Ben Carson Needs Religion To Differentiate Between Science And Propaganda

US Presidential Hopeful Uses Religion To Interpret Scientific 'Propaganda'
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NEW YORK -- Religion is needed to interpret science because otherwise science could be just “propaganda”. That is the view of a man who wants to be the next president of the United States.

Speaking over the weekend, former neurosurgeon Ben Carson appeared on NBC, answering a question on how science can co-exists with conservative Christianity.

The good doctor responded: "A person’s religious beliefs are the things that make them who they are, gives them a direction in their life. But I do not believe that religious beliefs should dictate one’s public policies and stances."

He continued: "I find, a very good measure of correlation between my religious beliefs and my scientific beliefs -- people say, how can you be a scientist, how can you be a surgeon if you don’t believe in certain things? Maybe those things aren’t scientific. Maybe it’s just propaganda."

Carson formally announced he was establishing a presidential exploratory committee on Tuesday, which is doublespeak for “running for President.”

Despite having an almost cult like following amongst younger conservatives, and faring well in recent polls, Carson has little chance of following Obama into the White House… which is probably good news for those pesky propagandists in laboratories and lecture theatres.

(H/T Raw Story)

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In a paper published in Physical Review X, physicists Michael Hall, Dirk-André Deckert, and Howard M. Wiseman argued for a new vision of quantum mechanics that could lead to a 'proof of the multiverse'. The idea is to find evidence of the effects of parallel universes, and how they interact. "The beauty of our approach is that if there is just one world our theory reduces to Newtonian mechanics, while if there is a gigantic number of worlds it reproduces quantum mechanics" said Hall. (credit:The Washington Post via Getty Images)
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NASA announced that it had found signs of methane spikes on the surface of Mars - evidence, perhaps, of life. The findings are still preliminary and far short of a 'smoking gun', but are intriguing enough to hint that we might not always have been alone in our solar system. (credit:Ablestock.com via Getty Images)
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This year's winner for "pointless" research discovered the reason that banana skins are slippery. The group from Kitasato University, Japan measured the friction of banana peel compared to other fruits in order to better understand why we always slip on them. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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