I cannot believe people are still so brain washed into believing such trash. This is 2000 y/o understanding of why we exist. Surely people are a bit brighter? Fuck it annoys me.
Allah means God in arabic, so it's not true that i don't believe in Allah, since i believe in God.
It's perfectly normal for someone who embraces a certain religion to be interested about and eventually critic towards other religions, I find it less normal for an atheist to be obsessed with something they don't believe in
and to discern about how believers should live their relationship with a deity
DRESCHI - you are totally right about evolution vs creationism, but you said it yourself: atheists seem to be obsessed with inner-religious matters
An atheist pro abortion can fight for their beliefs and move lobbies, politicians, media and public opinion to make abortion an acceptable practice, while those who believe that abortion is equal to killing and it shouldn't be allowed they should not support their own beliefs publicly.
Many atheist are as radical as radical religious people
I cannot believe people are still so brain washed into believing such trash. This is 2000 y/o understanding of why we exist. Surely people are a bit brighter? Fuck it annoys me.
Does that mean you believe that the Muslim Allah and the Christian God are identical? I do admit that as a non-believer I don't know that much about religion, but I have heard or read it often that believers of a certain religion think that the Gods of other religions are false Gods.
Or, maybe to emphasize what I mean by that question... do you think that any and all Gods humans believe in or have ever believed in, are all the same? What about the Greek Gods, for example? Did the Greeks just perceive many facets of the one God as different Gods? Yes, that is a serious question, and it is not intended to mock you or anything. I'm just curious.
One can do what they want. I just find it curious that one is concerned about something that doesn't exist. It's just my personal opinion. God is about faith, not about evidence and you can't disprove faith. It's impossible. One can lose the faith as fast as they found it, but it's an intimate thing which is neither based on brain washing nor on evidence. China will have the largest Christian community in the world by 2030. I said atheist, anti clerical, brain washing communist China. An atheist will never convince a theist that there is no deity. So, again, i don't understand why bothering about something you (generically speaking) don't understand and don't believe it exists.If you define an atheist as someone who believes there is no God, why would it be any less normal for them to challenge and critic other beliefs? (I don't think every atheist is "obsessed" by the way.)
Now that would be downright weird. An atheist trying to "spread the word" and convince believers not to believe anymore makes sense. By an atheist cannot, by the very definition of the word, tell believers how they should live their relationship with a deity. If anything, an atheist might want to tell you how you should interact with other people. And I think that this is what this was about. (If you agree with that is another matter of course.)
Have you ever met or talked to an atheist trying to tell you how to live your faith? I can't quite believe that because it seems too absurd to me.
Sorry but no, I did not say that. I do believe that there are lots of atheists who are not obsessed with inner-religious matters. I said that there are fanatics on both sides. But I really do not believe that there are more fanatic atheists than fanatic theists.
Forcing against will is something wrong in every aspect of life and living, not only abortion. However, GodsEmbryo said she shouldn't say or demand others can't do it; to me this sounds like she cannot campaign against abortion. I don't see why not, if pro-abortion people can campaign for this practice. Also, don't forget that it's easier to force to abort than to force to not abort. I don't recall of illegal non-abortion cases, while literature is full of illegal abortion cases. I mean, you can't really force people not to kill, if they wanted to, can you? At least let's give anti abortion people the chance to stand for their beliefs, right or wrong.That was not how I understood that. Everyone can support their beliefs publicly. I think the difference is that someone who supports abortion would not force any woman who is against it to do it. But someone who is against abortion would force other women NOT to do it. I guess that is what GodsEmbryo wanted to say.
I've never seen so many ignorant statements in just one sentence. Allah means God in arabic, so it's not true that i don't believe in Allah, since i believe in God. There is a deity and then there is religion which is "an organized collection of beliefs, cultural systems, and world views that relate humanity to an order of existence." A theist believes in a deity and embraces a certain religion. An atheist does not believe in any deity and therefore does not embrace any religion. It's perfectly normal for someone who embraces a certain religion to be interested about and eventually critic towards other religions, I find it less normal for an atheist to be obsessed with something they don't believe in and to discern about how believers should live their relationship with a deity.
Theists seem to be obsessed with inner-religious matters. I don't see in this thread or others much about evolution vs creationism, while i see a lot about how preaching is wrong, personal beliefs should not be shared and stuff like that. As if the atheists were afraid of something they claim they don't believe in.
I know GodsEmbryo will take it personal, now, but i must quote the following because in my opinion it is emblematic of atheists obsession towards what they don't believe in:
If a woman is against abortion for example because of a belief, then she has all right to not do it if she was in such a situation, but she shouldn't say or demand others can't do it.
Why is that? An atheist pro abortion can fight for their beliefs and move lobbies, politicians, media and public opinion to make abortion an acceptable practice, while those who believe that abortion is equal to killing and it shouldn't be allowed they should not support their own beliefs publicly. God has spoken, i guess. An atheist one.
Many atheist are as radical as radical religious people: they would just want to wipe religions away from the face of earth as much as radical christians or muslims would want to wipe atheists and infidels away. They are both dangerous, but personally i tend to be more suspicious towards a radical atheist who wants to wipe a non existing God and everything related to it, than a theist who tries to convert an atheist.
I'm always surprised in today's age of rapid scientific advancement that people still result to god of gaps arguments. It's a logical fallacy.So, why we exist, sorry? Could you please explain? How the first hominids ended up over the face of earth? Evolution? From what? A cell with a nucleus? And how did that cell form? Life arising from non-life? Any solid evidence that you could gently share with us?
Logical and scientific support.What makes the theory you support less annoying than a belief?
And here we get to the crux of the glaring fallacy. To be fair, it's a very popular one, even with its own name: it's the cosmological argument. Here's what's wrong with your statement:A belief that something cannot evolve from nothing and therefore there must be a creator.
But in all honesty, yes I am becoming more radical. I used to be open minded and respectful but I've seen soooooo many religious shit and idiocy that religion starts to piss me off. I'm not an anti-theist yet, but I'm not really neutral anymore either, and I really am wondering if the world wouldn't be better off without religion. Atheists should be less radical? Well, that's the story of the chicken and the egg (well, because ofscience we know the egg was first, so it's probably not the proper expression): are atheists responding to the crap of religion, or is religion responding to the crap of atheists?
I don't want to jump too far onto the bandwagon, but there's one particularly glaring use of faulty logic I need to point out:
I'm always surprised in today's age of rapid scientific advancement that people still result to god of gaps arguments. It's a logical fallacy.
Logical and scientific support.
And here we get to the crux of the glaring fallacy. To be fair, it's a very popular one, even with its own name: it's the cosmological argument. Here's what's wrong with your statement:
1) The theory doesn't say 'from nothing'
2) If something cannot come from nothing, where does a creator come from?
3) In what other area of life - any area or topic - is it okay to simply make up an answer when you don't have one? "I don't know, so...God."
Do we have an answer for biogenesis at the moment? No. Does that mean it's at all sound or reasonable to make one up? No.
To the last sentence first: even the briefest of history educations will show the former to be true. A more detailed study of history will show some striking inverse correllations between periods and regions of high religiosity and quality of life/scientific and social advancement/etc.
"The Origin of Life. This problem is one of the big ones in science. It begins to place life, and us, in the universe. Most chemists believe, as do I, that life emerged spontaneously from mixtures of molecules in the prebiotic Earth. How? I have no idea"
George M. Whitesides, "Revolutions In Chemistry: Priestley Medalist George M. Whitesides' Address," Chemical and Engineering News, 85: 12-17 (March 26, 2007).
Even Miller throws up his hands at certain aspects of it. The first step, making the monomers, that's easy. We understand it pretty well. But then you have to make the first self-replicating polymers. That's very easy, he says, the sarcasm fairly dripping. Just like it's easy to make money in the stock market -- all you have to do is buy low and sell high. He laughs. Nobody knows how it's done.
Stanley Miller quoted in Peter Radetsky, "How Did Life Start?" Discover Magazine (Nov., 1992).
Not really. As far as I know, both religions claim that their God is the only one in existence. So either they are identical, or (at least) one of them doesn't exist. No?It's irrelevant if they are identical.
Depends. If someone has faith that the earth was created 5,000 years ago, that actually can be disproven. That faith that a God exists cannot be disproven, that I will concede.God is about faith, not about evidence and you can't disprove faith.
An atheist telling you not to believe anymore is not quite the same as an atheist telling you how to live your faith. But that might be nitpicking.An atheist stating that all theists are brain washed is a clear attempt to tell you how (not) to live your faith.
Regardless of what you think of abortion, the difference between the two is this: pro choice campaigners do not want to impose anything on pro life campaigners when they want abortion to be legal. But pro life campaigners want to impose their view on everyone when they want abortion to be illegal.Forcing against will is something wrong in every aspect of life and living, not only abortion. However, GodsEmbryo said she shouldn't say or demand others can't do it; to me this sounds like she cannot campaign against abortion. I don't see why not, if pro-abortion people can campaign for this practice.
The problem I have with this is that believing there is a creator does not solve the question where everything originated. Because: where does the creator come from? Atheist scientists are trying to find out how life exists without a creator. That, so far, they have not found out, does not prove them wrong. On the other hand, an atheist could demand that someone who believes in a creator explains where the creator came from. The usual answer will be that the creator has always been or that the creator does not exist within the boundaries of time. Well, maybe. Maybe not. To me, belief in such a creator does not make much more sense to me than life having originated from nothing. If you consider the size of the universe, the number of stars and planets, why shouldn't life have originated on one planet or other by some chance occurrence? If you consider the possibility of multiple, maybe countless universes (as some scientists have theorized), it becomes even less unlikely that life could be a product of random chance. On the other hand, even the existence of multiple universes would not necessarily disprove the existence of a creator. It's something that cannot really be discussed in a meaningful way.Faith doesn't need logic or scientific support. Those who don't believe in a creator, to the contrary, must explain how is it possible that life exists without a creator
God is about faith, not about evidence and you can't disprove faith.
Faith doesn't need logic or scientific support. Those who don't believe in a creator, to the contrary, must explain how is it possible that life exists without a creator and so far they haven't been capable of doing so
So, again, i don't understand why bothering about something you (generically speaking) don't understand and don't believe it exists.
Science:Which logical and scientific support are you talking about?
"Just a theory" never seems to go away.What you call faulty logic is related to a theory. You can say what you want, but coming from a cell with nucleus is just a theory...
False....and the fact that there are no links discovered between the cell and what should have been the first hominids...
Some scientific evidence for abiogenesis + copious amounts of evidence for evolution >>> zero evidence for creation. So yes, those theories are by far stronger. If you want to challenge that, you've got to change the balance of that equation: provide some evidence for the 'theory' of creation. I'll even take logical (keeping in mind I've already thrown out the cosmological argument, because it by no means even argues for a creator. It just argues for an uncaused cause, which theists have decided to call 'god' - 'god' does not, however, logically follow)....the fact that there is no evidence about the existence of those first hominids and most of all the fact that there is no evidence or scientific explanation on how those cells with nucleus came into existing and started transforming and replicating into more complex organisms, doesn't make that theory any stronger than the theory of creation.
Nor critical thought. And these three difficiencies make faith dangerous.Faith doesn't need logic or scientific support.
So far. Again, I'm surprised anybody uses the god of gaps argument anymore. It's wrong with every scientific advance - 'god' has a smaller and smaller place to hide. In any case, that research is being done. As you say, we'll have an answer in the near or far away future. In the meantime, those who believe in a creator have the burden of proof to show such a creator exists or every 'theory' derived from it is meaningless. Good luck with that.Those who don't believe in a creator, to the contrary, must explain how is it possible that life exists without a creator and so far they haven't been capable of doing so.
Quite right. However, as abiogenesis and especially evolution are supported by both science and logic, we've avoided that unfortunate comparison.i am saying that dismissing a creator as illogical and scientifically unsupported while theorizing something which is also illogical and scientifically unsupported is like the pot calling the kettle black. If one, as per your words, is made up, the other one is made up too.
I don't think there is a way to disprove that. No matter what science might find out in the near or far future, I don't think it will ever be possible to prove or disprove the existence of a deity. That is a question that simply cannot be scientifically investigated. The only thing that can be investigated are actual claims that any given religion might make, like the earth being only 5,000 years old. That can be investigated and proven wrong. (Fanatics will still believe it, of course.) But disproving such claims does not disprove the existence of a creator.an atheist will never convince a theist that there is no deity
Even Occam's razor does not mean that not assuming there is a creator is going to be ultimately true.
That, on the other hand, is something I wholeheartedly agree with.Religion wants to have an influence on society
I am part of that society
Why shouldn't I have a right to bother?
I don't think there is a way to disprove that. No matter what science might find out in the near or far future, I don't think it will ever be possible to prove or disprove the existence of a deity. That is a question that simply cannot be scientifically investigated. The only thing that can be investigated are actual claims that any given religion might make, like the earth being only 5,000 years old. That can be investigated and proven wrong. (Fanatics will still believe it, of course.) But disproving such claims does not disprove the existence of a creator.
I have not read all of Sabrina's posts. But I think there is a difference between saying "you're not gonna convince me anyway" when we talk about something that cannot be proven or disproven, and saying the same thing about something that can be (and has been) disproven, like the earth being 5,000 years old.I'm not sure if I understand your disagreement. Sabrina is not talking about an atheist proving there is no deity.
Sorry to be nitpicking again, but I don't think weighing love towards a partner according to logic and science is an apt comparison. I don't think anyone of us thinks that love is a matter of logic and science. But we have to discern two things:Sabrina talks about something that you atheists can't understand, as we speak: God. It's not about science and logic, but you can't grasp that because you don't have faith. Everything must have an explanation for you. You probably even weight the love towards your partners according to logic and science. You are boring. For me of course and no pun intended
I wish you all a great fucking evening, about this i'm sure we can agree all
Sabrina talks about something that you atheists can't understand, as we speak: God. It's not about science and logic, but you can't grasp that because you don't have faith. Everything must have an explanation for you. You probably even weight the love towards your partners according to logic and science. You are boring. For me of course and no pun intended
I wish you all a great fucking evening, about this i'm sure we can agree all
I have not read all of Sabrina's posts. But I think there is a difference between saying "you're not gonna convince me anyway" when we talk about something that cannot be proven or disproven, and saying the same thing about something that can be (and has been) disproven, like the earth being 5,000 years old.
Sorry to be nitpicking again, but I don't think weighing love towards a partner according to logic and science is an apt comparison. I don't think anyone of us thinks that love is a matter of logic and science. But we have to discern two things:
1. the love you feel towards someone
2. that someone actually existing
And I think atheists are not challenging the first point but the second.
I think you must feel like talking to an asexual person about the glory of sex. Or like someone talking about music to someone who does not like any music at all (there are such people). Or like someone who's trying to talk to people who don't drink beer about the glory of the hops. So I guess, in a way, I can even understand you.
Have a nice evening as well. I sure did, with the glory of the hops.
I hope one day you'll understand we're all equal and others have rights too, not just the chosen one's. Thank you for teaching is about religion.
Evening :hatsoff:
As The Fly refers to himself in the third person, too, possibly we are both on our own path to becoming our inner spiritual being?
Shalom!
I don't think there is a way to disprove that. No matter what science might find out in the near or far future, I don't think it will ever be possible to prove or disprove the existence of a deity.
And here we touch on falsifiability, which is another take on this whole question, albeit one few find satisfying: if something is not falsifiable, that something is meaningless true or false. Taking Bertrand Russel's teapot as an example, say there's a teapot orbiting around the earth. Someone says great, let's get a telescope. Well, it's invisible. Okay, let's get some radar. Well, it's too small be to be detected by radar. Okay, let's build a big net to 'feel' it. Oh, it's also incorporeal. And so on. In the end you get an object that has no effect, affects nothing and cannot be affected - in other words, it makes no difference whether or not that object actually exists.I'm not sure if I understand your disagreement. Sabrina is not talking about an atheist proving there is no deity. but about never being convinced. No one will be able to prove or disprove a deity.
It goes a bit deeper than the binary of no creator or creator - such a creature would have to be by definition supernatural and therefore impossibly complex. It's not just assuming 'a creator', but a near-to-actually infinitely complex being - this requires a lot more assumption than those based on already observable facts in nature (such as that abiogenesis happened through natural, explainable processes that we just haven't found out yet). You're right in saying it doesn't prove against god - just that that hypotheses is near the end of the line.Even Occam's razor does not mean that not assuming there is a creator is going to be ultimately true.
"The principle states that among competing hypotheses that predict equally well, the one with the fewest assumptions should be selected. Other, more complicated solutions may ultimately prove to provide better predictions, but—in the absence of differences in predictive ability—the fewer assumptions that are made, the better."
Now, you might say that not assuming there is a creator is one assumption less than assuming there is a creator. But I'm not sure if that is an apt comparison. Because, if you do not assume that there is a creator, you automatically assume that life originated by some other process. No? (If you think that my reasoning is flawed, feel free to point out how.)
This is deism, and much like falsifiability, is a sort of irrelevant conclusion - what I mean by irrelevant is that if it's true or not, it makes no difference to us here and now. If no creator is paying attention to us or acting on us as theists believe, said creator might as well just be the big bang with 'god' slapped on it.And even if life originated by random chance, you can ask, where did the universe come from? Maybe a creator created it and then left it alone, with life originating by random chance, but not the universe. Or, maybe the creator was casting dice, so to speak, so that the universe was created by random chance, even if there was a creator. (Yes, I do realize that this is very far from what religious people believe in.)
Almost as if god were designed to last, no?But the point is: There's always the next question around the corner as soon as you have solved one question, and the end might never be reached, so there is always room for a God if you're a believer.
Truth. "I don't know" is often the most honest position, and in any situation where no evidence or logic points in either direction, that is the only reasonable position to take. This isn't the case with a deity, however; while no evidence explicitly against a deity exists, implicitly there is (natural laws as we understand them) and more importantly, plenty of evidence to suggest a much more likely origin for god - in psychology (see Sigmund Freud, for example).The most honest position is to say "I don't know" and based on the examples you give, someone can assess the evidence and arguments and say I believe or I don't believe in a deity.
I just posted to georges about the definition of unreasonable, and here you've brought it up in more or less the same form. :thumbsup:This is an ongoing process where evidence can be added or debunked, and as a result thereof it might change people's mind. So when someone is not willing to provide any proof or arguments, demands proof from everybody else, and in the same breath claims that nothing is going to change her mind despite whatever proof or arguments given... Once again, sorry, but that's arrogance.
I see it oppositely; if people simply accepted what they didn't know, deities wouldn't be a thing. They exist because people don't except what they don't know and create an answer in that space. The god of gaps.Believing is to accept what you don't know.
On the contrary, I understand god as well as one can with only a small bit of pschology in my background. The difference being understanding what and why god is as opposed to what many want god to be. That you say everything must have an explanation to us is particularly rich, considering we aren't the ones making up explanations to fill the gaps in our knowledge. But it seems you aren't interested in defending your positions so I won't go any further. Seeing as this is a porn forum after all this these sorts of discussions take time, that's genuinely fair enough.Sabrina talks about something that you atheists can't understand, as we speak: God. It's not about science and logic, but you can't grasp that because you don't have faith. Everything must have an explanation for you. You probably even weight the love towards your partners according to logic and science. You are boring. For me of course and no pun intended
I wish you all a great fucking evening, about this i'm sure we can agree all