What "we dont know" DOES mean, however, that those who use science to disprove "God" or a Divine will or force had a hand in creation are also
being illogical.
We can say with fair certainty that the evidence does not support the literal Biblical idea of a creation in 6 days, around 6000 years ago, an Earth
will all of its life forms in their current state.
We can NOT say with scientific certainty, that there is no Divine being or God. We can say that we know that particular story isnt true, in the way
humans define truth.
Some of the criticisms of scientists by creationists are valid. (notice I say scientists, not science)
Many of the scientific theories presented here, are being stated by the presenter as if they were facts. (Such as life being created by energy coming
in contact with amino acids) I knew of the Miller/Uray experiments,
www.chem.duke.edu...
and the work that followed, but that work does not give us a justified "absolute knowledge" claim. It gives us a hypothesis that has a good chance
of bearing fruit, but it is NOT a "proven fact." Thus, I said the truth, "we dont know."
The reason biblical literalists have so much ammunition is because some foolish lovers of science are, in fact, doing what they are accused of by some
creationists. Turning science into a religion by introducing "faith" and "belief" where it by definition cannot be.
The one thing science can consistently tell us is that we dont know. And what we dont know, and that things we thought we knew, we didnt. It gives
us operational "knowledge" our best current hypothesis, but where it strays too far into the realm of "facts" and "absolute truth," it is going
beyond its bounds. It is good to remember that most of the science of history, has been proven wrong by now. And we have no reason to "believe"
that most of what we today call a knowledge will not tomorrow be the butt of scientific jokes. As Karl Popper said, it is hard to "prove" a thing
because you need to conduct the experiment an infinite amount of times to show that on the 10,000,000,000 to the 100 power time that you wont get a
different result. We also can not definitively rule out "hidden variables" which could well include "God willing."
This of course does not mean that science has no merit, no validity, and no use. It does. But we shouldnt over state our case, either. Science may
never have this definition of facts;
www.wordreference.com...
fact
a concept whose truth can be proved; "scientific hypotheses are not facts"
but we do have these "facts,"
fact
a statement or assertion of verified information about something that is the case or has happened; "he supported his argument with an impressive
array of facts"
There are long and boring volumes of philosophy on epistemology that debate whether anything ever can be "known" in an absolute way. Honestly, we
dont even know that for certain. The debate rolls on.
Onioncloud chids religion for criticizing science for not knowing what it hasnt yet found the technology to demonstrate, but science is highly
critical of religious or mystic claims about the nature of "what is" or the universe because they have not done the experiments. Science may yet
serve to prove some of the mystic claims. It seems to me both sides are accusing the other of the same thing. Neither of us know, but claim absolute
right to say the "truth."
What makes science preferable to me over some versions of religion is that at its heart, in its purest form, science knows it doesnt know, and keeps
looking.