Padawanbater2
Well-Known Member
[youtube]m15lVvspDXg&feature=feedu[/youtube]
Once again, epic.
Once again, epic.
Way to mangle the point of the video.Ok - first off - "I figured out The Sixth Sense therefore atheism is obviously the correct stance" - Seriously?!
Yet every study that controls for the variables seems to find the exact opposite, that prayer does no better than chance.On the other hand, you can find quite a few clinicians with observable, repeatable results on the affect of prayer on ailing patients.
link?You can also find quite a few physicists who will admit that time and space exist as a singularity that, without consciousness, wouldn't even exist.
It's quite deniable as it is done every day since Darwin.The debate about intelligent design is an interesting one, but I'm "reasonably certain" it can be fairly simply solved by simply re-examining how we define "intelligence". While it's undeniable that there is some form of creator
Natural selection has no intelligence, no goal or plan. You are redefining the debate to suit your beliefs.(whether you believe it to be a man in a white robe or a cloud of energetic gases, SOME creative force spurred all of this to happen), and at least to me that a form of intelligence is involved, the point of contention seems to not be intelligence but rather sentience.
No one claims a complete understanding of anything yet for the things you describe, we have pretty accurate idea of what is taking place.As a microcosm of the universe, the planet earth makes a pretty good example here. The planet itself and everything on it relies on an immeasurably complex system of opposing forces and patterns simply to prevent itself from exploding in a massive exothermic reaction, spinning wildly out of its orbit and away from the sun, being utterly obliterated by massive amounts of energy coming at it from all directions of the cosmos, or developing a completely toxic and volatile, combustible atmosphere incapable of harboring life. The most knowledgeable geologists, meteorologists, and cosmologists will admit on any given day of the weak that we as a species have nowhere near the complete understanding of how all of these things work together and keep the earth in a (relatively) stable state of homeostasis.
Life in it's most simple form has zero intelligence and is merely chemistry. In fact, life in it's most grand and complex form is mostly just chemistry as well.Life, in and of itself, is, even in its most basic forms, intelligent.
It took time to inhabit all of those places but natural selection can explain it all.The question, then, becomes why did life find a way? In the case of the single-celled organisms, it's fairly obvious that self awarness was nonexistent. Desire, and even instinct are also extremely advanced concepts that could not possibly exist within our simple single-celled organism model. Our single celled organism doesn't have a desire to eat, live and propagate, nor even an instinct to do so. What, then, is the driving force behind our single celled organism? Why does it become so prolific as to inhabit nearly all of the water supplies on the planet, if it has no desire, drive, or instinct to do so?
New-age hokum. Using the veneer of science to attempt to legitimize non-scientific ideas.The driving force is life itself. The very same force that collapsed the original mass of charged particles into a singularity before exploding outwards and eventually creating the entire physical universe that we know and love today. The very same force that for some reason takes on the same spiral form, and follows the same mathematical sequence, that we see in all of existence both on our planet and off of it, right down to the very building blocks of life on earth - our DNA. When broken down this far, perhaps "life" becomes the wrong word and it can only be described as a "creative force" - but its existence is undoubtably proven right down to every single photon, molecule, and atom that you see in front of, inside of, and all around you. This, my friends, is what we call god.
so we come to the difference between mere doubt and outright denial. when you set yourself in opposition against the religious, declaring that their fairy tale does not exist, you become the active atheist and this requires faith.If I don't believe in something because of lack of proof or evidence, that doesn't make my position one of faith.
Ok, I'll concede that you're correct on this one - "I'm smarter than any religious person, and I will prove my grand mastery of intellect by picking out plotholes in a piece of media directed toward the mindless masses" is much more accurate.Way to mangle the point of the video.
No, not every study. Just like most studies, the interpreted results tend to lean towards the vested interests of whatever parties are sponsoring it.Yet every study that controls for the variables seems to find the exact opposite, that prayer does no better than chance.
Bell's Theorem shows that on an atomic level everything happens in the same place simultaneously.link?
See below re: defining intelligence. Plus, just because I deny something doesn't make it untrue.It's quite deniable as it is done every day since Darwin.
Incorrect. The goal in its most basic form is to continue propagation.Natural selection has no intelligence, no goal or plan. You are redefining the debate to suit your beliefs.
Replace "life" with "living organisms" in the former and you are correct. As for the latter , "mostly" is really not specific enough to mean anything here.Life in it's most simple form has zero intelligence and is merely chemistry. In fact, life in it's most grand and complex form is mostly just chemistry as well.
Please, enlighten us. How exactly did organisms with traits making them better suited for survival win out over those with traits less suited for survival, before "traits" existed? Anything other than that specific process is not natural selection.It took time to inhabit all of those places but natural selection can explain it all.
Please debunk the law of conservation of energy, the fibonacci sequence, and the existence of DNA. New age indeed, (maybe not the fibonacci sequence since even the most ancient of peoples understood this) since all of these came about as a result of the scientific enlightenment.New-age hokum. Using the veneer of science to attempt to legitimize non-scientific ideas.
I deleted most of your post because you make too many assumptions. There is a difference between claiming a god exists and that a specific deity exists. It should be pretty clear that if a god exists it is nothing like Ganesh, Allah, Ahura Mazda, Zeus, Shiva or YHWH. Those ARE fairy tales and there should be no problem in saying so. As for any god existing, I am saying that I doubt it because there is no evidence but that in no way makes my position one of faith nor does it require any special knowledge. The point is that no one can know for sure, at least in this lifetime. Most people that are accused of being atheists (yes, it is an accusatory label) are actually agnostic atheists, they know they cannot know but don't accept the claim of the theists that there is such a being. As a scientist, I have no problem saying I don't know the answer to some mystery, unlike some people here that think an answer is required whether or not we have the capacity to know it.so we come to the difference between mere doubt and outright denial. when you set yourself in opposition against the religious, declaring that their fairy tale does not exist, you become the active atheist and this requires faith.
More lack of understanding on your part again. I have never declared there absolutely is no god. I have made specific claims to specific deities as described above but you apparently have a problem distinguishing between the idea of any god and that of specific ones.no, you chip away around the edges. you point to the various fallacies of dogma, you expound on the unlikelihood of the fairy tale and you boldly declare that there is no "GOD". how could you know such a thing?
Oh goody, more anti-science rhetoric.No, not every study. Just like most studies, the interpreted results tend to lean towards the vested interests of whatever parties are sponsoring it.
And says absolutely nothing about consciousness being required for existence. More mangling of real science by the pseudo-intellectual new-age crowd.Bell's Theorem shows that on an atomic level everything happens in the same place simultaneously.
That is the result, not a goal. Is it the 'goal' of hydrogen atoms and oxygen atoms to form water?Incorrect. The goal in its most basic form is to continue propagation.
I said mostly because once a brain evolved that can apply conscious intent, it no longer is only chemistry. However, that consciousness did not arrive ex nihlo.Replace "life" with "living organisms" in the former and you are correct. As for the latter , "mostly" is really not specific enough to mean anything here.
This sentence is gibberish. You're asking how an organism with specific traits were better than other organisms before they had these traits?Please, enlighten us. How exactly did organisms with traits making them better suited for survival win out over those with traits less suited for survival, before "traits" existed? Anything other than that specific process is not natural selection.
Adaptation isn't done as a purposeful endeavor. In fact many organisms adapted themselves into extinction. It sounds as if you need to read a book on evolution. May I suggest Origin of Species by C. Darwin?What caused this propagation if there was no driving energy behind it? Why adapt?
There is no debunking necessary because those things do not necessarily lead to the conclusion you made. It is your use of these scientific ideas to support something beyond what they describe, a la Deepak Chopra.Please debunk the law of conservation of energy, the fibonacci sequence, and the existence of DNA. New age indeed, (maybe not the fibonacci sequence since even the most ancient of peoples understood this) since all of these came about as a result of the scientific enlightenment.
We don't know what caused the BB. We do expect that the BB follows the conservation of energy and that the net energy was and still is zero. It is beyond the model of the BB to say what gave rise to the BB, although there are speculative theories, none of them can be realistically tested as of now. We do know that there is a force in the universe that exists all around us and causes the universe to continue to expand at a rapid rate. We call this dark energy and we still know very little about it.Are you saying the big bang, the very most energetic reaction to ever have occurred, happened without any energy input?
There are plenty of people that make this claim. I happen to believe there is no god. I cannot present any evidence therefore I don't go around making this as a claim, but as a personally held belief. I see no problem with this position and I will agree that I hold this position on faith. The difference is that I won't impose this POV on anyone else. Unfortunately, there are others that do.
Making the positive claim "there is a god" requires faith. Making the negative claim "there is no god" also requires faith. No atheist I know, including myself, has ever made that claim.
Thank you for pointing out the distinction. I think that is what has gotten UTI a little confused about this position. You and I both agree believing there is no god can never be proven, which would make it a position of faith as he said. But there is a difference between saying "No gods exist" (faith) and "I don't believe any gods exist" (not faith). I don't believe the position I hold is faith based as I can present evidence against it, as you, me, mystiphuk, Heis, tons of people on these boards have already done - "I know none of he man-made gods people believe in exist" (not faith, clear evidence to defeat the claim).There are plenty of people that make this claim. I happen to believe there is no god. I cannot present any evidence therefore I don't go around making this as a claim, but as a personally held belief. I see no problem with this position and I will agree that I hold this position on faith. The difference is that I won't impose this POV on anyone else. Unfortunately, there are others that do.
Exactly.besides isnt everyone a athiest...........do you belive in thor....Zeus.....ALLAH......ppl reject other gods every day without even know what they are about........the differance between the relieous ppl and me is I believe in one less god than they do.
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Then you are not an atheist and you don't know any. You are speaking of agnosticism.
Making the negative claim "there is no god" also requires faith. No atheist I know, including myself, has ever made that claim. The claim I make is "I don't know if there is a god, but I do know every god ever thought up by mankind does not exist"
There might be a god, who knows? Nobody.
You don't know That gods thought up by mankind don't exist - in fact you know that they do. They exist as concepts and archetypes. If they didn't exist, there would be no art, discussion, or philosophy centered around them. The entire atheist/theist debate wouldn't even be happening."I don't know if there is a god, but I do know every god ever thought up by mankind does not exist"
You can keep saying this all day long and it won't make it any more true.Then you are not an atheist and you don't know any. You are speaking of agnosticism.
Sort of true but replace proving with knowing and you are spot on!If you believe that we currently have no way of proving that there is or is not a form of god, you are an agnostic.
I'm actually more than atheist, I'm an anti-theist. I not only believe there is no god, I believe that theism is harmful to society in general. I will not discount the many good things that religion has brought to mankind so please don't start referencing those, but as a whole, I think it is more harmful to delude ourselves into thinking there is more than we can demonstrate empirically, just because we are scared of death.MindPhuk, on the other hand, with his assertion that "there is no god", fits the definition of an atheist.
You're one to talk. Atheism merely means without theism. ANYONE, including those that are too young to have learned about a god are atheist by definition. Just like amoral is not the same as immoral.Making statements about atheists as a collective(which you don't explicitly do in this post due to your addiition of "that I know", but I have seen you make in the past) should be avoided, as it appears you don't even actually know the definition of the word.
You know damn well that isn't what people mean when they talk about the existence of a god. You are using equivocation to change the meaning of the word exist. Of course the gods exist as memes, no one has ever disputed that fact. An atheist doesn't believe any exist in reality.You don't know That gods thought up by mankind don't exist - in fact you know that they do. They exist as concepts and archetypes. If they didn't exist, there would be no art, discussion, or philosophy centered around them. The entire atheist/theist debate wouldn't even be happening.
I do not believe a god exists of any kind. That makes me an atheist. I don't have to prove it, or KNOW one doesn't exist to be an atheist, all I have to do is BELIEVE one does not exist, which I do.Then you are not an atheist and you don't know any. You are speaking of agnosticism.
If you believe that we currently have no way of proving that there is or is not a form of god, you are an agnostic.
There is no God, I agree. As I've said before, it doesn't make any sense. The "God" as described by theists CAN'T exist. Proof THEY themselves don't even understand it and haven't thought enough about it.MindPhuk, on the other hand, with his assertion that "there is no god", fits the definition of an atheist.
I know the man-made gods thought up don't exist in the exact same sense that I know Santa Clause doesn't exist, or that I know gravity is a constant in our entire universe, even though I haven't been to every single available space.You don't know That gods thought up by mankind don't exist - in fact you know that they do. They exist as concepts and archetypes. If they didn't exist, there would be no art, discussion, or philosophy centered around them. The entire atheist/theist debate wouldn't even be happening.
I have never declared there absolutely is no god. I have made specific claims to specific deities as described above but you apparently have a problem distinguishing between the idea of any god and that of specific ones.
Making the positive claim "there is a god" requires faith. Making the negative claim "there is no god" also requires faith. No atheist I know, including myself, has ever made that claim.
I happen to believe there is no god. I cannot present any evidence therefore I don't go around making this as a claim, but as a personally held belief. I see no problem with this position and I will agree that I hold this position on faith. The difference is that I won't impose this POV on anyone else. Unfortunately, there are others that do.
am i the only one who sees the massive amount of double-talk in the above posts? perhaps y'all are having a problem with the term atheist, so i'll break it down for you. "atheism", meaning without god. this is not merely a matter of doubt but of decision and certainty. maybe you're unsure of that other term you seem to think that i have confused, agnosticism, so i'll break that down for you as well. agnosticism, meaning without knowledge. while you can certainly have atheistic agnosticism, just as there is theistic agnosticism, this implies only a tendency in one direction or the other and excludes the certainty of being "without god". you may choose to quibble over what constitutes a god and to restrict your supposed atheism to the gods of man, but these are just devices to avoid the central issue.But there is a difference between saying "No gods exist" (faith) and "I don't believe any gods exist" (not faith). I don't believe the position I hold is faith based as I can present evidence against it, as you, me, mystiphuk, Heis, tons of people on these boards have already done - "I know none of the man-made gods people believe in exist" (not faith, clear evidence to defeat the claim).