question: by admiting to "God" does science loose its grounds?
assertion: by scientific enquery, beleiving that the base of all things came from one intelligent scource only directs science to explore the science in observations of that law, which would assert that chaos is only apparent, and that purpose exists for items under scientific scrutiny.
question: so, if a scientist accepts that all things were based by an intelligent entity, he also asserts that everything was designed?
assertion: no. he only asserts that the basis was of intelligence and designed some, but sceintific data does not assert that all was designed. ie: a man takes a tank, fills it with water, and adds chemicals to see how they will react, the reaction was not controlled, but allowed freedom in a contained environment to "become"
question: so a scientist accepting that an intelligent entity was first may not be religios?
assertion: true. religion makes assertion based on devine inspirations. a man who eats magic mushrooms can beleive he had involvment with the devine. religion also has been targets of corruption, and nothing man mandated is tottally infallible.
the scientist in question, may find science in the religeons to be impressive, and perhapts even of devine assertion, yet aknoledge that flaws in overall religion and writtings of man were not written by the hand of the devine, and therefore, while aknoledged, may not be religios.
the acceptance that by scientific principle, that which was first had intelligence only directs the enquiry of science to the assertion of order within boundries, and chaos only apparent.
debate?
Edited by tesla, : my grand typing skills: typoes
Edited by tesla, : topic change
Edited by tesla, : spelling
keep your mind from this way of enquiry, for never will you show that not-being is
~parmenides