The E, I would never do this because I have had a near death experience. This experience was so extremely scary but so wonderful at the same time. This experience is so hard for me to put into words what happened.
The E wrote:DDHv wrote:The existence of things that cannot be explained from inside the box. Such as free will, the laws of thermodynamics and other information in physics, human creativity, miracles, unselfish love, even the existence of playfulness in humans and many animals. I've read about how much otters enjoy play. So do I.
Why do you believe that none of this is explainable without invoking something not contained within the physical universe?If you are going to use the Bible's definition, please use it correctly. For example, do a search for the places where God says, "IF you XXX, then YYY." The God of the Bible believes in free will, with consequences.
No. The authors of the bible did.
As I've explained in my previous post, I do not believe free will (as an ultimately acausal force) actually exists. Everything we do arises from interactions of ever-increasing complexity which ultimately derive from the basic interactions between the fundamental particles of the universe.Your POV is understood. You insist on a closed universe. Where, in the box, is a reason for the beginning of that universe? You do not live your life without making choices, and I hope you don't live it without at least some creativity, unselfish love, and play. Have you considered that in a totally deterministic universe no thought can be relied on to fit that, rather than be a random chemical result?
You apparently have difficulty understanding my point of view. Of course we make choices and have thoughts and all that. But the question is: Is there an acausal element to this? By which I mean, is there a single action we can do that does not, can not, have a cause explainable by the mechanisms that are at work within us?IF there is no entry from outside, THEN no miracle is possible. Point to a proof of error that is based on facts, not current theories, please. The statement that there is error is commonly made, but so far, no one has been able to show me exactly where and back it up with fact.
Do you have archeological evidence to support the idea that the miracles as mentioned in the bible happened? Do you have archeological evidence showing that the biblical flood happened as described? Tenshinai already posted a few instances where archeology utterly failed to support the bible.I can't see the days = epochs idea either. There are too many facts against it. At least two theories, consistent with present physics, exist that would allow a literal seven days, if outside intervention is not ruled out.
Name one. I seriously do wish to know how you can get from the Big Bang to a universe inhabitable by humans in a mere seven days without completely violating several laws of physics.I present for outside intervention, in addition to the existence of the universe as is,
You're using the existence of the universe as proof that god is real?
Why am I taking you seriously again?the finding of chariot parts like those of Mosiac Egypt in the Gulf of Aquaba tongue of the Red Sea;
To quote the article: "Are chariot wheels found on the floor of the red sea that date back to 1400 BCE enough to prove that the red sea actually split and the Israelites and the Egyptians actually passed through on dry land as the bible relates?"
The answer, as with any rhetorical question like that, is "No".the discovery of cooler pieces of crust below subduction zones;
Which book of the bible mentioned this?the fact that humans dominate the earth and its life;
whatthe existence of a society that travels much and has rapidly increasing knowledge;
what
Hang on, do you claim that this is somehow proof of supernatural intervention on our behalf now.the fact that you think it wrong, not just a chance result, that we should believe in a God who did not make us robots.
Please walk me through the line of proof that goes from "The E is a skeptic and believes in a completely physical universe" to "god is real".I think God often rates our importance above what we do, except for those who puff themselves up. I wonder, do they really believe themselves?
Have you considered the possibility that God wants us to actually make real choices with real results, even when it means He needs to step in at a great personal cost so He can forgive and still be totally honest
What great personal cost is that again? To whom is this god of yours accountable in order for some, any, action of his to carry a cost?
Here's something I would like you to do. Track down Peter Watts' novel "Blindsight". It's available for free off of his website. Please read it, and pay special attention to its ruminations on the existence and value of free will. I would like to hear your thoughts.