Exactly my point... By default, the belief here is that all there is is naturalism, therefore no designer is needed which is why we have the controversy.Ivellious wrote:Well, gman, science is typically presented in a manner that does not require a designer.
Naturalism, in itself, is actually not a bad thing. It helps us to understand diseases, the weather, the planets, and more. Science, as assumed, therefore tries to account for the factual character of the natural world and tries to create theories to explain these facts. Religion and philosophy on the other hand is assumed to supposedly try to operate in the equally important but utterly different realm of human purposes meanings and values. Something that science could illuminate but never resolve. Science studies how the heavens go, and religion and philosophy how to go to heaven or not. Belief in a designer therefore is not even needed. The claim is that meaning and values are reduced to something entirely human that has no factual basis in the world in which we live. It’s something that can’t be reduced to the physical and is something we have to decide on our own. Basically it boils down to this, sense perceptible structures are facts where feelings are not in the area of truth or reality. But there is no good reason to think that all properties are sense perceptible or natural and therefore there is no good reason to think that all facts are natural. There might be non-natural facts as we have seen before too..Ivellious wrote:In chemistry no one ever teaches it from the perspective that a designer must have done it that way. Same with physics, geology, other biological fields, and so on. And I certainly never hear anyone complaining that chemistry only uses "natural facts" and is lacking in the need for a designer to make it work.
Sure, and you can inject evolution into a Christian mindset. I'm not debating that.. What I am debating however is that you really cannot separate the two, science and philosophy. They are intertwined so you cannot neatly divide the them.. They will eventually collide so eventually philosophies will clash.. Right now, naturalism (all that there is is matter) has been given the greater hand in our public systems. And this mindless matter supposedly created everything we see today.Ivellious wrote:And as far as the philosophical stuff, I don't necessarily disagree with what you are saying. Again, all I meant was that there is no explicit mutually exclusive relationship between evolution and Christianity, and that being a Christian does not mean you can't believe that evolution is real (as the main post seemed to suggest).
As a Christian I actually believe in some forms of evolution. I believe that G-d set the world to recycle itself.. That is death and rebirth found in nature which eventually culminates to our destruction but simply rebirths itself into another form.