And my response to Coded Logic:
Thank you for taking the time to respond, and I respect your
position, and I do not condone any violence attributed to Religion. Nor do I condone any violence attributed to
man’s political agenda, greed, and overreaching quest for scientific
knowledge. Your argument is biased, and does
not account for all the murders and blood spilled that man has done in just
developing one weapon of mass destruction.
Take the nuclear bomb that was developed to drop on Hiroshima and
Nagasaki. Do you realize how many lives
were sacrificed in the name of science to test and develop that weapon? This is just one example that comes to mind,
and there many more in the name of geo politics, science and medicine that has
brought death to thousands of innocents and misled individuals. Or the environmental catastrophes they have
left behind in their wake?
I worked for a large engineering company that had concerns
in federal and government work. We had
permanent offices on site at Oak ridge, Tennessee, and Los Alamos Laborites,
New Mexico, monitoring and cleaning up the surrounding area for nuclear radioactive
contamination. Deer hunting in Oak Ridge
was defined by bringing in a deer to the check point, and having it scanned for
radioactivity. If
it was within a certain range, you got to keep it. Needless to say, the areas are quite
contaminated. So, how many people have
developed cancer in those areas that believed
their government would keep them safe from harm? Or what about the nuclear weapons testing the
US did off the Bikini Atoll Islands. 23 tests from 1946-1958. The military authorities, and scientists told
the native residents they would be able to return when they had completed. Well, you know the story, they could not, as
the area was inhabitable. But, all those
natives believed and had faith in what the military and scientist
told them and that they would be able to return. What is worse, is that our scientist hadn’t
any idea what the outcome would demonstrate, so they required testing to
support their hypothesis. Which is a
sanitized way of saying they had a belief
and subsequent faith that it
would result in proving their initial calculations. But even with all the scientific methods
they employ, they were incorrect, as they would not have misled the residents
initially.
Also, do understand that faith
is not unjustified belief, you could
not be more incorrect on this matter and would do well to realize that the
science in which you “believe” is
based on theory and hypothesis, and there are many unproven postulates an all
areas of scientific study. So when Alan Shepard was sitting atop of that bomb,
getting ready to be blasted into outer space, you better believe he had faith.
He had faith in every NASA
engineer that participated, but the reality is, they had no clue what was going
to happen. In other words they had a belief in something, and a lot of faith that they did their calculations
correctly.
Whatever axe you have to grind on religion, faith and belief, is disproportionately targeted. It unfortunately exists in all religions,
cults, large corporations, and governments.
Blind faith and ignorance is
dangerous in any realm including the secular and scientific. My point is that somehow having a theological
view got entwined with ignorance and an illogical thought processes. This is quite frankly offensive. I work in the technology and engineering
industry, I am educated, and also have a background in food science. I do not pontificate illogical unreasonable
conclusions. I am surrounded by very
smart educated professionals, and have had some great discussion and debates on
theology, but what we do not do, is
utilize a sophomoric ad hominem tactic to discredit the person on the bases of
their virtues, and views. And when we
are discussing the origins of the universe and life, I am sorry but at the end
of the day, science (actually the political) answer to the question is just as
silly as that of a creationist. We are
all hypnotizing and looking to prove them.
In closing you said, “and that, my friend, is why I HATE IT
when people try and use faith to justify their beliefs.” I sincerely hope you don’t need faith to believe in that the next vaccination or inoculation you need to get,
because the fact is you surely do, especially when you do not know the
outcome. You may have some idea based on
statistical analysis, but there is no guarantee or assuredness, and that my
friend is still blind faith. I do agree with you on one point, trusting in
humans, whether secular, or religious will result in disappointment.