Juddog
Diamond Member
- Dec 11, 2006
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It could also be the first recorded reference to venereal disease![]()
Doh!

It could also be the first recorded reference to venereal disease![]()
It's been resolved since at least Cantor, if not before. There's nothing incoherent about an infinite ordered set with no least element. Aristotle's understanding of infinity was primitive.What an elegant, detailed solution to a philosophical question unresolved since Aristotle.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unmoved_mover
I just have some understanding of set theory, and I can actually spell "genius" correctly.You must be a super geneyus.
It says God made man "in his own image."
Zeno.How is an arrow refuting Aristotelian physics? Have you ever studied physics?
The burning bush seemed to be a direct communication.
I agree; I'm not saying that I think the "God particle" has anything to do with God, or anything of the sort (I'm an atheist), but rather I've seen that view used in various news comments, such as when the announcement was recently made that Peter Higgs and François Englert were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for their discovery.
In regards to your second point, if you go on the assumption that God is the universe itself, then you would be right - our brains would be contributing towards a form of universal sentience.
The burning bush is open to interpretation though. The bush actually does burn without being consumed (however; it's more like a flash fire and not the story Moses told).
Either way, while that can be looked at direct communication; I meant God was never physically present and talking to anyone.
That's where many don't get it. People think God sat down and had a powwow with these biblical characters.
The whole "god particle" thing sounds like more of that annoying habit physicists have of describing their specialty in religious terms. I understand that they feel very strongly about the grandeur and majesty of the universe and are trying to communicate that to us little people, but damn does it end up creating a lot of confusion when the religious start hunting for geniuses to call their own.
I would even argue that the more I learn about biology, the more I believe we were created. The human body is an amazing machine, IMO, and all machines I've come across are built.
I hold a PhD in physical anthropology (the study of human evolution) and am an anatomy professor at a medical school. I've dissected hundreds of humans. The human body is far from an amazing machine. There are so many imperfections, so many less than optimal structures, and so many parts that just flat out make no sense that the miracle is that we even work at all. If we're the products of design, the designer was far from intelligent.
I have found that many modern day Christians disregard most or all of the old testament, since it was before the time of Jesus.
none of any holy book is God ever said as being anything like a human.
Unfortunately that seems to be the case - because of the name alone, they assume that it has religious connotations, when in fact it doesn't. A lot of those arguments from people of a religion seem to be based on "so and so was religious, so that proves that religion isn't stupid". For example in this very thread we have people claiming since Einstein was religious, that somehow validates their position, but if you look at the actual things Einstein said, it goes against the views that they express.
It boils down to a lack of understanding.
I hold a PhD in physical anthropology (the study of human evolution) and am an anatomy professor at a medical school.
You got a Ph.D. in fairy tales?! That's a silly thing to do. :sneaky:
I hold a PhD in physical anthropology (the study of human evolution) and am an anatomy professor at a medical school. I've dissected hundreds of humans. The human body is far from an amazing machine. There are so many imperfections, so many less than optimal structures, and so many parts that just flat out make no sense that the miracle is that we even work at all. If we're the products of design, the designer was far from intelligent.
I hold a PhD in physical anthropology (the study of human evolution) and am an anatomy professor at a medical school. I've dissected hundreds of humans. The human body is far from an amazing machine. There are so many imperfections, so many less than optimal structures, and so many parts that just flat out make no sense that the miracle is that we even work at all. If we're the products of design, the designer was far from intelligent.
That's not an argument against the unmoved mover, which is a thought experiment. It's a question of faith and speculation on your part that the solution to the question will be purely scientific.
How is an arrow refuting Aristotelian physics? Have you ever studied physics?
My money is on the tortoise.
Its fine as a thought experiment. You seemed to be using it as a real world example though.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeno's_paradoxes
I was just posting an example showing that the Ancient Greeks had a certain amount of the "navel gazer" about them and didn't necessarily care if their theories correlated with how the real world worked.
Good reading material. It seems that the ancient Greeks were unable to solve these problems since they didn't have Calculus back then.
Good reading material. It seems that the ancient Greeks were unable to solve these problems since they didn't have Calculus back then.
You got a Ph.D. in fairy tales?! That's a silly thing to do. :sneaky:
Has nothing to do with lack of Calculus. Zeno's whole premise is really all the same arguement and just against Plato.
People like today just want to agree on something because their 'team' came up with it even if they know it's inherently wrong.
Zeno's entire arguement is due to there being an infinite number of points between to points, motion is an illusion.
His problem was not realizing while although there were an infinite number of points, time is not held frozen during the computations / motion through those points.