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13 pages in length. Science and religion - perhaps in another place and time - would never have the occasion to infiltrate each other's unique worlds, inasmuch as no matter how hard people attempt to bring them together as complementary forces, they are - and have long been - destined to remain at opposite ends of the spectrum. Annotated bibliography lists 10 sources.
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13 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCScinzRlg.rtf
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bring them together as complementary forces, they are - and have long been - destined to remain at opposite ends of the spectrum. Indeed, there has been no lack
of effort on the part of both sides to bring about at least some semblance of an alliance between two otherwise very diverse entities, however, these efforts have ultimately been
met with mutual and unresolved intolerance. Galileo tried almost single-handedly to construct the intrinsic separation between science and religion, a feat that landed him in a court of law
trying to defend his assertions. "This tie-in of science and religion seems unusual in this day and age. Normally people do separate them. Its part of the
whole split in science and religion beginning with the birth of modern science...Since [Copernicuss] time, science has really separated itself from religion, and this separation has not been healthy for
science, religion, or for the human species as a whole" (Anonymous 8). The lure of scientific thought placed a particular emphasis upon rationalism, which was a theory asserting that
reason, in and of itself, was an entity of knowledge superior to and independent of religious perceptions. This concept served as the beginning of unique aspirations - as well
as troubled alliances - within scientific and religious societies in relation to an original quest for truth that people could not ignore. Clearly, the climate for ideas prior to
1615 was anything but liberal. Before Galileos explosive presence, society was ill equipped to determine the various mysteries of life; once he enlightened both notables and lay people alike
with his scientific understanding of the inexplicable and defined that which was beyond religious description, the frosty climate began to warm to the potential for great discoveries. Such research
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