See, again we disagree
mile:.
I would say that fundamentalist Islam IS a reflection on Islam itself - just not a thoroughly appropriate one, just as the IRA
is a reflection on Ireland, or the "War on Terror"
is a reflection on America - they are just poor, inappropriate and incomplete reflections. Examples of how people adopt what
they perceive as the "true" set of ideals of their lives and teachings, and use them to ultimately perverse and oftentimes purely evil ends.
Quote:Many people believe in science--they believe in it when they go to the hospital, or accept Evolution, or accept that medicine works better than prayer. But at the same time, many of these people (excluding atheists) are also open to the idea of God and religion. I've been to and still go to church--all of the people there are liberal in their ideas of science and trust science--but that doesn't negate their religious beliefs.
But don't you see how people's faith
in religion can be shaken when science treads on its toes and attempts to
disprove certain things that they had previously taken for granted as being true and certain ? At the very least they must feel as though their noses have been put out of joint, surely.
Quote:So at least, in liberal communities and many mainstream cities, people don't take a linear for-and-against stance on religion and science.
I agree with you on that - I'm not saying that people can't incorporate elements of both into their lives - merely that the two
cannot always exist in harmony, as science progressively
disproves religion, hence the dichotomy.
Quote:If it was inexplicable, then science would not answer it. Science asks questions about Natural, religion asks questions about the Supernatural.
I
kinda agree, but then again I would counter by saying that science attempts to normalise the supernatural - it attempts to bring myth and other inexplicable phenomena within the reach of that which science
can explain ... basically in a bid to try and better understand it.
I am not suggesting that the two are mutually opposed on all levels - far from it -
however I
am saying that where the two meet, Science will almost uniformly attempt to explain away the mystique of religion, opting for what it deems to be cold, hard facts.
As I've also previously said, in my view science
doesn't explain what happens 100% - it explains what happens in terms we can better relate to. What's to say science is right ? What's to say magic
doesn't exist ? Just because people communicate in a common language, what's to say there's something fundamental that we haven't missed ? If science IS absolutely right, then how come there is still so much we
cannot explain and
cannot achieve ?
The debate rages on ...
.
!?!?! Shadow !?!?!