For a long time, humans have been curious about the relationship between science and religion. They only represent personal thoughts and there are no contradictions. When Bellhop asks Goodall about her new ideas, she talks about her new thinking on evolution. God creates human beings. The story goes that “the biblical description of God creating the world in seven days could well have been an attempt to explain evolution in a parable” (Goodall 150). Goodall is a zoologist and scientist. It depends only on the data and formal information that appears in books on the Internet. He should have thought and observed logically and sanely. However, she believes in God and finds her own “vision” in the forest that data cannot provide. Furthermore, not only Goodall, but also many scientists are Christians, and they all believe that God creates people. God is their spiritual support to express their emotions. However, they still do the most rigorous work and contribute to society. Goodall uses his own experience to demonstrate that science and religion are “mutually exclusive.” Indeed, the coexistence of science and religion could help the development of society. According to Goodall, she also thinks that “it honestly didn't matter how we humans came to be the way we are, whether evolution or special creation was responsible. What mattered and
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