Pygoscelis
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a dose of skeptisim born of curiosity and a genuine desire to know truth is healthy i think - religious/not.
I agree completely. We SHOULD maintain a healthy skepticism about scientific theories, as we should maintain healthy skepticism about all things. Just don't confuse healthy skepticism with closedmindedness (not saying you are).
the only thing a non-believer might be against is it's requirement to remember that it's to God our awe and praise should be directed to when we marvel at this universe.
If you're saying that you won't let scripture and dogmatism stand in the way of investigation and questioning, and that you wish to go forward with the investigation viewing it as understanding how God works, I don't object to that at all.
Early priests had this mindset. They were very much the birth of modern science. They investigated the world to see how God works. Only later did other clergy stamp down on them because they were discovering things and developing theories that was branded heresy.
As to evolution, must there be a conflict with it and religion? Could one not
believe that God made us and Evolution was simply the tool that she used?
and then u pointed out that science is only acceptable when it doesn't conflict with religious beliefs.
This is historically the view of most religious institutions, including Christian and Muslim ones. Galileo was killed as a heretic for suggesting the idea that the earth goes around the sun instead of the sun going around the earth. Al Galazi and his ilk contributed greatly to the fall of the arabic golden age with their anti-science stance.
ur assumption is that there is conflict. pls tell me exactly what is it in quran that u find is in conflict with established science?
If you interepret Islam as not in conflict with science then I applaud you.
I think the greatest barrier that religion puts in front of science isn't this at all though. I think its that once we label something as "God Did It" we often consider that a satisfactory answer and stop investigating.
This happened to many of the greatest scientists in history, including Isaac Newton.
He was able to explain how two bodies in space act on each other and developed his theory of gravity. Then he realized that in space there are many bodies all acting on one another and he was unable to explain how the solar system keeps itself together. He was stumped for a very long time. Eventually he invoked "God Does It" and then he stopped his research on the matter. It was over a hundred years (300 if I recall correctly) before the problem was taken up again, by another great scientific mind and solved.