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yes. it does. sometimes a question has to be asked.
yes. it does. sometimes a question has to be asked.
To Xenon: It's like you took the words right out of my mouth. I can so relate to your post. I, too, was involved deeply in the sciences (my career)...but then over time I expanded my understanding of 'everything' through entering the metaphysics realm. And yes, to comprehend God and reality, one has to be born extremely perceptive -- of your own sensory experiences AND experiences beyond the 5 senses. Take the Myers-Briggs personality test - you probably would score as an "INFP"? (just a guess)I started my own journey from a scientific point of view.
Big Einstein fan.
Like him, I was looking for what ties everything together. The highest form of energy.
It wasn't until I made the jump from physics to metaphysics that I understood.
You can't involve yourself in metaphysics if you don't have a very extended range of perception. I was born that way, so the journey for me was very rewarding and continues to pay benefits to this day.
To know what God is has no dependency on thinking. The power of discrimination is the only real important element of that.
It is the ability to FEEL that reveals "God".
Beyond the 5 senses. Beyond the mind which processes that input.
If you do it correctly, all of creation becomes your body.
x
Is this in response to my post??
Here's my reasoning:
My understanding of God is reality as we know it as well as a beyond that can't be proven or disproven, so the latter does not exist for the purpose of this conversation. To better understand God, one would have to better understand reality. To better understand reality, one would have to understand scientific concepts and methods. Therefore, when science proves something I understood wrong, my understanding of God was wrong and has to be corrected. Does this make sense?
yeah.
I started my own journey from a scientific point of view.
Big Einstein fan.
Like him, I was looking for what ties everything together. The highest form of energy.
It wasn't until I made the jump from physics to metaphysics that I understood.
You can't involve yourself in metaphysics if you don't have a very extended range of perception. I was born that way, so the journey for me was very rewarding and continues to pay benefits to this day.
To know what God is has no dependency on thinking. The power of discrimination is the only real important element of that.
It is the ability to FEEL that reveals "God".
Beyond the 5 senses. Beyond the mind which processes that input.
If you do it correctly, all of creation becomes your body.
x
Oops, just confused which question you were saying yes to.
I don't see the contradiction. If anything, corrections made to a religious belief by scientific rigor seem like they have the potential to strengthen the belief in the end, as long as the two are melded thoughtfully. Thoughtful, principled belief seems central to solid religious faith.
I think the key to incorporating religion and science would simply be humility, that is an acceptance that you're likely to be wrong about a number of things - including your religious beliefs. Given this, I'd really answer an unqualified yes to your title question.
And I agree with Ebola - from what I've heard, the rates of religious belief among scientists is roughly the same as with the general population.
Really? Wikipedia cites a poll of American "non-industrial scientists", showing just under half claiming some sort of religious faith. This poll would seem to support a 'some do, some don't' trend, when it comes to scientists and religion.
Here's my reasoning:
My understanding of God is reality as we know it as well as a beyond that can't be proven or disproven, so the latter does not exist for the purpose of this conversation. To better understand God, one would have to better understand reality. To better understand reality, one would have to understand scientific concepts and methods. Therefore, when science proves something I understood wrong, my understanding of God was wrong and has to be corrected. Does this make sense?
Of course I'm assigning something more to it. That's my way of giving life meaning and how I express the connectedness of the knowledge. One learns about God by learning about laptops. One learns about God by studying migration patterns of arctic terns.
Wouldn't trivializing God in that aspect also trivialize reality by association? Maybe I'm assigning meaning to reality rather than trivializing God.
And yes. We may understand all of what has been lain before us and become the Deus ex Machina ourselves. But I doubt we'll be as we are now.
A simplification of the model but imagine you have 2 different perspectives, the non-dual self and the relative self. The relative self/ego ranks and operates on distinctions of opposites( good, evil ). The non-dual self grasps all things equally as expressions of Spirit. Every part reflecting the qualities of the whole from this view.Fair point about asking if I am trivializing reality. I think I was trying to express the idea that we find some aspects of reality more significant and important than others. Also... and maybe this belongs on another thread... what about those aspects of reality that we find repulsive and evil?
In Judaism and probably other traditions there is this idea of being co-creator. God created man so man could be as God. This takes on particular significance in the present day context, where the non-dual All is seen as unfolding/evolving Spirit.Or that, if we have free will, we are continuously creating aspects of reality; are we also thereby creating parts of God?
MDAO said:Really? Wikipedia cites a poll of American "non-industrial scientists", showing just under half claiming some sort of religious faith. This poll would seem to support a 'some do, some don't' trend, when it comes to scientists and religion.
A) Who qualifies as a 'scientist'? It seems very arbitrary that the cutoff would be defined as "non-industrial". I have a hard time seeing an engineer as less of a scientist than a professor of Evolutionary Psychoneurosociobiology. As a budding medical doctor, I see myself as a scientist full stop. But I've been told, even here, 'that doesn't count', because I'm not a producer of research.
B) What qualifies as religious faith? My first instinct would be to set the bar very low: 'Are you open to the existence of ANYTHING supernatural?' But even something so seemingly clear-cut is problematic, because it's likely many people would answer 'yes' to this question, but who would feel wholly uninterested in the spiritual, at the same time. Each person's faith, or lack thereof, is unique to that person, and a function of his unique way of placing himself in the world.