Harry Bosch said:
"You can measure them, but that doesn't mean you know why they are there. You can't explain where everything come from. And you can't explain direct religious/spiritual experience. If there isn't a god, humans are hard-wired to perceive one."
Yeah thats true but I really think we need to apply Occam's razor here. Is the most logical thing to believe in a man in the sky who is everywhere at all times or is there maybe a more rational answer. For example quantum is apparently a promising field when it comes to the Brain box. Oh and I would hardly say we are hardwired to believe in God. We are hard wired to find answers and God was the one that made sense when we where killing eachother with clubs.
No, no it isn't. Not logical at all. But when you reduce religion, in its entirety, to "a man in the sky who is everywhere at all times" this demonstrates you have close to zero understanding or knowledge of the concepts involved.
The
least logical thing is to dismiss something you have no knowledge of.
Harry Bosch said:
"Even if this was true (a lot of evolution is still a complete mystery) what that does that have to do with anything except some of the more dogmatic religious fundamentalists?"
Well for a start the scientific consensus of evolution is true (Observed instances of speciation google it). I feel this example best illustrates the gap between religion and reality. Evolution only explains the diversity of live not how it started yet it is constantly bastardised into something it?s not perphaps showing how little people really know about science.
In some religions, evolution is not only accepted but is a core part of their belief system. Does that mean that those religions are fully accurate in every way? Also, do bear in mind that evolution is used as a tool by some atheists to berate religion with, and the connections they make are false. The complexity of life, the scale and diversity of the creatures and plants that live here, all altering form in order to continue to live, is not the antithesis of the theory of a spiritual being. It is in fact very strong evidence for it.