People of faith have a bad rap. In his book The Selfish Gene, Richard Dawkins says:
Faith cannot move mountains (though generations of children are solemnly told the contrary and believe it). But it is capable of driving people to such dangerous folly that faith seems to me to qualify as a kind of mental illness.
New atheists have recently fortified their no-god position by building a bunker beneath the soil of human ingenuity and scientific discovery.
The scientific revolution is a fairly new phenomenan. The Age of Enlightenment, also known as The Age of Reason, began in the 18th century. This movement deified mans intellect and catapulted humanity toward a trajectory of self-reliance and autonomy. By highlighting the intellect, humanity has been able to mine creativity and ingenuity within the collective conscious mind like never before. If necessity is the mother of invention, our thirst for greater scientific innovation has become a catalyst and a reinforcing feedback loop that continues to expand exponentially. The greater the desire, the greater the necessity to satiate that desire. We have become science and technology junkies.
Is faith incompatible with science?
Let’s define faith. Faith is often understood as being “belief that is not based on proof.” But this begs the question, what is proof? — Science utilizes the mental apparatus to probe physical reality. Proof is based upon obtained empirical information: information you can touch, taste, measure, see and feel. Proof is obtained through the scientific method. Ultimately science must be observable, measurable, repeatable and in the present. All 4 of those components must exist simultaneously to qualify as genuine science. That is the only way to establish unrefutable scientific proof.
What about science that can’t be repeated and in the present you ask? Good question. Where science is incomplete, imagination takes over. We all have faith commitments that exist in the absence of irrefutable scientific proof. However, faith does not exist in a vacuum. Evidence can often times guide and direct our belief.
Mad scientist?
Sir Isaac Newton, one of the Age of Enlightenment scientists, once said:
“He who thinks half-heartedly will not believe in God; but he who really thinks has to believe in God.”
Isaac Newton exemplified that reason and faith can coexist. He utilized the scientific method to prove the law of gravity while simultaneously committing himself to faith in the transcendent.
Are people of faith mentally ill? -- Let's be reasonable.
----> What do you think?
I don't accept Richard Dawkins view.
I believe faith is required for being mentally healthy. It is like a life-support system; faith gives us hope in adverse conditions, and gives us power to fight in such circumstances.
We believe, God will help us; after every dark night there comes a bright day.
If you have studied about enlightenment, you may have known that ultimate knowledge is within us. Science is unable to explain why and how enlightenment is gained. But one way to get enlightened is through right faith.
One of the greatest scientists Charles Darwin, who gave the theory of evolution (which is believed to deny interference of God in creation of human beings) did not deny God's existence and said,
And even the genius physicist Einstein believes that "faith" and "science" are not only compatible with each other but also complementary to each other:
By the way, nice brief article @encryptedkingdom. Please try to write somewhat bigger articles from the next time. I love to read long engaging posts. :D
I write about science and am very happy to see someone new writing great content like this one. :)
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Good point. Like Newton, many of the greatest scientists were able to synthesize faith & reason. Their belief in the transcendent empowered them to push through adversity even within their discovery process.
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Yeah, that's the thing. Faith gives us a different power to keep working and not to give up, as we believe that God will give us the result of out hard work.
And this helped the greatest scientists.
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#steempower
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Good post! I'm going to follow you to see more post like this and for support us!
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Awesome post! FOLLOW ME back for awesome crypto stuff :)
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Looking forward to read your Crypto stuff.
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Of course people of faith aren't mentally ill. As someone who has a mental illness I can assure you it is nothing like having a belief in God. Dawkins thinks he makes some profound statement when he says something like "who created the creator". Any freshman philosophy student can answer that question with ease. Also the definition of faith is sort of a popular one and is not really the accurate definition. As the great philosopher Dr. Craig says faith is "a way of trusting in something that you think or know to be true".
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Great point. There is another definition within the Bible as faith being the "substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things unseen." I tried to go with a simpler definition that an empiricist would accept. Trust and yieldedness are probably the most accurate definitions as you've mentioned.
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Are you threatening me!?
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What makes you feel threatened?
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I am Cornholio! (Whoa! Hm heh... that was cool) I need T.P. for my bunghole! Come out with your pants down!
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