Scarabin, on 2012-February-20, 22:28, said:
But does culture not play a role in faith, whether faith in religion or science?
I'm not sure what you mean by 'faith in science'?
A lot of religionists assert that those who prefer science over religion as a means of understanding our existence are simply subscribing to a different but equivalent 'faith'.
In one sense, that seems plausible.
In a major way, it isn't.
Religions differ in detail, and those details have underlain the torture and slaughter of countless people over the millennia, as one set of believers attempts to prove the truth of their god (usually described as merciful or loving...irony is something that seems to escape most believers) to the adherents of a faith that may differ only on a trivial matter.
But one aspect of religion that appears constant is that it requires that the believer accept as true matters that are 'revealed' or pronounced by the ruler(s) of the sect. Critical thinking about the underlying tenets of the faith is not merely discouraged...it is treated as punishable, often by a gruesome death.
Science by contrast is built on the assumption that everything is subject to proof. Having said that, some ideas that were once considered little more than speculative have, through repeated testing, proven to be almost certainly correct, to the point that they are, for practical purposes, accepted as 'true'.
Take the question of the speed of light as the upper limit....recently some experimental results out of CERN suggested that it is possible that some sub-atomic particles can travel faster than the speed of light.
Were science like religion, this result would have seen the experimenters stripped of their privileges, and, in some religions, beheaded or stoned to death and, at the minimum, ostracized.
But in science, its practitioners are concerned with what actually IS rather than what some ancient seers claimed we should believe to be 'true'. So even tho the vast majority of physicists were and remain sceptical, every one of them (of those whose remarks I have read) was excited by the news. if the results stand up, and no other explanation appears more plausible, then science will explore how and why this happened and modify the ideas currently seen as 'true' to correspond with reality.
That's the opposite of 'faith'.
This question of language underlies a lot of the silliness spouted by anti-science religious people: as in when they refer to The Theory of Evolution as 'only' a theory...while having no apparent difficulty with the Law of Gravity
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari