realpaladin
Master Poster
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2007
- Messages
- 2,585
The questions that physics raises today where the same questions that gave life the mythologies of the human imagination, which would then make them metaphors of the New Age of Science.
No they were not. They might resemble them because of the wording used to formulate them, but the connotations and background is wholly different.
Not really.
Indeed, the theory of physics during the 1700's was rooted into honouring the Church, th Vatican most prominently. Because of this, when physical theorists noted there seems to be a beginning to time, the Vatican was most pleased with it, because it corresponded to religious genesis.
However, going further back than this, the Ancient Greeks where the real first physicists of the world (and the race unto which we got the name ''atom'' for an indivisible unit, even though we know this is not true now) - and most of the physicists then developed physics on the foundation of theology, not so much the story of the Divinity we call the testiments, but rather inclusively studying their philosophical contexts, and as any educated person will know, the roots of philosophy and religion stem even deeper.
So let me try this again.
But first, what school teaches you that the Greeks are a race instead of a culture?
Your abstract reasoning is lacking. Because I asked you why, today, we still should look unto science as we do unto religion.
You respond with some history, but fail to finish it.
I say that it would be my argument, but you fail to see my logical conclusion;
"But because Science is a methodology rather than a belief, it could break free from it's religious roots and, at first co-exist, and finally refute it's religious roots.
Had it been a mere belief system, it would have stayed where it was."
Capiche kiddo?
So, at what point did you make it clear?