So I walked home from college today and there was a (very poorly attended) anti-GMO protest taking place in the Town Square (which is weird, because this area doesn't do much with GMO research as far as I know, being instead one of the centres of pharmaceutical production in the UK).
Did you guys know that GMOs have already destroyed the entire environment? Because that's what I learnt today.
Science is accidental, Religion is spontaneous and Philosophy is essential.
I don't like the process of science. People rarely ask "Why should we", instead going "How should we". That's not to say I don't like what science brings, but I'd much prefer to be in a room with philosophers than I would scientists.
Design, in my mind, will always take precedence over science.
Scientists constantly ask "Why should we". Ethics is involved in science plenty enough. If it weren't we'd constantly have live-trials of everything we've ever made or thought of, and we'd already have cloning of human embryos and more.
But science is interested in finding things out. Thinking is all well and good, but sometimes you have to push forward a step and try things out.
Not all scientists question why, before they do something, but the majority have consciences and question what they're doing. And when science itself isn't questioning itself, then those backing it are, such as businesses and governments.
As a student of the humanities (including philosophy) and the sciences, I can gladly say that I'd rather spend my time in a room of equal parts philosophers and scientists. Both sides generally have their flaws. Put the two together.