No, you haven't. I debunked most of your posts, Galileo, Descartes, Bacon, DaVinci, etc.
Well then go on... don't stop there.
Nicolaus Copernicus - just because he was persecuted by the Vatican does not mean he wasn't a believer. He was a devout man of faith.
Johannes Kepler - One of the Fathers of Modern Astronomy
Louis Pasteur - Father of Microbiology
Gregor Mendel - Father of Modern Genetics
Michael Faraday - Distinguished Physicist
Blaise Pascal - Distinguished Mathematician
Sir Isaac Newton - Father of Calculus and Physics (without him the modern scientific era doesn't unfold)
Carolus Linnaeus - Father of Taxonomy
Leonhard Euler - Distinguished Mathematician and Physicist
Niels Bohr – The Atom, need I say more...
John Dalton – Distinguished Chemist
James Clerk Maxwell - Father of Electromagnetism
William Thomson "Lord" Kelvin - Father of Thermodynamics - Distinguished Physicist
Linus Pauling – Revolutionized the World of Chemistry
Werner Heisenberg – Father of Quantum Theory
Max Planck - Distinguished Physicist – Co-father of Quantum Theory
Enrico Fermi - Distinguished Physicist
John Ambrose Fleming - Distinguished Mathematician and Physicist
J. Robert Oppenheimer – Distinguished Physicist
Alexander Fleming – Discovery of Penicillin
Sir Robert Boyd - Distinguished Astrophysicist
Albert Einstein - Einstein is probably the best known and most highly revered scientist of the twentieth century, and is associated with major revolutions in our thinking about time, gravity, and the conversion of matter to energy (E=mc2). Although never coming to belief in a personal God, he recognized the impossibility of a non-created universe. The Encyclopedia Britannica says of him:
"Firmly denying atheism, Einstein expressed a belief in "Spinoza's God who reveals himself in the harmony of what exists." Much like Isaac Newton (more on him below), this belief actually motivated his interest in science, as he once remarked to a young physicist:
"I want to know how God created this world, I am not interested in this or that phenomenon, in the spectrum of this or that element. I want to know His thoughts, the rest are details." Einstein's famous epithet on the "uncertainty principle" was
"God does not play dice" - and to him this was a real statement about a God in whom he believed… My favorite quote of his was
"Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind."
I think that what really bothers many of you is having to admit that ‘science’ and what we now know as the ‘scientific process’ were largely invented by ‘religious’ people (and especially Christians)… Most branches of science were developed by Christians, even if schoolbooks abstain from mentioning such details… Furthermore, you all seem to strongly gravitate away from the idea that scientists can in fact be believers (this thread wreaks of it). But you all wouldn’t have such a hard time reconciling the two positions if you would only accept the fact that numerous professors and scientific leaders worldwide today are Christians... Either way, these facts make the statements that claim that "science and Christianity are enemies" as being absolutely false and extremely unfair distortions of history and of the present.
It is also a fact that Christian scientists often publish in respected journals, but if they write about ‘creation’ or something ‘religious,’ even if it’s rigorously testable scientifically, it’s almost always censored and banned from publication just like those who think of alternative theories to the Big Bang (even if not Christian) are censored and usually not allowed much freedom to publish. We never think of our free press being censored, but it is in several areas and especially in reference to the relationship between science and faith...
Unfortunately, some Christians have reacted to this ridicule with ridicule of their own. This has just hardened each camp in its position and greatly hindered progress and true scientific knowledge. I am trying hard to avoid this because I know and have met many very sincere atheists and evolutionists who want to understand what is true and accurate and follow it. There are many atheists and evolutionists who have contributed important things to science and they are dedicated and want to do good things for human beings. But, they have serious philosophical questions that make belief in God difficult for them and this should be respected and everyone should be allowed the freedom to theorize and try to prove their theories. So, I have much respect for those who search for truth and really try to be objective even if that means giving up a worldview or theory that they have held for a long time. This deserves much respect.
That said, it cannot help the truth to intentionally distort history and posit the idea that Christians are intellectually inferior, simply because of their Christian beliefs...
and secondly, and MOST IMPORTANTLY, there are exceptions to everything. Hitler was a Christian. So what?
He most definitely was not... FAIL. Or are you trying to make a Bill Maher-like argument here? Maher recently suggested that Stalin established a “state religion” while building his case against ‘religion’ only to conveniently lambast Christians for it? Talk about blinders… and revisionism… Stalin pushed one of the most devastating atheistic movements in the history of mankind. And as I stated in another thread, more than 40 million people lost their lives in opposition.
The large majority do not believe in a god, no matter if Newton did. There are many others who don't.
Except that you are conveniently minimizing who Newton was and what he represented… Isaac Newton is arguably one of the 10 most influential people of all time.
As an aside, in today’s age, scientists who openly embrace faith are blackballed by academic publishers… For that reason alone, I will always doubt the validity of such surveys/studies… if you can even call them that… these surveys do nothing more than propagate the notion that belief in GOD is tantamount to idiocy. Ironically these ‘studies’ do a great disservice to the virtues of scientific process they are trying to endorse…
Pasteur didn't practice religion like you do. His idea of a God was much more abstract and not specifically oriented.
So then you are saying he wasn’t a believer? Either he was or he wasn’t… clearly his writings show that he was. He just happened to take the position that many other great Deists, including Einstein, chose to follow. They believed in GOD regardless.
quote
http://www.gradesaver.com/the-philos...gious-beliefs/
"The religious beliefs of René Descartes have been rigorously debated within scholarly circles. He claimed to be a devout Roman Catholic, claiming that one of the purposes of the Meditations was to defend the Christian faith. However, in his own era, Descartes was accused of harboring secret deist or atheist beliefs. Contemporary Blaise Pascal said that "I cannot forgive Descartes; in all his philosophy, Descartes did his best to dispense with God. But Descartes could not avoid prodding God to set the world in motion with a snap of his lordly fingers; after that, he had no more use for God."
Using Descartes as definitive proof of an intelligent man who believed in a God is dishonest.
And using this as an argument against the supposed lack of intelligence in believers is a reach… and you know it.
now attack ad infinitum... you've never been one to concede on anything, much less admit to erring.