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Re: GOD EXISTS | |
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by Daryl » Fri Jun 05, 2015 8:06 am | |
Daryl
Posts: 3562
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From my perspective the arguments presented here by the bible belters have similar validity and credence as those in the public domain from organisations like ISIS and such.
You play word and numeric games that at core are based solely on your own particular sacred texts, with nothing to confirm it from any other source. ISIS uses their sacred texts to justify atrocities, but there are plenty of biblical quotes that would also justify similar barbaric actions like stonings and beheadings. I have learned much from this discussion, least of which is that I am an agnostic (by strict definition). In that I really don't know the secrets of the multiverse, but am sure that mankind can never really comprehend what if anything is behind it. I do also know that I'll never consider that Christianity is any closer to such an understanding than any other money making theological business like Islam or Buddhism. As an individual all I can do is to try to be kind to others, reward goodness, and to fight what I perceive to be wrong (Much of which is often perpetrated by religions). |
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Re: GOD EXISTS | |
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by The E » Fri Jun 05, 2015 8:20 am | |
The E
Posts: 2704
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If the objective here was to show more proof (if any proof were needed) how utterly deluded and non-scientific creationist thought is, congratulations! You succeeded! If you wanted me to go "Oh, that's interesting maybe there's something to this", it failed. Because, and this may be new to you, it is always possible to find correlations and then construct meaning out of nothing. If you're trying to construct a case that the 7-day week is, in some way, a fundamental construct that is encoded in our biology (and not just an artefact of trying to build a calendar based around seasons and lunar cycles), then your case better be thorough. It better not fudge data. It better not be easily proven false by wikipedia.
And our good friend argumentam ad autoritam rears its head again. So what if Newton thought he could do useful work on this? What does this mean? What does it signify? I tell you what it doesn't mean: It doesn't mean that Newton was actually on to something. But yeah, cthia. You go right ahead. Keep spending those hundreds of thousands of dollars and days and weeks of your time proving that the unproveable exists. If nothing else, at least you're going to stimulate the economy. |
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Re: GOD EXISTS | |
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by cthia » Fri Jun 05, 2015 8:48 am | |
cthia
Posts: 14951
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Oh, I don't mind stimulating the economy. I make it a point to. I consider it a Christian obligation. But besides that, it should be - and is - a moral obligation. Every year I donate at least $100K to homelessness along with my time. I have been paying the tuition of two students showing promise or eagerness every year since I was twenty-five. Together with my family, we put 10 students through college the entire way and each is provided transportation. 50K each, per year given to each of them directly and NOT through some organization. So you see, stimulating the economy is NOT a problem for me, or my family. However, I hope it shows that I also try to stimulate thinking in funding higher education. Stimulating thinking -- an effort that is always fraught with friction. Friction -- that ever present copper-plated Cordelia Ransom of a variable of reality that always rears its ugly head in calculations and conversations. After all, a mind really is a terrible thing to waste, especially on petty conversations. Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense |
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Re: GOD EXISTS | |
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by PeterZ » Fri Jun 05, 2015 9:52 am | |
PeterZ
Posts: 6432
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If Christian understanding is as close or as far from whatever truth exists, Daryl, why does your core moral code reflect the central Christian tenet? Islam does have some moral beliefs similar to Christianity, yet it has an imperative to impose its moral and legal code on everyone. Christianity does not. Many Christians do wish to impose their code on everyone. Islam on the other hand requires Muslims to subject the world to Islam and sharia. You believe there exists a moral equivalency here? I'll grant that as an agnostic you don't accept any greater divine inspiration responsible for either. Yet, to govern yourself by a moral code as you admit to doing is to assert a preference for a specific moral code. By accepting a moral code to govern your life, do you not place greater worth on the morality you accept? If you do place greater worth on some codes over others, do not those codes that differ most from yours reflect less worth in so far as they are useful to govern your life? That differing utility to your life speaks to some greater understanding in those moral codes most similar to yours as far as you understand and value what is important. in life. All this is to say, don't cop out. There are ways to evaluate the differences between on set of beliefs and others. To take the easy way out and claim that all religious value structures are equal because they are based on religion. They are not. |
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Re: GOD EXISTS | |
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by Howard T. Map-addict » Fri Jun 05, 2015 9:58 am | |
Howard T. Map-addict
Posts: 1392
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I have found that people usually believe
what they wish to believe. My opinion is: if you find what a person believes, then you have usually found what he wishes to believe. HTM
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Re: GOD EXISTS | |
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by gcomeau » Fri Jun 05, 2015 10:03 am | |
gcomeau
Posts: 2747
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Well congratulations, you've edified everyone on the fact that Bible Numerics blatantly lies and fakes its data to get the result they have predetermined they want to get. Just like creationism. Mission accomplished! |
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Re: GOD EXISTS | |
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by Howard T. Map-addict » Fri Jun 05, 2015 10:12 am | |
Howard T. Map-addict
Posts: 1392
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Islam does *not* have an imperative to impose its
moral and legal code upon "People of the Book." Islam says "There is no compulsion in religion." The "Four Rightly Guided Caliphs" (Mohammed's immediate successors) did *not* impose Sharia Law upon Jewish and Christian communities, instead allowing them to follow their own laws. The Umarrid Dynasty followed their example. So did the Abassids. So did the Ottoman Sultans. For fully a thousand (1,000) years it was safer and better for Jews to live under Moslem control than under Christian control. It was also safer and better for those Christians who were called "Heretics." For the next 200 years, it was about equal. The self-styled "Islamic State" is doing what the Ottomans did not and would not do, what the Abassids and Umarrids did not do, what the Rightly Guided Caliphs refused to do. HTM
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Re: GOD EXISTS | |
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by PeterZ » Fri Jun 05, 2015 10:15 am | |
PeterZ
Posts: 6432
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The problem with Huxley's definition is that it too requires faith. That is to assert that a thing CANNOT be known is to believe that this is true. Like theism and atheism the assertion has yet to be proven. In the literal sense, we are all ignorant of the Truth, whether that Truth is God or His absence. We are persuaded to believe one way or the other by evidence each of us finds compelling. So, Huxley's definition is useful to describe one sort of agnostic. The sort that believe no evidence can be compelling enough. The agnostic isn't the ignorant. We are all ignorant in the literal sense. The agnostic is the un-persuaded. Huxley's definition asserts the agnostic is the un-persuadable as a tautology not simply in practice. I find the utility of that definition limited. It describes at best a small subset of the un-persuaded who have the faith to commit to sitting on the fence in regards to this question rather than moving to one side or the other. |
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Re: GOD EXISTS | |
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by peke » Fri Jun 05, 2015 10:20 am | |
peke
Posts: 94
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That is impossible, because scientists do not use the Bible as a source for their research, nor a a source of scientific knowledge. Anyone who does is not a scientist, whatever he may claim.
Newton also devoted large amounts of his time and brainpower to alchemy (NOT chemistry) searching for the legendary philosopher's stone and the elixir of life. Many - indeed, most - of the scientists of his time dabbled into subjects which would later be proven ridiculous. I remember that one of the great astronomers (Kepler, I think) spent a lot of time making astrology tables (admittedly, it was so he could make a living by making astrology predictions for affluent people)
There are a bunch of problems with this. First, the size of the measuring unit (seven days) is too small to be an useful measurement. In this case, you are measuring gestation times and rounding off the discrepancies. Now, if the measure was larger (say, 50 days) then a one-day or two-day discrepancy (a 2% to 4% deviation) could be safely forgiven, and the argument would have some merit as long as all gestation times could be expressed as multiples of the measure, with equally small discrepancies. However, since the measure is only seven days, a two-day discrepancy builds up to a 28.5% discrepancy, which is frankly too much. And in the case of the longer gestation times, where the variation can be of several weeks, the final discrepancy goes higher than 200%. Second, the part about heartbeats sound to me like a classic case of reversing cause-and-effect. Were the heartbeat measurements taken in a controlled environment, without outside influences? Or were them taken in a normal, everyday environment (you know, the usual environment we working stiffs face every day) where the person is subject to working stresses for the first six days, and a resting break for the seventh? (this schedule is, by the way, not mandated by heartbeat, but by normal working schedule). To me, it looks that they they measured heartbeats (hey, it's faster on workdays, and slower on rest days!) and decided that the heartbeat rate was the Cause of the workday schedule, rather than its Effect. If you want a real experiment, do the following: pick a largish group of people, divide into several groups (max of 7), subject them to time disorientation (so they lose track of the day of the week) and then subject then to the stresses of a normal working life. One group will be told it's Monday, another that it's Tuesday, and so on. Also, make sure that they have no access to any clues as to the real weekday. Measure heartbeats all the time. Compare. Draw conclusions. (probably needs to be refined a bit, but this would work) That's the scientific method, and I'd believe those results, instead of an old moldy book published in 1952 (not exactly at the forefront of modern thought, that one)
On the subject of the French Rev, let's do some numbers. Normal week: seven days, with five workdays and two rest days. French week: ten days, with nine workdays and one rest days. Crunch them numbers, and you'll come up with this result: switching to the French week, your total rest time is reduced by almost exactly two-thirds (65%, for the pedants among us ) Ever heard the old saying "all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy"? People need to rest, or they start going apeshit (and this is especially true on today's stressful world). Now, about the human cell replacement. This is another logical error, namely asserting that a single positive example proves a postulate, while ignoring all the negative examples. Like saying, "Skin regeneration is a continuous, cyclical process. People's skin is completely regenerated in seven years. Therefore, all of a human's cyclical processes run on a seven-year timetable." I definitely do not take a dump once every seven years. I am not full of shit .
Of course there are patterns in nature. That does not mean that there's a purpose behind the pattern, nor that there is a designer behind its creation. It's like saying that because a pattern exists, a creator must be involved. Fibonacci, for example. It's not that nature follows Fibonacci's pattern, but rather that the Fibonacci sequence accurately describes a pattern observed in nature. Subtle distinction, there. And finally, if you take a long sequence of perfectly random numbers, you will be able to find patterns in them. It's just the nature of math that, with a sophisticated enough formula, you can extract a pattern from anything. A non-random text like the Bible just means that the formula needs not be too sophisticated, and that patterns will abound. Last edited by peke on Fri Jun 05, 2015 10:28 am, edited 1 time in total.
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There is no problem so complex that it cannot be solved through the judicious application of high-power explosives. |
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answer to Cithia re: GOD EXISTS | |
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by Howard T. Map-addict » Fri Jun 05, 2015 10:27 am | |
Howard T. Map-addict
Posts: 1392
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You really want to know how we differ?
You really don't know already? Since you asked: We Jews believe that "The Lord Our G-d, The Lord is One!" His internal structure is unknowable to Humans. To claim to know it, is Vanity and Arrogance. The Exodus story says that G-d sometimes did things "with a strong hand and an outstretched arm." Does that mean that the Hand and the Arm were separate Persons? No! Obviously not! Neither does "the Spirit of G-d" doing something or being somewhere, make it a different Person from "G-d,-The-Father" or from all of Him. "The Trinity" means nothing to us Jews. G-d and man are two different things, never to be considered the same. It is blasphemy to consider a man could be G-d. Jesus was a man, indubitably a man, and therefore was not and could not be G-d. I hope that you find your Questions Answered. I regret if the Answer upsets or offends you, but you did ask, and I cannot deny my beliefs. Howard Wilkins
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