How, 23 people is the largest Sample I can provide for people who obtained the Priest hood in the Jesuit order in 2001, as that is how many people achieved this. The only possible way for me to provide a larger group would be to go back many years, but they are no longer the same situation. (depending on how many years I go back, the generations would change. Tell me what you would see as a reasonable size for the sample) a Larger search for Jesuit priests would not in all likely hood do much good, as in any World wide organisation it will have different branches, (For Example a Science sections, Theological sections, Historical Sections) and so a search may just turn up one particualr area of expertse while a review of people entering the Order provides a more balenced cross section I feel.Darth Wong wrote:Actually nothing I have ever heard on Tielhard de Chardin has ever pointed to his Science credatials being unusual among the Jesuit order, they are quite the normal, while he was a very clever man, reaching high honours and achievements, he stands out among Jesuit's not for his Science, but for his religos works. As a Scientist he is a good example of many Jesuit's as a Theolgian he was... unusual (banned from publishing his Theolgical works by the Jesuit's well banned is a little strong they asked him not, and he didn't after his death they where published. His most famous being the 'Phenonenom of man') Sort of several hours of searching to find a list of Jesuit achievements, (I did see a link to a list of their Nobel Prizes on an earlier search but can't find it again,) or an even longer search when all I have to go is 'Jesuit Order', I presented a person I came across three years ago, and whoose works have always stuck in my mind since thenSkelron wrote:You seem to be missing the point, which is that you are talking about anecdotal evidence rather than broad trends. You can't address that point by bringing up another anecdotal example.Ahh you want a Hardcore Theotician, how would a Palentolgist, involved in the finding of the Peking Man suit you?
Your entire sample size is 23 people? This proves my point for me.
Nope. I was saying that a scientific approach is incompatible with religion, and that there is a general inverse correlation between scientific approach and religious conviction. People who merely have a "belief" in science are simply replacing one god with another, rather than comprehending the method. Such people are very easily swayed to religion, if they ever left it in the first place.
[/Quote] sorry you are correct to pull me up on my use of the word belief, I did not mean to imply that science was a Religion... Or a Belief system... well actually why not I've been defending religion while you've been attacking it as unrational while science is rational, ((True)) but so does that mean Scientists are? I'll post a seperate post on this after this post.
Who said he knows very few religious individuals? He knows many religious people (like he. he married a Christian, which forcibly introduces you into a community of Christians), but not among his professional colleagues. That is the point I was making. In my own university class, I did not know anyone who believed in the authority of divine prophets or the accuracy of Christian myth.that it happens that Stephen Harking knows very few traditionaly religous individuals is anyhow irrelavent.
[/Quote] Maybe I should have been clearer, but I assumed you would not nitpick, it was obvious in the context of what you wrote I think that I was responding to your post, that he knew very few Traditionlly religious individuals from his Elite top echeleon of science friends. Still however you have avoided saying Atheist, although much of my evidence is from my experiances in life as a Catholic, I have always been debating about religion in general which is not limited to Christianity, it is possible to be religious and not Christian, or Traditional you need to prove Atheist, so you far you havn't done this.
[
Which Church did he go too, I need to find it out, as in my entire life I've never found Church to be a place to pick up Girls, (and I need all the help I get in that department:lol:) I have found a lot of people very nervous in society at times, however, not to admit they go Church, and to come up with excuses for why they go. Do you still know talk to this Study Partner, does he no longer go to Church, assuming he has married since then?My study partner went to church sometimes. He said he went because it was a good place to pick up girls.
In what way do you mean devoutly religious? I don't want to seem like I'm on a high Horse, but how is devotly religous meassured, regular attendence at mass? being a member of a certain faith, to simply say devotly religious is too open ended I need to know by what you judge this before I can answer. (I'm not trying to be awkward but my first instinct was that you ment Bible-bashing Fundy Crazies, then I had my doubts, so I need to be sure before I can answer)My science-aware and religious acquaintances have a funny habit of not intersecting, and the demographics bear this trend out; the most devoutly religious parts of the United States have distinctly below-average education levels.
See my earlier point, none of this proves non religions person at the very most you prove they are not believers in one-God. If you can honestly say that he was saying they where Atheists come out and say it, if you can't admit it, I'm not trying to find a Loop hole, I am asking you to be honest, and straight forward. The words we use, and what we mean behind them when we say it are a key focus in Philosphy, they are important, if your evidence says Atheist then it means Atheist if it says something else however, no matter how you choose to read it, it may mean something else.Perhaps I should have anticipated ths kind of loophole-finding retort, and used more careful language. OK, I will be more specific: he said that almost no scientists believe in a personal God. It is an unfortunate and typical symptom of the constant marketing campaign inherent to Christianity that many scientists' words have been twisted to make it appear as if they do.