thanks now I got it but there are many questions I wanna ask but this would be my last question.
trumble I know about learned buddhists many of them claim that buddhism is 100% compatible with science so I would like to ask you can you please explain the KARMA and ANAATMA concept in Buddhism with simple science and logic (or with some examples)
I'm not aware of anything in which science and Buddhism actually
conflict, but that isn't the same as saying Buddhism can be explained scientifically or established as being 'true' by use of the scientific method. Quite simply it can't, just as metaphysical or ethical systems can't be, and the other great religions can't be. Buddhism involves faith and belief rather than scientific 'proof' it's teachings are correct, just as the monotheistic religions do.
That said, karma is essentially just cause and effect. That is, of course, evident throughout the whole of science; science is all about causes and effects. The only difference is what those causes and effects
are. In the case of karma they are principally moral in nature, although whether they are by necessity physical as well would require very long discussions about free will and determinism and the nature of consciousness which probably wouldn't reach any conclusion anyway (they never have so far!)
In the case of anatta (which is what I assume you mean) much the same things apply. Anatta is the idea that there is no permanent 'self', just a continual flow of ever changing phenomena that give the appearance of continuity. I'm not aware of any science that shows that to be either true or untrue. I
am aware of Western philosophy that suggests something similar, principally that of Hume which many of those who followed (most notably Kant and Hegel) tried, and failed, to shoot down and just settled for suggesting far more convoluted alternatives instead. None of those ideas have been empirically demonstrated to be either true or untrue, either.
