Namaste all,
actually, Bandit, Jaiket is speaking of a Theological doctrine called "God of the Gaps" Theology.
essentially, this view posits that whereever science lacks an answer to a question, the answer is "Goddidit". however, when this gap of knowledge is filled in, say how electricity conducts, the "God of the Gaps" is pushed out.
this is, by the by, a disasterous theological position to have for, essentially, the being is putting God into a position to be falsified. generally speaking, i understand that most theists frown upon this sort of activity.
here is a little snippet from an essay that goes into much more detail and depth:
Precisely what
is God-of-the-gaps theology? There is not anything that it is
precisely; it is not that sort of thing. Somewhat vaguely, however, it can be characterized as follows:
[size=+1] [/size] The God-of-the-gaps theologian is an Enlightenment semideist who thinks of the universe as a vast machine working according to a set of necessary and inviolable natural laws. ( Perhaps a God has created the universe: but if he did, it is now for the most part self-sufficient and self-contained. ) These natural laws, furthermore, have a kind of august majesty; they are necessary in some strong sense; perhaps not even God, if there is such a person, could violate them; but even if he could, he almost certainly would not. ( Hence the otherwise inexplicable worry about miracles characteristic of this sort of thought. ) Natural science investigates and lays out the structure of this cosmic machine, in particularby trying to discover and lay bare those laws, and to explain the phenomena in terms of them. There seem to be
some phenomena, however, that resist a naturalistic explanation — so far, at any rate. We should therefore postulate a deity in terms of whose actions we can explain these things that current science cannot. Newton's suggestion that God periodically adjusts the orbits of the planets is often cited as just such an example of God-of-the-gaps theology.
[size=+1] [/size] The following, therefore, are the essential points of God-of-the-gaps theology.
[size=+1] [/size] First, the world is a vast machine that is almost entirely self-sufficient; divine activity in nature is limited to those phenomena for which there is no scientific, i.e., mechanical and naturalistic explanation.
[size=+1] [/size] Second, the existence of God is a kind of large-scale hypothesis postulated to explain what cannot be explained otherwise, i.e., naturalistically. [
16]
[size=+1] [/size] Third, there is the apologetic emphasis: the best or one of the best reasons for believing that there is such a person as God is the fact that there are phenomena that natural science cannot (so far) explain naturalistically.
http://www.asa3.org/ASA/education/origins/gaps-ap.htm
metta,
~v