When I first quoted the study early in the thread I did add the proviso that when comparing to Europe we would need to take the increased secularism in Europe into consideration.
As far as disciplines go, the study does differentiate between Natural and Social Scientists and the questions were put to members of the American Association for the Advancement of Science which is a reputable association which should not have any innate pro-religious stance amongst it's membership.
Another study makes much the same conclusions...
we also have to be careful on how we frame the question and what definition and context we are putting on the question.
I would support the fact that Scientists are less likely to be religious and less likely to hold a belief in a particular definition of God, however that is some way from stating that Scientists are mostly Atheists or that as Bhavv keeps repeating that Intelligence leads to Atheism. Because the statistics simply do not hold those propositions to be true. I would (with some reservation) be more likely to agree with the statement that Increased Intelligence leads to Agnosticism.
This is interesting, because I too know a disproportionate amount of scientists (I live with two for a start) and when asked the question "Do you believe in God" invariably the answer is "By what definition" and rightly so.
If we look at your examples....If we define God as being the Flying Spaghetti Monster or A Pink Elephant in Space then we can determine a probable likelihood to some degree of certainty.....this is because the proposition has specific definitions as to what we are considering to be true....and as such the probability would lean toward an atheist position. On this I think we can agree.
However, if we defined God as being the Universe itself with, or even without, a sentience that we cannot currently determine then the probability is somewhat more difficult to ascertain...so the answer to the proposition would lean toward the agnostic position....we simply do not know.
This is the problem with trying to apply scientific methodology to an unfalsifiable proposition...so much depends on how that proposition is defined and how many assumptions can be made as to it's likelihood. This is why Science and by implication the professional opinion (as opposed to a personal opinion) of Scientists logically and rationally should follow an agnostic approach to the question "Is there a God".
This should be the default position until such time as a falsifiable definition of God can be universally applied.
It may make some sort of sense, but where is the evidence for how it occured? There isn't, conjecture on both sides of the fence.
Christianity and science are not orthogonal belief systems.
There is a lot of evidence for the Big Bang, read some astrophysics journals to find scientific evidence.
The problem is also that a great many scientists were indoctrined as christians and in adulthood never felt the need to stop being a christian and stop attending church, even though they beleive entirely in science.
So asking American scientists if they beleive in a God wont get you very interesting answers. The only true test would be to get tens of thousands of babies, lock them up in a sealed black-box without outside contact and raise them as scientists with no knowledge of outside religous beleifs. I doubt very many of them on their own accord would develop a natural beleif in a God when they learn scientific explanations for the universe.
Not quite what Biohazard asked, what he asked for was evidence on how it occured not if it occured. The how is pretty much an unknown.
Castiel, out of interest what's your background? You make some interesting points and you seem to have done loads of research etc Your posts are very interesting! And can you please explain to me how science and spirituality are compatible? In my opinion spirituality means that you accept that we have souls. Science would suggest than anything representing a soul would simply be brain function, purely electrical and chemical signals.
That’s akin to pulling the race card though, someone can’t put forward a decent argument so call it racismYeah it’s not the same thing but it’s on the same principal.
Nobody will ever know exactly how our Universe came about from the big bang out of nothingness although there are a number of theories all of which are quite sound but existing evidence and observed evidence suggests it did. We even know that there are particles that appear and disappear from thin air randomly and then there are particles that can pass through all known matter. Those aren’t just theories, those are observed things.
Just out of curiosity, which religion?.Just been chatting to this american guy at work from Denevr who is very very relgious.
I think it does matter in many ways, without evidence we have to rely upon what others say.It doesnt mater how any such evidence is presented.
So when evolutionary scientists claim something came fom nothing does that make it scientific or is faith involved?.They are both well educated intelligent people (well, my sister is anyway), anything that cant be explained is explained as a test of faith.
I don't think any human can, the same way no evolutionary scientist can prove we evolved from none living matter or that there was absolutely nothing and then by random chemical accidents all of a sudden there was something.Prove to me how miracles, and such miraculous childbirths are real.
As much as I am loathed to re-enter this thread...
Kedge, evolution explains biodiversity, which is the diversity of life we see before us today.
It has nothing to do with the origins of life. Evolution doesn't suggest an answer for this - we don't know. However, it does suggest that one of the earliest of life forms was a single called organism and that other life forms eventually evolved from this.
It's not life, they stress, but it certainly gives the science community a whole new data set to chew on. The researchers, at the Scripps Research Institute, created molecules that self-replicate and even evolve and compete to win or lose.
With Kedge you are literally wasting your time, he has been told this so many times that for him to still make the same mistake means he must be deliberately mispresenting it.
Not quite what Biohazard asked, what he asked for was evidence on how it occured not if it occured. The how is pretty much an unknown.
We are born as babys not people. When was the last time you heard a baby born crying out "i'm an atheist" or "i am gay"Athiesm is the absence of belief, it's the default state that we are born into as people.
No,the how it occured is also relaively understood. The whole physical process is what astrophysistis study and search for evidence for. No on searches for proof that it hapened because it is accepted by the scientific community that it did happen.
I expect what you want to ask is the WHY question? Science doesn't try to anser why the univers was created, only the how.
Maybe you could start a topic on this?, i for one would be very interested to learn this "scientific fact".My knowledge that there is no god is based on scientific fact.