quite the opposite to what you say. Whilst one religious man was just praying to the God of Thunder, science discovered how in fact it was nothing to do with the mystical son of Odin, but was down to electrostatic discharge. That man is now either superstitiously worshipping a different divinity which might do lightning, or he's up off his knees dealing with the reality of that incompatibility between science and religion.
Also the question is no longer the what , why or how of E/M fields. You can get a thoroughly comprehensive understanding of all those thanks again only to science.
I have to say with all due regard to your brother, I know I'd be pretty depressed if I felt I had to say
I can't know and I don't care , because to me that is basically a defeatist's approach, smothering natural human desires to scientifically inquire and from it broaden knowledge. To my mind nothing should be considered beyond what can ever be understood.
Because you believe the fundamental questions cannot be answered, does not mean it is true.
By all means believe it religiously if you're so inclined and keep praying to Thor or to God whatever.
But it will never be the way of science.