Science in itself is the most deceptive of all religions.
"Mainstream scientists are trend followers who believe in what is accepted and popular, and never really look for a truth that may be contrary to what they believe."
Notice He didn't say all scientists..........just "mainstream" ones.
Those that live in and are sold out to the status quo.
The ones whose works are printed in the textbooks taught to our children, even while still only an unproven theory........because it follows an accepted agenda.
He also compares the close-mindedness of many scientists to that of religious fundamentalists.
In this He has a valid point.
And I said the very spirit inspiring both of these groups is one and the same.
I compared the mainstream's reluctance to accept even the idea of certain truths until they have been proven in such a way with so many witnesses, they can no longer deny what is staring them in the face.
In this respect...not in all respects that is true SkinWalker, but at least you must admit in this respect.......Science is just like a false religion.
Therefor He had a valid point, and so did I.
I just took it to the next logical step, and showed you why.
The way Fort sees it, mainstream scientists are trend followers who believe in what is accepted and popular, and never really look for a truth that may be contrary to what they believe.
He also compares the close-mindedness of many scientists to that of religious fundamentalists, implying that the supposed "battle" between science and religion is just a smokescreen for the fact that, in his view, science is, in essence, simply a de facto religion in of itself.
I stopped reading here. I don't even know what you said, but I'm sure it's stupid.
TheVisitor
And there's were you are wrong.
-If there is something "unproven" to the degree that it cannot be said to be the most likely and plausible explanation, then it simply isn't taught. If it is, then it deserves criticism....
-I must admit nor even entertain the idea of any such thing. All religions are, apparently, "false." Science is, apparently, the only viable method of obtaining information about the universe.
While sciences may appear to some as spontaneously practicing materialist dialectic, philosophically they (these sciences) oscillate between mechanical materialism and idealist obscurantism.
Originally posted by
Heliocentric:
Im sort of half with you visitor but when you bring in the antiquated old testament rhetoric (and religion in general) you kind of lose me to be honest.
And since religion is loosely defined as the belief in supernatural powers that control human destiny, how does this definition fit in with your claim?
Yes indeed. In order to be called a "religion," a belief system must include faith in the existence of something or someone supernatural and in that thing or person's ability to assume control of the natural world. Science does not have that. Science by definition cannot deal with the supernatural because all scientific theories must be disprovable and something whose truth hinges on its transcendence of the laws of nature cannot be disproved.Science is not a religion. There are no deities or supernatural agents that scientists seek to appease. Blind trust and belief without evidence is faith and the antithesis of scientific methods.
Duh? Just exactly what kind of a scholar do you pass yourself off as? Just as the supernatural is the core of religion, the scientific method is the core of science. It is hardly 500 years old. The "sciences" practiced in medieval or ancient days were at best empirical engineering and at worst alchemy. Mathematics goes back a long way, but mathematics is not a science. Its "theories" are provable.Science is really not the newest religion......I should make a retraction on that. It is in fact one of the world's oldest religions.
If you use words to mean only what you want them to mean, you can prove anything.
Science in itself is the most deceptive of all religions.
Consider the work of author Charles Fort.
The Book of the Damned was the first published nonfiction work of the author Charles Fort (first edition 1919).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Book_of_the_Damned
Dealing with various types of anomalous phenomena including UFOs, strange falls of both organic and inorganic materials from the sky, odd weather patterns, the possible existence of creatures generally held to be mythological, disappearances of people under strange circumstances, and many other phenomena, the book is historically considered to be the first written in the specific field of anomalistics.
The title of the book referred to what he termed the "damned" data - data which had been damned, or excluded, by modern science because of its not conforming to accepted guidelines.
The way Fort sees it, mainstream scientists are trend followers who believe in what is accepted and popular, and never really look for a truth that may be contrary to what they believe.
He also compares the close-mindedness of many scientists to that of religious fundamentalists, implying that the supposed "battle" between science and religion is just a smokescreen for the fact that, in his view, science is, in essence, simply a de facto religion in of itself.