Like I said, I feel this pretty far removed from the specific topic of the thread. I didn't want to address your questions in detail, not because they are invalid, but because I think it will derail the thread. It might be more appropriate to start a new thread about the wider issue of ethics and impartiality of the scientific community in general, but since you insist, I'll give you my answers to your questions.
Ahem,
Religions are followed blindly without any evidence for their claims. While many people do follow the popular articles and books and the Michio Kaku shows with blind acceptance, this is not generally how the scientific community works. You're right, I am talking about theory, not practice, because research that is biased or altered for ulterior motives is not really science. Also, your statement that "the gatekeepers of science are often society's most unscrupulous and avaricious citizens" is an unfounded generalization. I do not see why they are any more or less unscrupulous or avaricious as any other human being.
I never said anyone was "inviolable." And while you and I may disapprove of the tangling of science and capitalism, it doesn't make their discoveries wrong. How does patenting portions of the human genome, however unfair or unethical that may be, make the research invalid?
I have not defended studies sponsored by companies with a financial interest in the results, and I will not do so now. This is an example of science with an agenda, which is not really science. However, it still doesn't necessarily make the results wrong, they just deserve extreme skepticism and scrutiny.
Same thing. This is not "science," but business.
Are you from the US? Are you familiar with the Bible Belt? I promise you that science is not universally embraced in the industrialized world. And even those that do embrace it, it is still not the same as religion, as I explained before. People who put their faith in religion do so with no or insufficient evidence and generally refuse to entertain alternate ideas. To have a truly scientific worldview is to believe only that which has empirical evidence of being true and being open to any alternative if evidence is found that supports it.
Are you saying there is something wrong with the scientific method? So science has a "habit" of requiring testing before an idea can be accepted as true. I do not have any problem with this, and I'm not sure why it's relevant.
I agree.
It's just that we are talking about two different things. You are attacking supposed ulterior motives and deceptive practices in the scientific community. I am talking about science as a way of looking at the world, as opposed to spiritual or metaphysical worldviews. I don't consider the scientific worldview to be comparable to a religious or faith-based worldview, for reasons I have explained above.
OK, but I disagree. A church has centrally held worldview and motives and invents information to serve these. While some pseudo-scientists may do the same thing, the central "tenet" of science is to find the information first, then form conclusions based on the information. It is not created by human beings in the same way a religion is.
And in that very same hospital, all of your biased and doctored research is saving lives and helping people live longer. Once again, bad science is out there, but you are overlooking the huge majority of research that is honest and useful.
Looking back at your first post, it seems you were saying the exact same thing as me:
So why is it OK for you to take something from your "heart of hearts" and call it a "scientific reality," but when I make the same claim, but base it on scientific studies, you ascribe it to a "god-paradigm?" Say what you will about shortcomings in the world of scientific research, but it is more reliable than anecdotal evidence and pure intuition, which is what you seem to have based your opinion on.
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