I think you'll find that's untrue. Some scientists believe in 'A' god but not many, and certainly not "most". Don't confuse god analogies made my scientists such as Hawking or Einstein with belief, or the god references science personalities may make for the sake of diplomacy. You have to remember that some people have a lot of time and emotions invested in their faith and are easily offended by the slightest suggestion that what they believe may not be true (case in point, the article that started this thread). As a scientist, you're acutely aware that you're walking on eggshells with these people so a lot of scientists choose not to denounce religion. From my own science background and education, I personally know a few scientists and public-speaking science professors who are atheists, yet they diplomatically avoid making statements that may be deemed anti-religious. In fact, like many of the great scientists, they'll often make vague references to 'god' so as not to offend or exclude those who find it hard to accept science without letting go of their beliefs.Many scientists believe in God. In fact, most scientists believe in God
I think you're focusing too much on the word 'computer' here. I have explained the differences between this type of biological 'computer' and man-made computers, but you seem to be unable to see past this computer metaphor used by the researchers and scientists as if that somehow makes it the same as a computer that has been designed by humans. I don't know what your level of programming experience is, but if you have ever written software, you'll know that it consists of lines of code, executed conditionally, sequentially and/or in loops. If you were looking for a creator, those would be the telltale signs to look for. The type of 'programming' we're seeing here is much more like the self-learning/adapting programming we find in neural networks, or the programming of gates/nodes like we find in FPGAs. There is no more reason to assume that god flicked all the switches in a biological array of 'programmable' cells than there is to assume that god flicked all the DNA switches that made the staggering number of different species that exist on this planet (although of course some people believe that too!). This is 'programming' on a huge timescale, with continuous and gradual modifications or 'updates' through the process of natural selection, the 'versioning' of which is evident simply by studying ancestral DNA.But you claim it is not a computer based on what?
So, do you believe also that god 'programmed' the cancer cell? (Not sure that's a god I'd want to associate with if he did). Or is that the work of the devil? In which case, is the devil a better programmer than god?Digital model of the cancer cell – is this the time for us to debug/reprogram the cancer cell?
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4707930/
Also, from the article you posted:
Some scientists refer to the coding DNA as a program code, but from the informatics’ point of view this is not a god analogy. Most computer languages make a distinction between programs and other data on which programs operate. The program code is a set of instructions executed directly by the computer's central processing unit. These instructions define what happens to the data that are also digitally coded but are not a program code.
Last edited: