Rufus21 wrote:
bluethread wrote:
History, philosophy, mathematics, anthropology, etc.
Social sciences arent science?
Correct, they use science, among other things, to make assumptions regarding the past and predictions about the future.
bluethread wrote:
That was not the question. You were just asking where science doesn't work.
From the original post:
Rufus21 wrote:
So what are some situations where science does not work but religion does?
Post #5:
Rufus21 wrote:
So can religion be used to fill in any of these areas where science stumbles?
Post #24:
Rufus21 wrote:does anyone have any examples of situations where science doesn't work? Examples of religion finding answers where science isn't applicable?
I've often heard people claim that their religion offers answers that science cannot, and that science is not capable of handling certain subjects as well as religion can. I
am simply asking for evidence of these claims.
I stand corrected on the scope of the thread. I believe such people are pitting a methodology against a philosophy, which is not appropriate. I say this because I presume you mean theistic philosophy, when you use the term "religion". However, I view religion is those practices that follow from a philosophy, not the philosophy itself.
bluethread wrote:
I thought you created that thread so that it would not muddy the waters on this thread. I guess that only applies to others muddying the waters.
Whether or not life has a specific meaning is tangential. I only mentioned it here because someone claimed it was a topic that science could not answer but religion could. I remain unconvinced.[/quote]
Well, it is not just the meaning of life, but many philosophical questions, specifically regarding the past and the future, can not be answered by science alone.