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What Tyson was pointing out was that, at one time, the Muslim world was the cradle of civilization. They were the pioneers of science and technology. They were the primary discoverers of knowledge. Then they decided that science and mathematics was the work of the Devil, and they experienced a technological regression from which they have never recovered. Now, theirs is a primitive civilization.
[url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_Golden_Age[/url]There is no consensus among historians about what caused the end of the golden age of scientific thought int he Islamic world. they certainly did not, however, somehow decide it was the "work of the Devil."
Corolinth wrote:
Today, there are more Muslims in the world than Jews and Christians combined, yet they represent an embarrassingly small minority of people making scientific discoveries.
No, there are [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_religious_groups]not more muslims than Jews and Christians combined.[/url]
Strike two. Try to get your basic facts straight before you start pontificating.
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A war on science is not an unfounded fear.
Yes, it pretty much is.
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The billboard is representative of the push to have intelligent design taught in science classes.
Here is a rather excellent explanation of why ID is not science. Suffice to say, the point isn't up for debate, least of all by any of you. Furthermore, the judge who wrote that received death threats from angry Christians. At the end of the day, to the religious contingent really doesn't care that ID isn't science. They simply wanted to remove science and use the classroom to push their religion onto the masses, and are angry that someone put a stop to it.
First of all, I don't think anyone here would seriously contend that ID is science.
Second, even if we were, you do not tell us what is and is not up for debate by any of us. Just because you went out and got an engineering degree on your second try does not mean you are now in a position to talk down to everyone else here on science in general. If you want to talk at length about electrical waveforms, and the difficulties of making smartphones more durable, you go right ahead. However, quite a few of us have degrees in science, and even if that science is not as mathematically rigorous as engineering, we still understand quite well what is and is not science. You're an engineer, you're not Neihls Bohr.
Third, just because some heavily fundamentalist groups have pushed heavily for Creationism and ID in a classroom does not somehow establish that these are what's responsible for any shortage of technically qualified people in the U.S. In fact, despite your carrying on about muslims, I'll point out that 2 of the nations cited as common donors of technical people - Pakistan and India - have very large muslim populations.
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With regards to the statement about not caring why 85% of the Academy rejects God, but wanting to know wht 15% doesn't - that is the more interesting question. We know why 85% of the Academy rejects God. They don't need it. God is not answering any unknown questions for them. They don't look up at the sky at night and say, "Wow, I wonder what that is. I think it's angels being born." They look up and say, "Wow! Those are balls of gas, mostly hydrogen, undergoing nuclear fusion millions of miles away! Some of them are so far away that they don't exist anymore, and I'm just now seeing their light!"
So in other words, 85% of the Academy rejects God for reasons that have nothing whatsoever to do with religion.
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Meanwhile, a lot of religious people have this belief that they must reject science for God. They look at science as though it's the work of the Devil attempting to lure them away from their Bibles. They look at evolution, at the Big Bang, and all they see is the Devil trying to lure them away from Jesus. Most don't want to admit it, because you can't stand around in a society full of computers, automobiles, and airplanes and say science is the work of the Devil without being treated like a complete and utter lunatic. Nonetheless, when it all comes down to brass tacks, that idea is at the core of the religious objection to science: It is the work of the Devil trying to lure us away from God.
Except that most religious people who reject Evolution don't also reject other aspects of science. This is complete nonsense; what's really hilarious about it is that Creationists tend to say things so absurd that they are almost stawmen of themselves. Yet you've managed to take an already-caricature viewpoint, and strawman it to an exponentially greater degree of absurdity! That's really pretty entertaining.
You have the same problem as Tyson: you want to take the most absurdly extreme religious viewpoints, strawman them, then pretend as if there's some sort of justifiable reason to fear this boogyman of religion. Like I pointed out already, science has won over religion. We are not, lawsuits aside, teaching pseudoscience in the schools. The sort of people that want to shield their kids from scientific knowledge are only going to render themselves irrelevant. Furthermore, they are not going to engage in any meaningful "war on science" because the
majority of religious people do not want Creationism or ID in school any more than you do.
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Now, we have this 15% of the Academy that looks up at the sky and has the exact same thought about hydrogen undergoing fusion that their non-religious colleagues have, yet they still see God. They know full well that the universe is the result of a complex interaction of physical laws that does not require their God to exist, or any god at all for that matter, but they still see the glory and majesty of God revealed to them in their telescopes and microscopes. Many of them feel a deeper connection to God in their laboratories than they do in their churches, because in their laboratories they discover new aspects of God that were previously unknown to humanity.
Exactly where do you get off speaking for these people as to where they do and do not feel closer to God?
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That 15% is the interesting topic to study. Why do they see God when other religious people see the Devil?
Since "other religious people" do not see "the Devil" in "Science", we can leave this question aside.
Some religious people may see "the Devil" in the Theory of Evolution in particular, but very, very few reject science of other kinds. Yes, yes, this is a weird cognitive dissonance and makes no sense. We all get that. It's absurd enough without you exaggerating and strawmanning it.