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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!asuvax!chnews!sedona!bhoughto
- From: bhoughto@sedona.intel.com (Blair P. Houghton)
- Newsgroups: sci.physics
- Subject: Re: Number of "religious scientists"
- Date: 22 Dec 1992 00:38:55 GMT
- Organization: Intel Corp., Chandler, Arizona
- Lines: 27
- Message-ID: <1h5o2vINNm7c@chnews.intel.com>
- References: <1350@kepler1.rentec.com> <1gttdfINNhk0@cat.cis.Brown.EDU> <1992Dec19.015057.28603@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: stealth.intel.com
-
- In article <1992Dec19.015057.28603@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> crb7q@kelvin.seas.Virginia.EDU (Cameron Randale Bass) writes:
- >In article <1gttdfINNhk0@cat.cis.Brown.EDU> ST202194@brownvm.brown.edu () writes:
- >>physicists are really saying, I believe, is that the laws of physics
- >>equate to God." - G. Burbridge, in paper called Modern Cosmology: the
- >>Harmonious and the Discordant Facts.
- >
- > I hope this was made in a poetical rather than a serious vein.
- > Otherwise, I suspect that large numbers of physicists would
- > disagree with Mr. Burbridge, God apparently being unnecessary
- > within physics in particular and science in general.
-
- They might disagree that physicists are really saying this,
- but on reflection they might actually say it, since God is
- better suited as such a metaphor than as some extraphysical
- director of some suprareality.
-
- God "exists" as a metaphor in all religions that don't
- actually still believe in the anthropomorphistic deities in
- the mode of the Greeks, Christians, etc. Using God here to
- encompass the totality of logic both discovered and
- undiscovered tends to make science a religion of rigid
- bounds; and religion a science of dubious quality. God
- isn't necessarily unnecessary as much as it is an
- energetic, but not political or philosophical, nonentity.
-
- --Blair
- "I even spelled it rihgt."
-