greedoniz wrote:I thought it was a fascinating documentry and I for one couldn't agree with Dawkins enough.
I think he overplayed the attack on science a bit too much but he is right that if people reject their rationality for faith or beleif in an unfounded system then it undermines what makes humans so successful as a species. As he said in the documentry that all the things that have made a practical difference to our lives have been a result of science.
My problem with this Greedoniz is the assumption that to be "rational" something has to be proven by our scientific methods at whatever period of history we happen to be at. We "knew" about bacteria long before we could see them through a microscope, yet how was this (correct) theory deduced? By observing natural processes and coming to the best conclusion we could... "once you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains - however improbable - must be the truth." People then acted on the theory of these imaginary air-borne bugs... and revolutionised life from agriculture to medicine.
My faith is totally rational - I look around the world and see how humans behave, and feel that despite a lack of scientific evidence, the existence of God explains it the best. My method of thinking is just as scientific as the next man. When I put that into practice and see others doing so too, following what it says in the Bible, I see our lives improving - not necessarily in "quantifiable" terms, hey, life's not one big beach party whatever you believe, but in the way we relate to the world and to each other. Observation - hypothesis - testing the hypothesis - success. Just because it can't be written in a Cochrane Review doesn't mean it's invalid, im my opinion anyway.
greedoniz wrote:I think nameless above misunderstood when he states that Dawkins beleives that all scientists are good. My slant on whaty he said was actually a comment on the core principle of science itself. This is to explore, come up with a hypothesis, test it repetitively to DISprove it and then publish the results to be reviewed by anyone who wishes to. They can then repeat the experiment to see if they get the results and in time a hypothesis which has been proven to work then becomes part of science itself.
Again, the assumption is that something is only worth a damn if it can be quantified by *our* methods, but that's just so short sighted when dealing with something that is not necessarily physical. For a long time, psychologists used Freud's approach to psycho-analysis - in fact he has been called the father of psycho-analysis. But now we are moving towards "cognitive behavioural therapy", so what has changed? Have we proved somehow that Freud was wrong and CBT is correct? Not exactly, and some of Freud's theories are still used (to my consternation), but it seems to fit better. But we have no proof that Freud was "wrong", anymore than whoever designed CBT is "right".
You could well come back with the argument that once Creationism seemed correct, now we have evolution so why can't religious people update their model? Well, indeed - and I am not a "Creationist", of the type that insists on a literal 7 day creation - but I believe God created the world, and maybe one day we'll find out how he did it. But it becomes more difficult because part of the Christian belief is that it is a valid and active faith throughout time, and again, for me this is based on the observation that Christianity and it's principles have come under attack from many angles throughout the ages, yet to me it has always been a valid faith. I was listening to a Pastor's talk on my iPod in the car this morning and as a quick aside to his enlightening talk, he made this very point - how impressive that whilst we use or trust very few "facts of science" from 2000 years ago, something that was scratched on parchment all that time ago was offering incredibly wise and specific advice on a question about marriage that someone had emailed to him in the year 2007. So forgive me for not throwing that book in the bin just because nowadays we "really are sure" how life began, because that says nothing to me about the topics which are actually much more important to my life.
One final crude analogy - a vacuum is basically an absence of particles. Hence, you cannot "see" a vacuum (as far as I know), however powerful your microscope, even if you could see down to a sub-atomic level. Yet vacuums help us all the time in everyday life. To me, saying "God does not exist because there is no scientific proof" is like saying "vacuum's do not exist because it has not shown up on our high-power microscope." Science is designed to explain and discover things using principles and measurements we are already familiar with - you cannot "test" something without a benchmark - but the flip side of that is that it is effectively
designed not to see things it cannot measure. If God exists, he most certainly is not limited and obliged to show up on our radars, under our magnifying glasses or wriggle when we poke him with our science sticks.