>>13571090Yes, and I’ll explain why. When you first take the sip, you realize that all the religions on earth, some more than others, have shitty non-scientific beliefs. Whether it’s being anti-evolution, believing in BS like karma, or something completely different, you’ll realize it. Hence, you’ll become disenfranchised with religion, and therefore God.
Eventually, as you study, you will begin to realize that science doesn’t actually answer any fundamental questions like “where did everything come from”, or “why are we all here”, etc. Sure there’s many attempts. Scientists will be able to go “farther back” in their understanding of natural history. Where before they knew nothing they can now say that everything came from some giant explosion billions of years ago. But the question still remains—where did *that* come from? And *how* did it come into existence?
And hence, the scientist realizes. There is no conceivable answer that humans would *ever* be able to discover, besides some penultimate god-like form of “creation”. Everything has a beginning and an end. But the very existence of stuff necessarily requires something with no beginning. Something from which all else came. Something that “always was”, at least up to the point at which the universe was created. Most scientists, upon reaching this point, call that thing “God”.