Rick Blaine
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On the contrary, it takes no faith whatsoever. The rational place confidence in research and sound reason, not faith, because they are justified in this by more than ample supporting evidence. Faith is required only when supporting evidence is lacking or, worse yet, when counter evidence is mounting.Maj.Nick Danger said:It takes a tremendous amount of faith for me to believe many of the assumptions made by some "scientists" through out history.
They would (and do) seek quite the opposite, to prove, affirm and support or uphold the validity of such experience. That is what science does, by by presentation of evidence.Maj.Nick Danger said:
Mankind's all too fallable wisdom and science can never disprove what I and many others have experienced...
Evidence that is reasonable, replicable and that provides theoretical explanation of phenomena. A phenomena that is exactly the sort of occurrence (or circumstance, or fact) perceptible by the senses, as you are describing.
Maj.Nick Danger said:...could hope to quell my wonder and curiosity at this awe-inspiring and eternal universe in which we live.
There is an appetite for wonder, and isn't true science well qualified to feed it?
It's often said that people 'need' something more in their lives than just the material world. There is a gap that must be filled. People need to feel a sense of purpose. Well, not a BAD purpose would be to find out what is already here, in the material world, before concluding that you need something more. How much more do you want? Just study what is, and you'll find that it already is far more uplifting than anything you could imagine needing.
You don't have to be a scientist -- you don't have to play the bunsen burner -- in order to understand enough science to overtake your imagined need and fill that fancied gap. Science needs to be released from the lab into the culture.
Richard Dawkins