I generally like, "I don't know," as my go to answer. — Tom Storm
Yes, slap yourself in the face. You will quickly see cause and effect. Seriously, you are questioning logic itself. — ButyDude
So you are agnostic, more or less. — ButyDude
I know that your simple refutation is not enough, as well as my simple explanation is not nearly enough. — ButyDude
I (like many contemporary atheists) am an agnostic atheist. In other words, I don't know whether or not there are gods, however I see no good reason to believe. — Tom Storm
atheist entails that you actively believe that there is no God — ButyDude
There are lots of good reasons to believe in God. Belief in God is necessary for moral realism and objective morality, and human dignity. — ButyDude
It is extremely difficult to be a single, individual person and believe in God. — ButyDude
The role of the Church is to organize the followers of God in prayer, community, and action. It is through organization only that great charities and Churches across the world provide food, clothing, shelter, vaccines, medicine, and even surgery, to the billions of people around the globe. — ButyDude
I personally don't attach a label to my "atheism", e.g. agnostic. In fact, I don't even put officially the label "atheist" on myself. I simply don't believe in the existence of God or gods, as these terms are commonly used. That's all.I (like many contemporary atheists) am an agnostic atheist. — Tom Storm
Just to mention from the OP. In Bacon's time people were religious. Rarely were people atheist. That science and atheism would hold hands came only far later.Men who were incredibly influential in science like Roger Bacon were active participants of the church. — Isaiasb
How?Science disproves God. — praxis
Didn't think he would have had said that. But what Dawkins says that there's no need for religion, and simply those questions on ethics that science cannot answer can be vaguely answered by general "humanity". Don't have a direct quote, but his general idea is this I think.To be perfectly clear, Dawkins does not claim that "Science disproves God." — praxis
In Bacon's time people were religious. — ssu
But how religious were the people in Bacon's time? Like modern American Christians, or like old-fashioned Catholics in traditionally Catholic countries?Science is objective. Religion is subjective.
It's not like people generally chose their religion. They were born and raised into it, it was normally not a matter of choice, nor was it perceived as a matter choice. (Religious people in traditionally religious countries seem to tend to be skeptical of adult converts.)Or is it that to find Jesus you have to use your brain and think?
I don't think the question is clear. It's so broad as to be virtually meaningless. Which science versus which religion? — Tom Storm
I grew up with the latter. As such, it is my opinion that they think of religion as objective and public. Certainly not subjective. — baker
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