Science as Religion -- Objective? Or only one perspective amongst many perspectives?
Imagine a human being -- is this individual one's friend, as seen from a distance? Or is he or she a conglomerate of atoms, a mere product of an interaction of natural laws and forces? Or is this individual a composition of cells, healthy and harmful bacteria, bones and muscles? Or a living human spirit?
It all depends, one might say, on the perspective one takes of this friend or organism that is the object of one's personal, physical, biological, and yes religious speculation. The conflict of who we are, and if science is synonymous with objectivity or merely offers one perspective amongst many has been under much debate in the academic community. Bruno Latour, stated that the scientific paradigm is not a separate domain, "but only one voice in the assemblies that make up things," from the physical up through the biological and social composition "of the common world." Even in science, biology, chemistry, and physics do not always offer complementary views of the natural world and human experience, but exist in conflict and multiplicity. (Latour, 2000)
Such a view...
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