Now don't you feel better?Holsety wrote:Fine. Science is a school of thought which is value neutral and should not be judged good or bad. My apologies.As you say, '''science" did not.' And "science" should not be cast in a bad light because of scientists doing things badly, or doing bad things.

Let's use Mendel as an example. He noticed patterns in the plants he was working with; observed carefully through many trials; and worked out the probabilities. This lead him to develop two properties of inheritance. How much of that was accident?Holsety wrote:Makes sense to me in part since god created the universe. However, there is the babel story with, for instance, language creating a unity of understanding of the world for humanity that god must then crush, in order to maintain separation between humanity and god. (god actually fears the unity, fears that humanity will equal god in one translation I read)Galilei, Pasteur, and Newton were very strong believers. Mendel was a monk, and Copernicus was a cleric. THEY saw no conflict with faith and trying to learn how the universe worked.
Moreover, this suggests that merely because they made great discoveries, they were great people and that the division between science and faith that they managed is what allowed them to make their discoveries. This seems highly improbable. Most science teachers would tell you the discoveries were something of an accident, not a moral reward for keeping two aspects of studying the world divided.
OTOH, IIRC, the results of Rutherford's gold-foil experiment was quite a surprise, and lead to the accidental discovery of the atom's nucleus. In this case, the best principles of science were followed. The incorrect "knowledge" (asumption, really) was discarded, and our understanding improved greatly. Which lead to many more theories, experiments, and further improved understanding.
As for the division between science and faith, Mendel, I assume, thought the principles he discovered were a revelation of God's genius. An attitude Francis Collins shares, as clearly seen in his book called The Language of God: A Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief. No separation in that. But neither of these guys used God as an explanation for any aspect their specific fields. Mendel theorized the two pairs of genes, with dominant and recessive traits, rather than figure God did it one way X% of the time, another way Y% of the time, etc. Collins knows all about the rate of mutation in DNA, and doesn't say God mutates each one. Does that show a division between science and faith for them?
Heh. I just mean it would be nice if learning some bit of information could make one happy. That whole Depression thread wouldn't exist.Holsety wrote:Nah, I don't know how intelligent I am so I don't know that it would be cool.Intelligence and facts don't have anything to do with happiness. It sure would be cool if they did, eh?!?
What I meant, using Sisyphus (not Tartarus) as an example, was that you can stop trying to roll that damned boulder.Holsety wrote:Somehow I am reminded of Tartarus, the one guy in it (may be named Tartarus) who is trying to roll a boulder up a hill and, when he nearly reaches the top, he messes up and it rolls to the bottom. Kind of asymptotic, ain't it?Don't wait for the world to do it. Cauterize them yourself.