To: balrog666
In reality, most creation myths start with a deity on the scene. Few have an explanation about how it got there.
You have to know just where to stop asking questions to believe in a religion!
That's an interesting but, I think, fallacious argument.
Where do your questions stop? At "science hasn't discovered that yet"? Do you believe that someday science will discover "all" of the answers to "all" of the questions?
Or do you believe in infinite questions? How can science reconcile infinity? What scientific proof exists of infinity?
How does science explain existence? It "just is"? If that is what you have to accept to believe in science, then, by your own definition, isn't science is just another religion?
148 posted on
08/03/2006 3:05:27 PM PDT by
Thrusher
("...there is no peace without victory.")
To: Thrusher
"Where do your questions stop?"
They don't. That's what science is about; no matter how much it learns, it keeps asking questions to try to learn more.
Just because the answer is "I don't know yet" doesn't mean you're not asking questions.
150 posted on
08/03/2006 3:09:22 PM PDT by
Sofa King
(A wise man uses compromise as an alternative to defeat. A fool uses it as an alternative to victory.)
To: Thrusher
Reality doesn't care whether or not you believe in it.
189 posted on
08/03/2006 5:36:32 PM PDT by
balrog666
(Ignorance is never better than knowledge. - Enrico Fermi)
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