However, the explanation of the first question is not so simple. The word "faith" has different meanings, has different senses. One way can be called trusting something on the basis of faith which is associated with believing in something that lacks evidence. In other words, it means to trust or believe in something that is not supported by sufficient evidence to prove its truth. Another meaning is to believe in something which indicates to rely on or trust it. People have both types of faith in God. Some religious people have faith in God in the second sense, they do not accept the first definition of faith which is to believe on the basis of faith. This is due to the belief that those people think that there is very strong proof of God's existence provided. In this particular scenario, science is not a matter of believing in faith (Hansson,2008). Scientists have a second kind of faith in science, they believe in science that has been provided by evidence. They do not take into consideration theories, claims and scientific explanations that do not provide sufficient evidence. So scientific statements and non-scientific statements are equivalent in the second sense, that is, having faith in something. Scientists demonstrate and explain science and how the world works by providing concrete evidence. This has helped and increased our ability to understand, predict and control things supported by scientific evidence and data
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