Not necessarily, sometimes politics and tribalism is the justification. However it takes scientists to make nuclear bombs for example, and in terms of Star Trek, Discovery is a science vessel, the greatest weapon in Starfleet's service.And religion which is used as a justification.
War represents the worst of human nature deployed en masse and the time we most often misuse all the tools at our disposal, including science and religion
Not necessarily, sometimes politics and tribalism is the justification. However it takes scientists to make nuclear bombs for example, and in terms of Star Trek, Discovery is a science vessel, the greatest weapon in Starfleet's service.
I'm afraid I have to agree. At this point I have almost no confidence that they'll be able to tackle this subject with the adequate tact and intelligence. Looking at season one it will more likely be a superficial hodgepodge of hamfisted speechifying and cheap plot twists, all while the writers congratulate themselves in interviews for how brave, progressive, topical and current their writing is.More on-point... however one may feel about this issue philosophically, I have zero confidence in the ability of the current writing staff to do it justice. The very prospect makes me cringe.
That always worked for Kirk.Looking at season one it will more likely be a superficial hodgepodge of hamfisted speechifying and cheap plot twists.
Don't know if it “always worked”. What was bad then is bad now.That always worked for Kirk.
And Picard.
And Sisko.
And Janeway.
And Archer.
Faith and science are far from incompatible and the false dichotomy between the two is based on ignorance as much as are the worst excesses of each. The issue comes from the false premise that each seeks or should seek the same purpose, they don't and whilst trek has commonly come down on the side of science it has done so in terms of favouring science where faith is misapplied.
Science is the (supposedly, but in reality not always) objective process of analysis of that which is testable, that which exists within the framework of the observable universe. It is value free and makes no definitive statements, merely makes provisional hypotheses open to being disproved and reassessed. It is an ongoing process and subject to change, making no statements about what should be, merely what is
Faith has a totally different purpose, it is about that which is not testable and it does assign values. One cannot prove or disprove the existence of god because he/she is by definition outside of the rules of the universe which is his/her creation, outside of that framework of testable processes of which we are a part. Science can have nothing to say here. Religions's role is largely about the values it assigns to behaviours and attitudes and whilst your own values may not be reflected by any given religion that does not detract from the fact that those values are part of religion's purview where science is silent.
Many fail to understand this, hence the perception that the two are (or should be) rival explanatory models.
More on-point... however one may feel about this issue philosophically, I have zero confidence in the ability of the current writing staff to do it justice. The very prospect makes me cringe.
I can live with being that as long as I know facts back me upnarrow-minded disrespectful asshole.
What I'm trying to say is that you can believe in God and scientific truth. It's not mutually exclusive.
Also Science for all of it's gifts has the potential to be as horribly corrupted as religion has been.
Faith and science are far from incompatible... One cannot prove or disprove the existence of god because he/she is by definition outside of the rules of the universe
And what I’m saying is that you can’t reconcile faith and science without giving up parts of faith or science.
I can live with being that as long as I know facts back me up
extremely good for me, yesGood for you.
Again, your definitions are off. Atheism is a lack of something, not an active process. I don’t think about god unless someone forces me to. I don’t believe in god in the same way I don’t believe in invisible pink kangaroos running through the street. One specific random incarnation of an unprovable assertion is as silly as any other. You can vague it down to whatever formless spirituality you want, it’s still pink kangaroos.Personally I am an atheist, but I understand the limitations of science to realise this is every bit as much a faith as any other.
That was Battlestar Galactica. People lost their shit at the end when it turned out God was real and affecting events.Science and Faith would be better. A story line that explores both.
Again, your definitions are off. Atheism is a lack of something, not an active process. I don’t think about god unless someone forces me to. I don’t believe in god in the same way I don’t believe in invisible pink kangaroos running through the street. One specific random incarnation of an unprovable assertion is as silly as any other. You can vague it down to whatever formless spirituality you want, it’s still pink kangaroos.
Gods existence cannot be tested, therefore science cannot comment.
Gods existence can’t be tested because it is an artificial construct that denies examination. You’ve defined it as something that can’t be examined so it can’t be. What you’re basically saying is any fantastic assertion than can’t be tested is valid. That’s just nonsense. And five paragraphs of pointlessly flowery language doesn’t change that.
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