Eh, last post for tonight.
macguy wrote:What is this in relation to? The christians?
Yeah, his statement was in reference to Christianity. Actually for a long time, it was held as dogma in the Church that the world was flat and that the earth was the center of the universe. When scientists tried to refute these as false, they were branded as heretics.
By the way, the beliefs of geocentrism and flat earth WERE supported with Scripture, it's just that the Church was interpreting those passages incorrectly. This proves how interpretation can vastly change what a passage means, and why I am an OEC.
Science is always changing so we should expect this frequent change in knowledge because they haven't reached absolute truth.
Science is always changing, but that's because we gain new knowledge each day, and sometimes when we come across that knowledge it contradicts with earlier theories. This is why scientists are constantly experimenting, and why one scientist who performs one experiment isn't a standard. It takes multiple scientists multiple experiments before they put forth a theory, and as always, a theory doesn't say "This is true, period," it merely says "This has yet to be proven false after countless experimentation."
Faith works a bit differently, as there really isn't anything to "test" about it. So science constantly changing isn't a bad thing; it's actually a very good thing.
I also think it's a bit mistaken to think that science cannot reach an absolute truth about the universe simply because some scientists are not Christians. I dunno if that's what you were trying to say, but that's how I interpreted it at least.