Well this is far from the first, and no doubt it will be far from the last, time I have to listen to people who believe in something supernatural scrabbling desperately to put science in the same bracket as theology.
What does that mean? To put something in the same bracket? As I state above, science is not the same mode of inquiry as religion
in the modern first world cultures, however, both are modes of inquiry and are social institutions.
Sorry, but as a social scientist, they are both social institutions, aspects of culture, and subject to many of the same problems/biases. Any lengthy reading on how science is actually done, the debates over biases and ways of "knowing" in science, etc. will reveal these issues. To see the two as somehow very different and assign them differing values is to ignore their common roots and their common "problems," which stem from the way individual human cognition interacts with social life and the distributed knowledge of a cultural system.
There is no science that is free from cultural bias. Likewise, religion. We are human, after all.
you just will not accept that science IS NOT a religion.
I don't think science is a religion. Some people act as though it is, and mistakenly use it as such.
However, both science and religion are part of the social superstructure. Neither are The Truth. They are human ways of making sense out of a complex reality. Both work for certain things and not for others, and are integrated with the rest of the cultural context.
Why do you think all these trans-discipline theoscientists never get published in the science journals?
Because they are publishing in the wrong area for their mode of inquiry. Doesn't mean that science and religion cannot merge in the individual and the society, but that the two don't merge much in realms of literature.
Science is what gives us the internet, nuclear power, microwave ovens, catalytic converters, heart surgery, pacemakers, men on the moon and spaceships that are now leaving our solar system. All these things and so many more were worked out using logic and then made real.
Science gives us means. Spirituality/religion gives us ends. The science that gave us nuclear power also gave us nuclear weapons. The microwave ovens we were gifted with made it easier for us to have poor nutrition. And on and on.
Science gives us "how," but not "why" or the ethics of what to do with the "how." The "how" and "why" were (and are) integrated in some cultures, but we have forgotten this in the modern Western world and insist that the two are (and should be) irreparably separate. That is the height of unscientific foolishness: to assume one's cultural biases are the only appropriate and accurate reality. Sorry, but it is.
And we see the ill effects of this, because science is really crummy at motivating people. It can give us "how"- the means, and even certain goals based on predictins- but it fails to engage our emotions and spirit, and so it does a poor job at motivating people to be kind, compassionate, useful, and so forth. Everyone in the US knows recycling is a good idea. Science tells us this all the time through nice public service commercials. But how many people don't bother recycling? A LOT. Why? Because science is bad at making us CARE. I can point to numerous examples. A friend of mine is working on a documentary right now about how no one feels like working for or giving money to NASA because they don't CARE if we go to outer space. They're getting a bunch of "hows" without any "whys"... and it is the "whys" that make most people personally engaged.
On the other hand, religion is great about coming up with whys and emotional engagement. Did you ever get around to reading some of the literature on how in traditional (pre-industrial) societies, religion/science (as one unified system) came up with the hows AND the whys to promote sustainable use of natural resources? If not, then the statements are pretty much unscientific, biased toward modern Western culture, and would be just as unsupported in peer-reviewed journals on the science of culture as you claim the theoscientists are.
Science cuts both ways, and sweeping generalizations about the value (or lack of value) of "religion," must be evaluated based on the actual study and analysis of the data... data that is cross-cultural, cross-religious, and consistent. If you ain't got that, it's just an opinion, not science. The same thing that the religious folks have.
But delivers WHAT and WHY, that is the question.
No religion has ever demonstrated a word of its text to be anything but the work of some man somewhere lost in history.
This shows a profound lack of a good definition of religion, combined with a lack of study of the cross-cultural data on religion. No offense, but there it is. First, by defining religion as text-based, it shows a clear bias to the modern world religions and excludes the vast majority of the world's religions throughout history, which were shamanic. Secondly, it presumes that religions are based on single "works" rather than on ongoing practice, another clear bias.
Sorry, Tao, but until you engage some cross-cultural data, your views are simply unsupported in the social sciences, and therefore just as biased and unfounded as those you rail against (the religious).
But of all the billions of theists that ever lived not one can provide anything but instead appeal to "faith". A meaningless appeal to suspend logic.
I'm glad that you can look out at everyone, know their personal experiences, and know that their conceptualizations of the universe is in opposition to their logic. That must be a nice gift to have.
On the other hand, there is the possibility that
you have not experienced a theistic universe and so for
you it is most logical to be atheist.
For
another, they have experienced something different and so for
them it is most logical to be theist.
Logic is based on experiential, observable data, yes? But how is it logical to assume that you have the only data available? Is it not
possible that your data-set about reality is limited?
Science does not have all the answers but it does not pretend to and will never stop trying to answer the questions and pose new ones too.
Again, shows a bias toward a certain
type of religion, not a good working definition of religion in general. There are religions that would fit this description exactly:
Religion X does not have all the answers but it does not pretend to and will never stop tyring to answer the questions and pose new ones too.
Just because some religions do pretend to, does not mean all do. So you must qualify such statements to be accurate.
for it is high time any notion of God went extinct.
In this statement, I see the same feeling of arrogance and self-congratulation as I see when the "saved" proclaim that it is high time that everyone in the world join their congregation and be "saved" just as they are.
Science and religion may be different modes of inquiry, but it seems they result in similar types of social behavior and feelings of self-righteousness. Which goes back to my point... they are both parts of the culture's superstructure and just as bound to bias, personal emotion, divisiveness, and so forth. I would hope that science is a bit better about reflecting critically on itself, but alas, it rarely is.