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Is it correct that the end point of science is theology?
On the other side of science is theology-the sea is the boundary, and the sky is far apart. Answer the Lord does not agree that science has an end.

What science doesn't care about, all kinds of other unreliable things have living space. Many people think that this sea can be crossed, and this sea can indeed be crossed, but no matter which side you cross to the other side, you are doing something completely different from this shore.

Among the scientific research objects, those who turn to theology are only afraid of the unknowable (the answer agrees that theists and most atheists belong to agnostics). The unknown will give people a strong sense of insecurity, and the temporary lack of solution will make them more painful. The cost of science is high, and the cost of theology is low. When people feel that their abilities can't stand the test of science and are frustrated, they sometimes tend to cross the ocean to find low-cost solutions. At this time, they are not pursuing the truth, let alone the truth, but just psychological comfort.

Although some of them later developed new beliefs, this still cannot hide their vulnerability. Many theists laugh at atheists who have no faith, or some atheists believe in science. In fact, they don't know that science has never been a belief. I believe that through our own efforts, human beings can pursue and constantly discover the real world, which is the belief of most atheists. This belief actually belongs to one of the "rational beliefs" in modern western philosophy. Science is just a tool we use to pursue this belief. Before the birth of science, because we lacked more effective tools, it was easy to fall into theology on the road of pursuing knowability.

Fearing the unknown, theists choose theism as a deception to support themselves. Because atheists despise deception, they choose the arduous things of rationality and constant truth-seeking to support themselves. They all have beliefs, but they believe in different things.