Seven Years of Service
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RE: Science vs. religion 06-20-2017, 02:52 AM
#15
@Anime! I don't know about Christianity and Islam; however, Judaism technically doesn't support the humans lived with dinasours thing. Like I said in my first post, many jewish texts suggest that the "people" (if you can call them that) back then were much different back than now. This is especially true if you consider the fact the Judaism also supports the fact that the earth is billions of years old and not 5-6k (Way too difficult to explain, you need to get into Kaballah which would take me an essay to explain), meaning evolution had to take place in that time. Furthermore, a common point is that gods days arent necasserily equal to human days. The time between animals and humans creation may have been billions of years.
We should probably end this debate since it's going off topic from the original point of the thread. You seem to know ur stuff well tho. Im sorry I cant argue for every major religion, since I dont know nearly enough to. I'm also sick and sleep deprived, so excuse me if I made little sense.
(This post was last modified: 06-20-2017, 03:54 PM by Shinoa.
Edit Reason: Typo
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Twelve Years of Service
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RE: Science vs. religion 06-20-2017, 10:09 AM
#16
I have to say, this discussion is definitely one of the more well-educated and sound debates I've read in this forum section. Thank you for your thoughts!
To relate back to the original topic. I agree and know of many of the points that people have made already about science and religion not necessarily denying each other's relevance, but may collaborate.
When you think about US research - Remember that a huge sum of the governments research and development (R & D) expenditure goes towards research conducted by universities/colleges. The very same institutions that began as schools to train ministers and religiously educate young men. Their curriculum was based upon the type of education referred to as classical. It included the learning of ancient languages and philosophers. It was believed that this type of higher education would help young men to think at a more advanced level. Over the decades and centuries, the curriculum changed, but the development of these institutions led to some of the most important scientific research that exists in the world today.
Religion may not always directly cause or encourage scientific investigations, but can be a catalyst for it.
On another note: Has anybody ever watched Transcendence? This thread really reminds me of it.
Seven Years of Service
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RE: Science vs. religion 10-01-2017, 02:22 AM
#17
I'm going with neither side. They're both b.s. I feel like everything is just random
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