AllTerrainMonkey
New member
Originally posted by reverend
Science = constantly tested, disputed and peer-reviewed. Also mostly right on many testable areas of life and its development.
Religion = mostly wait for a slight chink in science\'s armour, jump on the error, ignore the fact that that an error has shown up a more viable direction and has actually moved on by a long distance and covered even more ground.
C\'est la vie!
Well, the reason for this kind of behavior is simple. Science is driven by whether ideas are proven or disproven; young bucks know that if they want to get famous quick the easiest way is to disprove long-standing notions, theories are maintained by standing up to intense scrutiny and peer review, etc. However, with religion, it\'s all or nothing. You have a belief system that has varying degrees of being set in stone, and to be a true believer you have to believe that not a single iota is wrong.
For example, it was only in 1992 that the Catholic church finally admitted that it was wrong to condemn Galileo for suggesting science knew more that scripture about how the universe worked. (Links: BBC, New Scientist, and USA Today).
This is a quote from BBC.com in the above linked article.
In 1992, Pope John Paul II expressed regret at the way Galileo had been treated. \"The error of the theologians of the time, when they maintained the centrality of the Earth, was to think that our understanding of the physical world\'s structure was, in some way, imposed by the literal sense of Sacred Scripture,\" he said.
I think it\'s apparent that Christian religions as a whole didn\'t crumble to pieces as more and more of the civilized world came to accept that the Earth wasn\'t the center of the universe. I think it\'s amusing seeing so much opposition to Evolution, as if its validity undermines people\'s faiths, and therefore it has to be wrong or proven wrong at all costs.