Tweak155
Lifer
- Sep 23, 2003
- 11,449
- 264
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They aren't absolute truth's even if there aren't aliens. The sun is hot for us, it's not hot compared to many other stars....
It is the question that is flawed.
They aren't absolute truth's even if there aren't aliens. The sun is hot for us, it's not hot compared to many other stars....
They aren't absolute truth's even if there aren't aliens. The sun is hot for us, it's not hot compared to many other stars....
The Sun is hot period. Sure, there are hotter stars, but I never said ours is the hottest.
Just because 10,000 degrees is much hotter than 5,000 doesn't mean 5,000 isn't hot.![]()
The Sun is hot period. Sure, there are hotter stars, but I never said ours is the hottest.
Just because 10,000 degrees is much hotter than 5,000 doesn't mean 5,000 isn't hot.![]()
I do think there is an absolute truth to be had...primarily becasue there are absolute truths -- we do have evidence for this. For instance, the Sun is hot, water is wet, exposure to space radation will kill you, you can't survive in the vaccum of space outside of a space suit and helmet, and so on.
We need to create a different science. Our current science doesn't deal with absolute truths, IMO....that doesn't mean there aren't any to be had.
You're missing the point. Let's look at the other end of the scale...
For something that lives in sub zero or freezing temperatures, our nice 68 degree day would be hot to them. To us it wouldn't be.
Let's look at the farthest end of the scale - is there any context where it'd be suitable to call absolute zero hot?![]()
Well worded, but does disproving the bible mean there is no god?
Just so we're clear, I find that many of these arguments stem from people not specifying what type of evolution is being discussed. Evolution certainly has been proven true as far as minor changes over a <usually long> period of time. Generally when arguing with a christian, the problem they are focused on is how life came to be.
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What I can say, though, is that our current understanding of the sun being hot is useful in that it allows for further predictions that we also verify by further observation. The supernatural explanation does not provide this. I therefore limit my conception to that simpler one, as it is the most sophisticated functional model.
Evolution does not discuss, postulate, or theorize on the origins of life. Christians should be debating abiogenesis!!!!
The Sun is hot period. Sure, there are hotter stars, but I never said ours is the hottest.
Just because 10,000 degrees is much hotter than 5,000 doesn't mean 5,000 isn't hot.![]()
This is ultimately where the debate has its issues. The level of evidence it takes for one person to believe may be well above or below the other persons own requirement of evidence. Are you suggesting there is a complete lack of verifiable evidence for an intelligent designer, or simply that you do not feel there is adequate evidence? Subtle difference, but I suspect you see what specifically I am asking.
Now it is such a bizarrely improbable coincidence that anything so mindbogglingly useful could have evolved purely by chance that some thinkers have chosen it to see it as a final and clinching proof of the non-existence of God.
The argument goes something like this: "I refuse to prove that I exist," says God, "for proof denies faith, and without faith I am nothing."
"But," says Man, "the Babel fish is a dead giveaway isn't it? It could not have evolved by chance. It proves you exist, and therefore, by your own arguments, you don't. QED."
"Oh dear," says God, "I hadn't thought of that," and promptly vanishes in a puff of logic.
"Oh, that was easy," says Man, and for an encore goes on to prove that black is white and gets killed on the next zebra crossing.
I don't see how this fits in. Can you expand what you mean by "this"? It doesn't seem you are applying it to the previous sentence, or if you are, it doesn't seem like an appropriate application.
You are half right. Books were super expensive plus the peasants were mostly illiterate. Your first point is just Protestant propaganda.It was left in Latin specifically because the church does not think the peasants should be reading it themselves, rather, just believe what the church is telling them. Plus at the time books were super expensive.
My wife (who believes in some sort of divine presence) would counter that my construct makes it impossible to describe any sort of supernatural being. In other words, even if God presented itself in some sort of verifiable way, it would then become a natural being by its very definition, and thus cease to be divine in the way that she sees it.
You are half right. Books were super expensive plus the peasants were mostly illiterate. Your first point is just Protestant propaganda.
I don't think I agree with your wife, or at least not totally. If prayer "worked" to any extent it can be shown in a verifiable way, but still be supernatural in nature. At a high level, the part that prescribes "you pray, thing happens" would fit a natural model. But the how could be completely inaccessible to natural explanation. Unless you're willing to elevate such a complex and arbitrary mechanism to the status of fundamental law of nature.
And I'll be honest, I don't know how that HGttG quote actually relates to this![]()
The thing is that any model you create is inherently naturalistic. If every time you pray, something happens, than there is a physical process that is happening, even if that physical thing is some kind of immensely powerful being. In other words, from her point of view, once you've reduced God to an explanation of natural events, you've lost the nature of God.
It goes to my last sentence above, and to the absurdity of ontological arguments. If God is inherently supernatural and defined by our faith in it, then "proof" of God's existence would destroy God's very divine nature, and thus there would be no God. What that really means, though, is that there is no such thing as proof of a truly supernatural God, since such a definition implies its very unproveability.
How is this God if it is unable to do anything?
That is a question that depends very heavily on your particular definition of God. My wife, despite being Jewish, sees God both as watchmaker and divine fabric of all creation.
Very few religions, though, view God as a predictable interventionist. The Bible, in particular, depicts a jealous, capricious, and erratic God that alternates wildly between angry retribution and incredible compassion. Furthermore, it depicts a God that becomes decreasingly involved in the lives of humans, at first directly speaking to people, then only distantly rewarding and punishing, then appearing briefly (by the Christian account) in the form of Jesus before disappearing again.* There's no sense anywhere in there that this sort of God does things in a way that could be accounted for in repeated experimentation.
*This is not a unique concept. The Greeks, in particular, set a much harder line for divine intervention at the Trojan War, after which the gods decided that it was best that they have nothing further to do with the affairs of humans. Yet it's interesting that they still sought the influence and wisdom of the gods through sacrifice and oracles.
There is not a single verifiable prediction created by a supernatural model that cannot be equally accounted for by a simpler naturalistic model. I therefore posit that there is no repeatably observable evidence that God exists (or that it doesn't).
My wife (who believes in some sort of divine presence) would counter that my construct makes it impossible to describe any sort of supernatural being. In other words, even if God presented itself in some sort of verifiable way, it would then become a natural being by its very definition, and thus cease to be divine in the way that she sees it.
Douglas Adams sort of touches on this in the Hitchhiker's Guide, on the topic of the "Babel fish", which, when placed in your ear, translates the language of any other speech into yours:
The thing is that any model you create is inherently naturalistic. If every time you pray, something happens, than there is a physical process that is happening, even if that physical thing is some kind of immensely powerful being. In other words, from her point of view, once you've reduced God to an explanation of natural events, you've lost the nature of God.
It goes to my last sentence above, and to the absurdity of ontological arguments. If God is inherently supernatural and defined by our faith in it, then "proof" of God's existence would destroy God's very divine nature, and thus there would be no God. What that really means, though, is that there is no such thing as proof of a truly supernatural God, since such a definition implies its very unproveability.