I'm sure this point has been made but: Lasers are light, generated radiatively by an excited atom source (like a ruby) and emitted as a coherent stream (all the photons travel the same direction, making the beam incredibly intense for very little energy). Lasers can also be plane polarized light where the constructive interference increases the amplitude, which in light is equal to its intensity, so once more you generate a very intense point of light for very little energy.
In short, religions have their place in human thought, as one method of understanding the world, our relationships to the world and eachother, and our responsibilities there in, which science cannot tell. Science is not all mighty, and only pertains to empirical observations of the natural world. Science is only ever a model to try to explain what we see and predict what we'll see next, yet it never can describe all of reality as we cannot observe nor detect reality absolutely (see the uncertainty priciple)
Actually, there is all sorts of evidence for many things out there, and I say this as a guy getting his Ph.D. in Molecular and Cellular biology. Heck, just take a look at the extraordinary complexity of purine synthesis, or the fact that life requires, pre-resequite, 400 genes no less to be viable. That does not mean all religious claims are right, but there is some very good science in some of them; and self evidence beyond our natural understandings as well seen in the common human condition/daily life.
Lol, I can't believe no one else came up with that first, it is so obvious XD. Nice nonetheless and synch's perfectly on my crummy laptop using IE7 *shrugs*
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