Faith Vs. Science

Nice colours.

There's a mistake in the religeon flow chart at the "get an idea" stage. Muslims believe true religeon is based on Divine revelation rather than speculation on the Divine.

Gentleness and kindness were never a part of anything except that it made it beautiful, and harshness was never a part of anything except that it made it ugly.

Through cheating, stealing, and lying, one may get required results but finally one becomes

Nice chart to base your beliefs on...

Faith on that chart is not always the same thing as Islam.

A lot of people have struggled with science and other religions. When they see another religion fall short, they make the false conclusion that all religions are incompatible.

/Can't believe I gave a serious reply...

"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.

Hi, thanks for your replies!

This is an arguement I too have tried to follow through, but keep failing. The 'get an idea' more specifically means the idea that religion is based on a Divine revelation which occurred many years ago in unknowable circumstances. How does an individual take an old collection of ideas and justify revering them above all overs? Obviously I understand that Islam has a great many important messages which should be heard, but for what reason should someone put other sources of information in lower regard?

You look at the message, the history. Make a judgement call.

If you see truth in it, maybe it is true.

Allah (swt) gave us a mind, intellect. We have not been told to ignore this valuable tool, but to use it.

A lot of people these days have what I call "default answers" to questions on religion and faith - they have heard some cool sounding quote and use it as their answer without really giving it much thought.

That pic also ignores "fact". 1 + 1 = 2. No amount of scientific refining will change that. that is part of the "keep idea forever" stage. Is that faith?

"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.

Salaam

Quote:
How does an individual take an old collection of ideas and justify revering them above all overs?

This was answered by You

But as for this:

Quote:
...Divine revelation which occurred many years ago in unknowable circumstances.

In Islam we have rigourous sciences of transmission and histories of the transmitters to verify the texts/doctrines/rulings we inherit. The letter of the law is traced back to the to the jurist and the spirit is traced back to the Messenger of God SAW.

I'd just like to add that for Muslims, intellect may be the basis or beginnings of faith. However, absolute trust in the truthfulness and timeless perfection of the Messenger of God SAW is the reality of Islamic faith and the basis of our faith being accepted by God SWT.

Gentleness and kindness were never a part of anything except that it made it beautiful, and harshness was never a part of anything except that it made it ugly.

Through cheating, stealing, and lying, one may get required results but finally one becomes

I absolutely agree with you about people having 'default answers' within religious debates. Things like 'how can you even be sure who wrote that book', or 'publishing a book is a social process through which the message is affected and changed' or 'any book written under certain social conditions will no doubt be influenced by them'.

Assuming that 1 + 1 = 2 is a fact which scientific retesting will not change is incorrect. Some marginal theorists work from the idea that 1 + 1 = 1.999, and if their work became more convincing than that currently in play, we'd get the 'revolution' part. This has yet to occur thankfully, but it is not discounted.

Obviously these kind of massive changes cannot occur in religion as it would destabalise the core ideology of divine revelation. Is the main difference between the religious and the secular, that the religious have an ideological belief which they will not compromise and the secular will? Or are both religious and secular people guilty of this?

My coming to Islam has been more like the diagram on the left than the right. I feel that doubt (self-doubt, doubt in what someone is telling me etc) is always important. All evidence that I have come across has, if anything, stregnthened my belief that Islam is the Truth.

But now that I believe that the Qur'an is the word of Allah (swt), should I stop challenging myself? I disagree with this strongly. Of course there are some questions to which there is no satisactory answer available (e.g. WHY create the dinosaurs only to wipe them out?) but as long as these do not conflict with my belief in Islam then they don't really strengthen or weaken my faith.

If something DOES come up that I feel proves Islam false, I guess I have no option but to leave Islam. I mean, what would be the point following a way of life that you know is based on a falsehood?

Don't just do something! Stand there.

Muslims believe there have also been such "revolutions" in religion - A new messenger was sent which gave an updated message.

Before the arrival of the final prophet (saw), every community has been sent a messenger.

PS about that math question, 1 + 1 = 2. It does and always will, not matter what someone else says. 1.00001 + 0.99999999 may equal something else, but 1 + 1 = 2.

"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.

First equation:
0.6+0.7=1.3

Second equation
1.3+1.4+2.7

If you are using something that is very inaccurate to measure the numbers, you may not read decimal places and 'round' the numbers to their nearest integers. Therefore they would read:

First equation:
1+1=1

Second equation
1+1=3

I WIN!!

Don't just do something! Stand there.

Biggrin

"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.

Ya'qub, the reason that doesn't work is that if you rounded down the decimals in the sum, they would amount to 2 either way. If you were being scientific you would also mention that you had rounded down the decimals for an approximate answer.

Faith can be inherited, ie taught, and it can also result from personal experience that isn't testable and scientific. I might observe that I have always been in a communion with a part of myself that I don't understand, and that I don't understand the nature and substance of my perceptions even if it can be shown how they result from brain activity. My precise thoughts are by nature apparent only to myself, and external observations of me could not recreate them. I might also conclude, by way of a personal choice, that rather than let all that crazy inner dialogue go to waste, I will consider that it is a reflection of the process of divine judgement, and I would acknowledge an underlying agnosticism that can only be healthy if I have any commitment to truth.

Faith and science then are quite different things. Science is a process of theorising, testing and creating, whereas faith is a matter of choice to presume a spiritual element in both the known and the unknown. Only a cynic would insist that because scholars have laboured under the improper and inaccurate contentions of the past, eg the world is a flat body at the centre of the universe, those contentions are enshrined in faith, and only a fool would take literally and permanently every statement of fact and every instruction in the holy books. There are religious dogmatists who might appear stupid, just as there are dogmatic atheists who could not prove their assumptions either, and either sort would make a useful straw man.

  • It can never be satisfied, the mind, never. -- Wallace Stevens

'If something DOES come up that I feel proves Islam false, I guess I have no option but to leave Islam. I mean, what would be the point following a way of life that you know is based on a falsehood?'

Now this is very interesting. What would it take to prove beyond reasonable doubt that a religion is false? With a scientific idea it's quite easy to test/retest etc, but religion is very different.

The debate we're getting into regarding maths could get way off the point. However, the fact that it can be debated from various points of view to get various answers (each having a valid contribution to the ephemeral idea of 'fact') illustrates the reflexive nature of science.

'only a fool would take literally and permanently every statement of fact and every instruction in the holy books'

This confuses me. If an element of a holy book is discredited, doesn't this cast doubt on the rest of it? Or at least enough doubt to suggest that it does not contain a monopoly on the truth, and other sources should be given equal consideration when a person is constructing their interpretation of life?

Not in my case, but I'm not Muslim, I'm Jewish. In Jewish tradition, including Orthodox tradition, there have always been both rigid and liberal schools of thought. Generally liberal Hillel vs. strict Shamai, Maimonedes vs. Nachmanides etc. The stricter rabbis have often sought a monopoly, and they have had it within their own following, and excommunicated or otherwise shunned liberal "radical" scholars, but philosophical interpretation is also integral regardless.

I take my cue on religion and science from Norman Lamm, who in turn cites many scholars. His take is that religion and science occupy distinct realms, and do not strive for the same type of truth. One is a matter of spiritual fulfilment while the other deals with empirically demonstrable tests, apparent facts. So I can contextualise. In Islam many Sufis and possibly other schools have also sought a broader understanding of the world and a spiritual connection distinct from rigid and widely understood fact. So you can go ahead and discredit whatever aspects of Torah you like, and I will incorporate that into my understanding of things, but to seriously rock my boat you would have to demonstrate that the sages were liars and people of ill-intent, not that their ideas were either inaccurate or only temporarily applicable.

You seem to be fairly smug about things. Whereas I doubt there is a single logical or scientific idea you might have that I would wish to contest, I can certainly theorise as to the existence of a parallel and Godly realm of which you know nothing. Why shouldn't I? It is no more relevant to science than my favourite colour, or my preferred code of standards and ethics, roughly equivalent to the golden rule. Do you have a code of ethics? Why not be a nihilist? Why value life at all, if you have no sense of existence for a greater cause?

  • It can never be satisfied, the mind, never. -- Wallace Stevens

Quote:

Now this is very interesting. What would it take to prove beyond reasonable doubt that a religion is false? With a scientific idea it's quite easy to test/retest etc, but religion is very different.

The principal of Falsification (i.e. Popper's Philosophy of Science) is laid-down in the Qur'an.

If we find one verse which contradicts either another part of the Qur'an or something that is proven by Science, then we discredit the whole thing.

Chapter 4 Verse 82: "Will they not, then, try to understand this Qur’an? Had it issued from any but God, they would surely have found in it many a contradiction!"

If there is JUST ONE mistake, then it proves that NONE of it is from God.

Christians and Jews don't have this problem (is it a problem?), because they do not believe that the Bible or Torah is free from corruption (or so I think); but it is a fundamental belief in Islam that the Quran has not been changed since it came down to Muhammad (pbuh).

Don't just do something! Stand there.

"Ya'qub" wrote:
Christians and Jews don't have this problem (is it a problem?), because they do not believe that the Bible or Torah is free from corruption (or so I think)

Very wrong Ya'qub.

  • It can never be satisfied, the mind, never. -- Wallace Stevens

But historians have pretty much proved that they have been changed! But even non-Muslim historians accept that, even if the Qur'an is not the unchanged Word of God, it is unquestionably the unchanged word of Muhammad (pbuh).

Don't just do something! Stand there.

I think they agree with errors due to translation, but not in actual spirit. As with all translations there is a little of the translators interpretation that will come though, which may not be the best interpretation.

But followers of such faiths will have to confirm - that is my understanding.

"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.

The Torah was written in Hebrew and the Jewish consensus has always been it remains unchanged. Translations are obviously not the same thing. Stop fantasising. If you want me to find scholars who dispute the authenticity of the Qur'an I'm sure that's also quite possible. As for my own opinions, I keep them to myself, but I had to correct you on the Jewish understanding.

  • It can never be satisfied, the mind, never. -- Wallace Stevens

May be possible, but they would not be considered Muslim by the mainstream community.

I was not aware of that about the Torah. I had assumed it was written in some other language, as the New Testament is purported to have been and then translated into its current form.

"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.

Sorry if I offended you. It is just all my Jewish friends have told me this.

Maybe I misunderstood, and they meant transmission/translation errors instead.

There aren't any 3000 year old Torahs available so its impossible to check.

Don't just do something! Stand there.

lol

No way dude (and I'm not offended). If they're [url= (Reform and Liberal) Jews[/url] - to which I don't object - they're observing a relatively recent and heavily assimilated brand of Judaism that any Orthodox scholar will find highly objectionable. They don't observe laws to the same level of stringency and the movement was founded just 200 years ago. If you have any Orthodox Jewish friends ask them what any Orthodox rabbi worth his salt will say. I don't deride Progressive Judaism, and I even entertain my sympathies (bear in mind that I have sympathies also for agnosticism and atheism, that's just me), but it is no exaggeration to say it is a type of observance that to an Orthodox observer looks like no observance at all.

The 2,000 year old Orthodox belief, from which Reform Judaism sought "to emancipate itself", is that every letter, highly decorated, in the Torah was transcribed numerous times within each lifetime, every drop of ink drawn out perfectly, and that the Torah is totally unabrogated. An imperfectly rendered Torah is not Kosher and either it has to be buried or if possible an incorrect rendering must be scratched out and corrected.

  • It can never be satisfied, the mind, never. -- Wallace Stevens

Quote:

Yaqub, maybe this is totally off the point. But can you briefly tell us your "story"?
And even some non-Muslims believe that Islam is a fairly scientific religion, it confirms or is confirmed by a lot of the established science, such as the Earth being an ostrich egg shape. No established science contradicts Islam.

Chin up, mate! Life's too short.

"Courage" wrote:
Yaqub, maybe this is totally off the point. But can you briefly tell us your "story"?

It can be found [url= (about two thirds of the way down).

Don't just do something! Stand there.

I know, but if I didn't want to know just a little bit more, I wouldn't've asked would I?

Chin up, mate! Life's too short.

Thanks, mate, that's very enlightening. It seems strange that many people who're born Muslim seem to take it for granted.

Chin up, mate! Life's too short.