I don't believe science as whole is directly incompatible with religion. Both are too broad to label. Some forms of religion reject scientific explanation of our creation completely, and some scientists hate religion, religiously.
For example a scientist may believe in the big bang model and believe life on Earth evolved over millions of years, but beyond that, they may believe that a God created the big bang. It would be ignorant to say that the big bang was *not* created by God. It's certainly logical to assume that beyond the incompressible barrier lies God. It's also logical to assume beyond that lies nothing but pure science, no intelligence involved, no higher being. As science nor religion can prove it either way, neither of them can begin to touch base on anything beyond the beginning of the universe. The lines between religion and science blur.
Isn't one of the most fundamental scientific particles that is rumoured to be the building blocks of our universe, named by scientists as the God particle or something?
For example a scientist may believe in the big bang model and believe life on Earth evolved over millions of years, but beyond that, they may believe that a God created the big bang. It would be ignorant to say that the big bang was *not* created by God. It's certainly logical to assume that beyond the incompressible barrier lies God. It's also logical to assume beyond that lies nothing but pure science, no intelligence involved, no higher being. As science nor religion can prove it either way, neither of them can begin to touch base on anything beyond the beginning of the universe. The lines between religion and science blur.
Isn't one of the most fundamental scientific particles that is rumoured to be the building blocks of our universe, named by scientists as the God particle or something?

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