Commander Abs, on 5 Jun 2007, 16:46, said:
Firstly, with that nice little list of scientific things you forget to mention two *very* important *proven* areas of science.
1. Uncertainty Principle
2. Calculus, specifically third order differential equations
You'll find that Uncertainty Principle puts limitations on the accuracy to which mathematics can solve *some* problems,, ergo you can't find an *exact* answer to some things. If there exists such problems, it all but rules out ever finding a Grand Unifying Theory (yes, they are actually called that too)
Further, non-trivial third order differential equations are, for the most part, unsolveable.
My point is while science is capable of doing a helluva lot of things, there's some fundamental things it is still incapable of solving,, and things like the Uncertainty Principle are not just "We haven't found out how to yet, it'll come". The errors of the uncertainty principle are *small enough* to be ignored in the macroscopic world, but the fact remains there are *unsolvable* things,,, and to contradict this you'd be uprooting the entire maths and physics knowledge base,, and thus,, tearing your own argument to shreds, because all scientific knowledge we have would be incorrect.
Moreover, if Uncertainty Principle IS correct, science *cannot* rule out divine intervention, magic, or that the only explanation is no explanation,,, but on the same token doesnt prove these things to exist. End of the day we can only be uncertain.
The uncertainty principle is part of quantum mechanics. And yes, it governs the limit to which we can accurately measure the very small. The cause for these uncertainties is also very well known: the energy transfer caused by the particles by which we attempt to detect the momentum and position of other particles. However, the whole uncertainty part is that things become blurry and unfocused, as if there is some random influence. And the effect gets stronger, the more accurately you try to measure. So maybe that's something you could call god. I don't know, I'm not ruling out what I can't deny. I just avoid the religious connotations and refer to it as quantum fluctuation.
Now, differential equations are part of maths, not of science. Maths isn't really a part of science in the strict sense, because it's essentially the study of a system in itself. Maths doesn't study the world, it studies itself. And it tries to formulate new rules and laws within the system of maths. Science works like 'given the universe, how does it work?'. The approach used by maths is more like 'given this system of numbers, vector spaces or whatever, what can you do with it?'.
Solo Wing, on 5 Jun 2007, 21:41, said:
It's impossible to positively prove the lack of something. And so logically, the very nature of a god makes it impossible to falsify any hypothesis confirming the existence of a god, because it's impossible to show otherwise. But falsifiability is a very big prerequisite for any sound theory in science. It's akin to saying 'if the moon were made of cheese, it would taste nice'. Since the moon is not made of cheese, and never will be, it's impossible for me to falsify that claim. It's like a 'self-righteous' claim. And those invariably go out the window in any serious science.
In that sense, yes, atheism is a belief. It's the positive belief that there is no such thing as gods. But it has little to do with science. All that's certain is that an atheist will not seek religion as an explanation for things. But there are more ways of explaining the universe than science and religion alone. To say that an atheist supports science is by any means an uneducated claim.
Now, how is science unproven? I'd say by far most of it is very proven. If it didn't have any evidence backing it up, and just counter evidence, it would be immediately thrown out. You fail to see how science works. Science works on a 'true until evidence denies it, false until evidence supports it' basis. Science doesn't deny the existence of a god, because there's neither hard evidence for him nor evidence against. It's simply an 'undefined' statement.
Solo Wing, on 5 Jun 2007, 21:41, said:
Why what? Does there have to be a reason? Science doesn't concern itself with 'why', so it's no less wrong to put that burden on it than it is to ask of a bakery to start manufacturing televisions. You're asking the question to the wrong discipline.
Solo Wing, on 5 Jun 2007, 21:41, said:
Wow, ignorance galore. You really think atheists believe life is pointless and worthless? You really think I believe my only purpose in life is to keep the human race alive and well? Do you think I'm so selfish that I'd kill myself because I'm useless anyway?
Life has any purpose you give to it. Just because I don't use an ancient book to give me purpose and to set a standard of morals for me to believe in, doesn't mean I don't have any. It just means I give life purpose on my own accord. Morals aren't absolute, what one thinks is good might be what the other thinks is bad. Doesn't make one right and the other wrong, and doesn't mean any that doesn't fit your definition is bad or just doesn't exist. I have a very strong moral standard and a very well-defined purpose for life, and frankly I find it insulting that you'd assume to know what I think based the word 'atheist' alone.