A scientific theory is built around observations and experiments and it is constantly re-shaped so that it involves new observations etc. etc. ...
But my point is that religion does work the same way. The only difference is how they each define the result.
A couple of brief, quick, and bad examples, before I check out--I wished I could stay, but alas I\'ve got some other things to do...
So...a person \"observes\" that Jesus raises someone from the dead. Jesus has performed other witnessed miracles, thus the conclusion is made he is \"the chosen\".
The non-canonical gospels were \"removed\" because, through comparison and relayed historical accounts, they weren\'t believed to be \"accurate\". As a result, the doctrine can be taught more \"accurately\"---by omitting certain unproven points and, as a result, strengthening the belief system.
The Bible was built in the exact same way theories are built---through observations and amendments (and in some cases, omissions of \"bad data\"). The only difference were how the observations were defined (Miracle vs Science).
Anyway...
There is \"scientific\" evidence today that supports certain accounts in the bible----the only difference is science explains an event away as a \"scientific\" event (seismic, geologic, weather-related, etc)...and the other explains it as a \"miracle\".
Perhaps it\'s man explaining the miracle with science, but the truth is the science is the result of the miracle. (Just an alternate view, mind you).
Anyway. I wish I could hang longer, as you guys always impress me with the depths these conversations reach. If I get a chance to post again later, I certainly will.
Cheers!
Kev