Scientific research seems to advocate that everything can be explained deterministically; that there is no allowance for a force that acts outside of the observable universe. What authority do they have to say this when there is no evidence to back it up? There are certainly countless number of variables in our model of the universe that leave the possibility open for a being that transcends the universe.Cougar wrote:Roy,
Who are these scientists that attempt to refute the spirituality of God? Is Galileo still blasphemous in your eyes? What do you mean by logical analysis?
I don't know and have never read any scientific article that refutes the spirituality of God. It isn't even discussed in scientific articles... it is not an appropriate place for it.
I would like to call out your ignorance about science, because the entire point of writing scientific articles is to teach other people what you did and what your results were. Most are like a freaking cook book, showing a step-by-step process of the hypothesis, what was done, how it was done, what results were obtained, what the results mean, and future discussion for the topic. However, a good scientific article does delve any further than what results can show, which leaves questions and considerations for the reader... this is a good thing because it leaves some interpretation up to the reader and the reader can then decide what to do with that particular information.
Logical anyalysis is flawed deductive reasoning. It is the act of arriving at a conclusion based on incomplete evidence. I.E. concluding that humans evolved from apes just because we share many similar traits. Many scientists get carried away with their findings and their theories and they make premature judgments.
My argument is not against all science, but rather those that take a misguided view of what science is. There is such a large population of scientists who suppress spirituality merely based on personal bias, rather than any kind of evidence. And it is my belief that there never will be any evidence, that it is a test of faith and those that cannot feel that supreme presence miss out. Science to me seems like half of the brain, and some scientists seem to only be using half of theirs. This kind of thinking causes a black and white view of the world; there is no feeling, no purpose, no meaning to anything. This is not the world I experience.
Galileo was a pioneer of thought and I think he had some good ideas, but he was too quantitative in his studies. In life there are two things dominating the world; quantity and quality. You should not emrace one and refute the other. But he was right in arguing that no authoritative truth should be taken for granted; that we each need to experience our own truth to find it.
That is still not showing how to learn. That is teaching one about different observations or different interpretations of the world as we (or they) know it. It is more vital for one to know how to properly learn, then for them to be taught 'facts'.Cougar wrote:If scientists don't show how to learn, then why do schools hire chemistry, biology, physics, and astronomy teachers?