Hi John..maybe shooting down my idea wasn't the best way to put it, after all I did say i didn't understand the rest of your post. But if my firewalking and belief that I can just go do it based on "belief" generated by my knowledge of the process isn't an example of science being a belief then...
I tried the visionary approach, with the guy who envisions space travel based on his current knowledge of,,well, fireworks and following that "belief" or vision by encouraging his son to experiment. If that's not how science can called a belief then....
I'm out of ideas...
Except the one that says that in order to accept the idea that science is a belief, then one has to already subscribe to another belief system that one feels trumps science in the quest to determine what the "meaning of life" really is.
I don't subscribe to any belief system myself. Sure there's a bit of appeal to a higher power going on sometimes in my life. It's pretty minor though, like throwing the odd coin in a wishing well, or crossing my fingers but what I'm really doing is appealing to luck.
I'm looking at science as THE way to explain the way the world works by default but I can't say I'm comfortable calling it any sort of belief simply because science admits when it's wrong. Sometimes, science gets caught by other science and proved wrong, remember those cold fusion guys ? but in the long run, the bad science gets overrun by the good science.
I like that
Belief never seems to change, even in the face of overwhelming evidence and I'm rather concerned about this. Why is belief so intent on asserting it's mastery over the world as we know it yet at the same time. refusing to demonstrate this mastery when asked to?
I've heard a lot of arguments about this, from the "presence of doubters" to "the universe doesn't feel you should know these things" to "your motivations for wanting to access this information are immoral" that I'm siding with the idea that these higher powers don't want to demonstrate their prowess because.....they can't.
I can understand belief playing a vital role in some-one's emotional happiness, and I understand the idea of belief being a motivator to bring about change so I'll give a nod in it's direction for having some value to some people. It's when it crosses the line into territory that knowledge has proven to be false, and continually asserts it's dominance over knowledge that belief can get....well...annoying at times.
After all, didn't the Bible teach a geocentric universe ? only to be proven, centuries later, to be false. Now most Christians go with the round earth idea, contrary to the Scriptures but they didn't adopt this idea easily. There was a lot of kicking and screaming IIRC, but knowledge won out in the end, didn't it ?