Xamonas Chegwé wrote:I don't
believe in science.
I happen to think that the scientific method is the best tool for making sense of the world we have yet come up with, based on the observable results of employing it.
Belief is something completely different. Believing is accepting something is right without, or in spite of, the evidence. That is anti-science - there is no belief in science.
Sorry to be picky - I agree with everything you say Rev, except the choice of words. I just hate it when xtians start blathering on about me having faith in science - it really annoys me having to explain to their glazed-over faces that I have no such thing for the umpteenth time.

Don't apologize. I appreciate precision in language, and I understand the point you're making.
Personally, it's a colloquialism that doesn't push any of my buttons. (And, trust me, I have lots and lots of buttons!) I'm comfortable saying I believe in science, or even that I have faith in science. And by using those terms I'm not suggesting I worship at an altar of science, or have anthropomorphised a petri dish. I'm merely bringing to bear language that suggests an anticipated outcome of future events that, by dint on not having happened yet, are not entirely knowable. And that's a kind of faith and/or belief. But the big difference is that rather than believing there will be some sort of second coming of a 100-foot Jesus who will have lightning bolts coming out of his fingertips (or whatever), and basing that on a literary work that I consider to be primarily fiction, I'm basing my hoped-for outcomes for the future on the very solid historical output of scientific inquiry... that it will make known things that are, right now, unknown. I can't be sure it will happen, but, based on an overwhelming body of reliable evidence, I believe it will.
In fact, it's highly probable that somebody invented cold fusion while I tried to peck out this response. I believe it's nap time!
