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One fact about Brahman is that he is a god in the Hindu religion. Another fact is that it is believed that Brahman is present everywhere, and in everything.
The science of something are the facts behind it. The study of something are the facts, the history the art, the myth, the anecdotes - everything about it.
Evolution is based on thousands of facts and has nothing to do with any religion other than the fact that it contradicts many of them.
No. Science is baised on facts while religion is composed of beliefs and spiritual knowlage.
Science uses facts as the basis for making sense of the world. Religion uses 'faith' to give meaning to our presence in the world. However, if faith (religion) is used to explain facts then it will fail because science works better at explaining the physical world. From what we understand at the moment science can not prove or disprove the existence of God and thus there is room for 'faith' (religion) in the world. The important thing to remember about Science is that a scientific explanation of the observed facts is not a 'truth' it is JUST an explanation that stands until a better one is found. Science requires that you continually test theories.
One fact about Brahman is that he is a god in the Hindu religion. Another fact is that it is believed that Brahman is present everywhere, and in everything.
AnswerReligious beliefs are taught as facts all around the world, including in the United Kingdom. Whether those beliefs are Christian, Jewish, Islamic, Buddhist, Hindu or so on, it is up to the faithful whether to accept those 'facts' as true. There is unlikely to be legal issue, as long as the participants are aware that it is religion that is being taught, and not science, medicine or some other such topic. Of course, there are necessary restrictions on religion being taught as part of a school syllabus.
no
Science is not, and should not be, an ideology, because the purpose of science is to discover and apply provable facts. Since religion really is an idealogy but science is not, religion wins.On the other hand, pseudo-science, which is the use of plausible, scientific-sounding but unprovable claims, often in the service of religion, could be considered an ideology. However, the claims of pseudo-science are readily dismissed, so it is not a strong ideology.supplement. Importantly, science is prepared to be wrong and to incorporate new ideas. And to seriously question concepts that do not fit comfortably with the main body of expert opinion.
James David Thomas has written: 'Facts and faith' -- subject(s): Religion and science, Faith
Well known tourist destination Bali has a population of 2.5 million 80% of its religion is Hindu The capital city is Denpasar (1/2 mill)
because science is ultimately not just facts. science is about finding explanation for facts.