mitchellmckain
New member
Evoken said:If you already admit that god is plain useless as an explanaiton in science, why do you think god is useful as an explanation somewhere else? By what criteria do you determine when, how and why god is an useful explanation for something?
From where I stand, your decision to use god as an explanation for some things and not for others seems quite arbitrary.
But all I said was "Goddidit" was useless to science. That is all. So is my collection of over 200 science fiction and fantasy novels, so are my over 100 strategy games, and my DVD collection, and my ingredients for Thai curry. What in the world has the uselessness of "Goddidit" to science possibly have to do with my belief in God? A couple thousand years ago, there was hardly any difference between any of the different facets of life. All were rolled into one fantastical explanation of things. Religion, science, law, entertainment, and perhaps even cooking were all a part of the mythical stories we told one another. But things have changed quite a bit since then don't you think. Sure they consult one other to various degrees but every decision of law does not need a scientific explanation, just as entertainment need have no relationship to religion (thank God), or religion to law or to science. The mind of man, or at least the communal mind of man has grown to encompass multiple points of view for a variety of different purposes for a much greater degree of versatility. It is unfortunate that many individual members have not been able to achieve the same versatility personally.
I am a scientist but that is not all that I am. I do not breathe science with every breath or wear my science colored glasses every second of the day. What you seem unable to understand is that science is NOT a religion nor does it require 100% devotion of ones life, mind and soul lest ones impurity spoil the result of ones scientific inquiries. No, science does not work that way. (Neither does my religion for that matter.) Science is a matter of proceedure, that is all. Purity of devotion plays no role at all. Science informs my religious beliefs but does not rule them because religion just is about explaining objective observations or the mathematical relationships between measurable quantities, just as science is not about personal development in a relationship to God or towards living up to ones ideals.
The very first intent of Genesis in its historical account is to explain that God created everything. Is this a science book, claiming that this is a theory to explain the world around us? No. It does not proceed to show that this is an explanation of one thing about the world around us unless one is childish enought to belief in talking snakes (which most Christians think to represent Lucifer and not a snake at all) and think this story is an explanation of why snakes have no legs. No, the purpose is entirely about man's relationship with an all powerful being refered to as God, to expain that He is our creator and the creator of everything have and see. Its purpose is to explain how we are beholden to a being other than ourselves for everything we have including life itself. This purpose has a logical place in the story which follows, for it all about how man responds to this creator and God's attempts to guide human beings towards what this being considers acceptible behavior.