V.V.V.V.V.
Houses Ov Mercury
...it's all "science." All of it has to do with acquired knowledge through learning, studying, and testing. There isn't really a "normal" way to "conceive" of science.
I think you originally separated these when I asked what is rational besides science. However when I said science, I meant all science.Goddamnit! Stop this shit. There is a clear and obvious difference between empirical science and logic/mathematics. Logical and mathematical facts are not "defined" by science normally conceived.
Reports are not scientific evidence, and are just as prone to falsification as pretty much anything ever.
These points are irrelevant to the truth of what those people believed. I could draw a picture of Balthazar, but it wouldn't make him real.But science doesn't need to be used to believe in something, infact the whole of human history has been based on belief in something in the absence of evidence.
And it has lead to amazing works of art, literature, music, architecture, etc.
...it's all "science." All of it has to do with acquired knowledge through learning, studying, and testing. There isn't really a "normal" way to "conceive" of science.
So you're saying truth can change? I'm pretty sure that goes against the definition of truth.
Mathiäs;6853161 said:Good thread here. My views haven't really changed. I might have become a bit more liberal.
AAAUUUGGGHHHH!!!!
FUCKING FUCKING FUCKERS!
Sorry alter, but you people give me a headache. I should learn to avoid threads like this.
So than if science is based off of truth and, I think, everything needs to have a causes and than an effect and we dont know what has caused anything before the big bang, how does this effect religious beliefs? And if so how does science factor in with this ad how does it explain everything.
pwnt.Science has no definite answers about what existed before the big bang. There's theories like that the universe goes back and forth between a big bang and a big crunch in a never-ending cycle (in essence that the universe is like a rubberband that stretches and snaps back in a certain interval) but that is still a controversial and not commonly accepted at this point. Considering that the laws of physics (the way science has currently formulated them) break down at the point of singularity makes it impossible to say anything meaningful about what happens before that at this point.
How does that affect religious beliefs? Depends on if you feel that in the face of lack of evidence the main other alternative offered (despite equal lack of knowledge/evidence of its validity) automatically becomes the truth. That is the answer that religions apologists like to give (the whole God of the Gaps philosophy where God exists mainly in the margins of science where science cannot offer any definite answers) but I think that's bullshit. The notion of the Abrahamic god having created the universe first of all doesn't solve anything (it defers the question of creation one step further, that is all) and second of all is no more valid than any other claim you could make about it. I could say that a unicorn called Boris created the universe and it would literally be just as valid. Or indeed any of the gods from non-Abrahemic religions. How can you know which one is true? You can't. So why decide at all. Why would you be so sure that one very specific scenario is the truth when there is no evidence for it and there are literally infinite other possible scenarios that in the face of complete lack of being able to verify anything, are all equally likely (or unlikely).
So to answer your question, the various religions fill that gap with their own dogmatic god(s) and science simply shrugs and says "we don't know yet" at this point.