RE: If Allah has a plan, what is the point of Dua?
February 4, 2016 at 5:54 pm
(This post was last modified: February 4, 2016 at 6:01 pm by Brian37.)
There is a 13 part Cosmos series hosted by Neil deGrasse Tyson an astrophysicist, that goes into detail about worldwide mutual independent discoveries and the gatekeeper fallacy. He goes back to ancient China much older, and the Arab world and the Aboriginals and the Greeks and Christians all the way to the modern era.
The gatekeepers "powers that be" would falsely attribute their discoveries to the divine. There is no magic power handed down to our species that allows us to test and tinker and invent. HUMANS do that, no magic involved.
COSMOS hosted by Neil deGrasse Tyson. 13 parts so one hour a day or one hour a week, but DO IT!
It is mainly about the history of the universe, but each week "hour" episode, he spends time pointing out the discoveries of MANY societies in our species history GLOBALLY.
His point is that religion isn't making the discoveries, HUMANS ARE.
You like most believers of all religions have a very narrow view of the world and all of you pick arbitrary starting points as to when "real science" started acting as if discovery and invention is a patent owned by one religion.
The gatekeepers "powers that be" would falsely attribute their discoveries to the divine. There is no magic power handed down to our species that allows us to test and tinker and invent. HUMANS do that, no magic involved.
COSMOS hosted by Neil deGrasse Tyson. 13 parts so one hour a day or one hour a week, but DO IT!
It is mainly about the history of the universe, but each week "hour" episode, he spends time pointing out the discoveries of MANY societies in our species history GLOBALLY.
His point is that religion isn't making the discoveries, HUMANS ARE.
You like most believers of all religions have a very narrow view of the world and all of you pick arbitrary starting points as to when "real science" started acting as if discovery and invention is a patent owned by one religion.