Yes, jehovah's witnesses believe that, although technically not that those people will 'go to heaven', but rather that they will rule over the faithful as spirit beings on paradise earth. And, just like the 6000 year old earth guys, they have it wrong (not based on reality, simply what is said in the Bible).
Jeff, I didn't ask you to refrain from google because I thought you didn't have any answers, but rather to hear what your specific issues were.
A few books of the Bible aren't called poetic in a reactionary way, it's based on their content and literary devices that separate them from books considered historical in nature, as well as content.
With regards to God simply misunderstanding units and words, again this is simply a limitation imposed by the old fashioned refusing to accept modern science (the world is round, the universe isn't geocentric) and given the limitation of ancient hebrew's 7000 word vocabulary, the word used for 'day', (yom), literally means 24 hours, the day light hours, or a long period of time, to break the creation events down into 6 epochs would look exactly the same as breaking it into 6 24 hour periods. Yay for homonyms.
A lot of the misconceptions people have about Biblical content, such as the age if the earth, are easily clarified without much trouble. Anyway, thanks for replying.
We don't have words for various specific concepts, but we can always smash words together, or use combinations of existing words to refer to different things.
"Day" and "epoch" are pretty different things. I'd think you'd want to be
fairly specific when speaking about something in such a text. But as we've seen, there's a great deal of room for interpretation. You yourself just said "And, just like the 6000 year old earth guys, they have it wrong (not based on reality, simply what is said in the Bible)." They have it wrong. So there's room for interpretation. Day means epoch. Day is nonspecific. Earth is 6000 years old. Only a specific number of people will go to Heaven. Literalists on one side saying that everything in the Bible means exactly what it says. Others try to be adaptive and adjust the meaning of the book to match current scientific knowledge. The video linked in this thread talks about that -
the God of the gaps. Gods of long ago had specific things they did, such as making the Sun move across the sky, causing the tides, making rain, causing earthquakes, and so on. Our expanding knowledge has found no such gods, leaving fewer things for a god to do, and the need for fewer gods in the first place.
Some of the more long-lived deities worked around this by simply saying "this god is everywhere and knows everything." That smacks of a child play-fighting and conjuring up an "everything-proof shield." By definition it's entirely immune to attack, so the game's over, right?
Not sure I agree with all of your statements (e.g., creating life from non-life by consuming food), but I think the gist of your argument is that scientific theories support the long-term evolution of complex life from inorganic and organic compounds. I get that, and by and large I agree with it.
I'm made of a great deal of atoms that are not alive. Most of them aren't even carbon. Most of me is inorganic water. There's a skeleton that contains a great deal of calcium, also nonliving and inorganic.
The proper conglomeration of atoms and molecules though, with the ability to maintain itself for a period of time against a harsh environment coupled with the ability to make more of itself,
does meet our definition of "life." At some point, the nonliving components that make up a person transition from "nonliving" to "living."
But there are many questions science cannot answer to my satisfaction. But before getting into them lets lay a framework based on abiogenesis. That framework is essentially based on assertions that before there was complex life, there was relatively simple life. Before simple life there were non-living organic compounds and inorganic compounds. And before there were organic and inorganic compounds there were elements. And before their were elements there were subatomic particles floating around.
The NDT video nicely answers this. God of the gaps. There's going to be stuff we don't know. A lot of it. The Universe is absolutely absurdly huge. We happen to be in it, and are capable of both retaining information and analyzing it, and are also capable of analyzing that fact itself. So we can look around and wonder why things are the way they are. (That of course assumes that a "why" is even necessary in the first place, which is a rather lofty assumption.)
Question 1 - where did the subatomic particles come from? If from smaller particles, what is the origin of those particles?
Question 2 - where did "space" come from?
In other words, how did the universe come to be?
An even greater question (for all religious folks to ponder) is - "where did your god come from?" Who or what created it?
At some point, you'll keep breaking matter down until we can't observe it anymore. But you can venture toward god-of-the-gaps then. At one time, breaking anything smaller than a sand grain was impossible, and therefore unknowable. A grain of sand contains an enormous number of atoms. We have progressed to being able to split those atoms into their constituents. Many things that were once unknown became known.
How does the Sun make us warm? Fusion releases energy which heats up the Sun, and electromagnetic radiation carries the energy here.
(
Another video, one that I really like: Richard Feynman talking about magnets. Eventually, you'll reach a point that is the limit of our knowledge at that time. That doesn't mean that something else is making it do that. It just means that we don't know that information yet.)
In my view the answers to those questions are unknowable. At least by a mere human mind. I therefore believe in something greater than humanity, which I call god. The fact that I may not understand what god is or how god acts upon me and the rest of the universe is no surprise, because I do not have the capability of understanding. But I am intelligent enough to wonder about these fundamental questions. . . and to realize that at some point scientific and/or rationale explanations just do not hold up.
There's nothing saying that the human mind is the end-all be-all of intelligence. We just happen to be the most intelligent things on this one insignificant planet.
"I therefore believe in something greater than humanity..."
Why does lack of knowledge necessitate the existence of a higher life form or force? If
that force does indeed exist, would that not then mean that there'd have to be another still-higher force beyond
it? Is it turtles all the way up?
A cat doesn't understand how a lithium ion battery works, or why it always is stuck on the ground and is unable to fly. That doesn't mean it's a god responsible for things that are beyond its ability to understand. It just means that its brain is not capable of holding and processing those ideas, nothing more.
We may differ in that we could potentially build machines which can also process, store, and analyze information. It may come to pass that we manage to build a machine that is capable of being more intelligent that we are, and maybe it will be able to understand things we don't understand. It's still not a god either, it's just more intelligent and capable than a human.