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Religion & Spirituality

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Sometimes science must give way to religion. Visitors to the Angkor temples in Cambodia can find themselves overwhelmed with awe.

Sometimes science must give way to religion

When I visited the temples last month, I found myself pondering the Higgs boson — and the similarities between religion and science. The Higgs, of course, has been labelled the ‘god particle’ because it accounts for the existence of mass in the Universe. But the term (coined by physics Nobel laureate Leon Lederman, perhaps to the regret of some of his colleagues) also signals the ambition of science, or at least of certain branches of physics, to probe the origins and meaning of existence itself — which, to some, is the job of religion. Proofs of God in a photon - Arts & Entertainment. Science and religion began to go their separate ways in the Renaissance.

Proofs of God in a photon - Arts & Entertainment

The process continued when Galileo and Descartes started to ponder on the nature of the universe. To do so, they had to stray into the territory traditionally the exclusive domain of the church and, in Europe in the first half of the 17th century, the church was powerful indeed. Children are born believers in God, academic claims.

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