Yes. According to recent polls, about 45-50% of scientists believe in God. Through the microscope and other forms of research, we see vast detail and harmonious complexity, and there are many scientists who understand this as pointing to the wisdom of God.
for science it uses cretion and finds out about creation. it also has a difrfent story from how the world started in another story but bascily they are related in away
Science and religion both seek to explain the world around us, but they operate in different ways. Science uses evidence and experimentation to understand the natural world, while religion often involves faith and belief in the supernatural. Some people find that science and religion can complement each other, while others see them as fundamentally incompatible. Ultimately, how they are related depends on individual perspectives and interpretations.
The conflict between science and religion in 19th century was about the creation accounts.
Science does not study religion. As Stephen J. Gould says, science and religion operate, or ought to operate, in quite distinct magisteria. Science is the systematic study of the natural world, while theology is the systematic study of religion. Of course, if we regard theology as a science, then theology is the systematic study of religion and therefore of God's creation.
That it, and we, exist.
Religion vs Science Creation vs Big Bang My claim is that the electricians came first because when God created world, there was allready light.
Glenn Gates Cole has written: 'Creation and science' -- subject(s): Bible, Bible and science, Creation, Criticism, interpretation, Religion and science
Frank Lewis Marsh has written: 'Evolution, creation and science' -- subject(s): Religion and science, Evolution, Creation
Sjoerd Lieuwe Bonting has written: 'Mens, chaos, verzoening' -- subject(s): Life, Religion and science, Theodicy 'Creation and double chaos' -- subject(s): Chaos (Christian theology), Creation, Religion and science
He thought they were religion and science were integrally related.
Science posits that life is spontaneously created by natural forces. The religious viewpoint is that life was created by a supreme being in the universe.
In Ohio's Public School system, Evolution is taught in all science classes. "Creationism" is generally reserved for either private study, or a Religion Class. The State of Ohio does not have a law requiring this, but it is an understanding that a debate on creationism does not belong in a Science classroom, but rather a Theology classroom.
you have to know how people think to know how they are going to react to regarding their financials