Can religion and science coexist? Is it possible for Gabriel Berger's science and religion to coexist? The concept of science and religion has been questioned in the "age of stationary" and "people on the earth". These movies show how society responds to events by questioning spiritual beliefs at a certain time and that our world is changing rapidly. Some of the sounds that you heard in the two movies made you feel the tone each movie is trying to convey. These sound effects help the audience understand the moments of tension, fear, despair, and peace, to name just a few examples.
Okay, I guess (the concept of religion) can help a bit. I often struggle with people who look at religion with their faces. Science requires doubt, evidence and religion require faith and faith, so there is no concrete way to make science and religion coexist. This is the most tedious talk show material. Will humans begin to regard "them" as angels if robots are not regarded as slaves? After all, through their existence, they can be regarded as kind in general to us. They definitely exist and trust to them will be directly verifiable: I believe my toast will be perfect! A movie like "her" will solve this idea just as if "Bot makes the world a better place" (even if it gets a bit irritated).
Many scientists still believe that science and traditional religious beliefs can coexist simultaneously, even if all contradictions between science and religion occur during the scientific revolution. For example, Nicolaus Copernicus is a church official who believes that science and religion are closely related, and that Bacon is also a religious figure. Even Galileo who remembered what he opposed to the church is devout and dedicated Catholic. In any conflict, science has developed rapidly after the scientific revolution. Scientists have been doing countless discoveries; this knowledge has dramatically changed human life indefinitely and has been applied to our daily life. Therefore, scientific revolution is one of the most influential and important events in history.
Pran Das may be right about the nature of God and the cause of the world and may not be right. What is important is that science and religion can coexist peacefully. A part of human condition is trying to understand our nature and look for answers to our world. Scientific discoveries enrich our understanding of our universe and ourselves, and now many of these answers are available. But the meaning, value and purpose that science may not be able to answer still has a fundamental problem. For billions of people, religion and faith provide comfort and meaning, but the fact remains that science only provides facts and does not provide answers at all. Thus, while both extremists continue to attack their fists and demand surrender, while others insist that they are good, science and religion will enrich our lives I think that I can do it.