Awwww Knight, we care about you too!Knight said:
I do.
And I care about ThePhy, fool, allsmiles, Calde-whatever, Granite and the rest. I do!
You'd be a decent guy if it wasen't for all the killing and stuff.................
Awwww Knight, we care about you too!Knight said:
I do.
And I care about ThePhy, fool, allsmiles, Calde-whatever, Granite and the rest. I do!
What makes you think I might want to?Knight said:Earlier on this thread I asked you if you believed in perpetual motion machines. And without qualification you stated "no".
Would you like to change your answer?
ThePhy said:Supernatural has been the bucket that religionists have dumped things they didn’t understand into for millennia. Had you lived a few hundred years ago, you would have found just as much comfort in labeling earthquakes, comets, diseases, volcanoes, and tsunamis as supernatural.
Not my pink elephant. Zeus told me there are no pink elephants.
No, you are replacing “We don’t know” with the more trendy “created itself” nonsense. Part of “we don’t know derives from the breakdown of the laws that govern the daily existence we live in. There is an understandable desire to demand that even at the earliest moments of existence that the world be the rational place we know. It wasn’t. Whenever we go to the extremes we find that we must give up our cherished comfort zone, and accept nature on her terms.Vaquero45 said:Since I believe that all of the natural world is ultimately caused by a supernatural cause, my explanations wouldn't have been entirely wrong. You otoh, ultimately appear to think those phenomena created themselves.
That’s Ok, I talked to Zeus and she said you are forgiven.lol, I stand corrected.
Knight said:Challenge anything you want!
Knock yourself out! :thumb:
2+2 might equal 5, create a four sided triangle, determine the length of time it took before time came into existence. Knock yourself out! Everybody's got to have a hobby.
ThePhy.... to maintain your world-view you need to have faith that the 1st and 2nd laws of thermodynamics might be breakable. I realize that. And you have your own will. You are free to think whatever you want to think I am not going to try to force you to believe in the conclusions of science.
Caledvwlch said:Ok, I can agree with that, but being raised a Christian, I was never given a good background in any of these plausible alternative, so I don't try to discuss them. What I'm left with is two thing. I don't know, and it doesn't matter that I don't know, because nobody really does. :thumb:
Knight said:The only folks willing to offer plausible explanations seem to be the Creationists. All the rest (including you) appeal to the "Singularity" of the gaps theory.
Haven't you ever heard the expression God of the gaps? It refers to the atheist argument that theists use "God did it" as a cop-out to explain anything that is a mystery to them. (There was some great discussion about this in Battle Royale VII... Check it out!)ThePhy said:I don’t know what you mean by the “gaps theory”.
Turbo said:Haven't you ever heard the expression God of the gaps? It refers to the atheist argument that theists use "God did it" as a cop-out to explain anything that is a mystery to them. (There was some great discussion about this in Battle Royale VII... Check it out!)
Hopefully that will shed some light on what Knight means when he says that you (and other atheists) appeal to the "Singularity" of the gaps theory.
Science closes gaps and therefore science is a great asset.noguru said:The God of the gaps methodology is still used. It will probably always be used. Since science will most likely never have all the answers. It is used regarding abiogenesis. This is why I find Christian apologetics based on the limitations of the naturalistic methodology to be misleading.
As an atheist and a scientist I can assure you that my atheism in something quite apart from my science. If I decided to take up the study of fine arts, nothing would change in my (non)theology.So often atheists pretend that their atheism is founded on science. But it's refreshing to see so many in this thread candidly acknowledge in this thread that they cannot even account for the existence of the natural universe from their worldview, and that they really don't care.
I am well aware of the concept of gaps you mention. I just had not heard that used in reference to science. I think it is a bit unfortunate that some feel we have to partition up the territory between God and science. Is science’s gap the same as God’s firm territory, and vv?Haven't you ever heard the expression God of the gaps? It refers to the atheist argument that theists use "God did it" as a cop-out to explain anything that is a mystery to them. (There was some great discussion about this in Battle Royale VII... Check it out!)
Turbo said:they cannot even account for the existence of the natural universe from their worldview,
Turbo said:So often atheists pretend that their atheism is founded on science. But it's refreshing to see so many in this thread candidly acknowledge in this thread that they cannot even account for the existence of the natural universe from their worldview, and that they really don't care.
Turbo said:That last phrase, "because nobody really does," bothered me when I first read it. How could he possibly know what everybody else does and doesn't know? It's stated so dogmatically; it sounds like something PureX would write (but PureX's post would be at least 10 times as long ). But then I realized that this is but another belief that Caledvwlch bases on blind faith.
Apathy, perhaps? My generation is notorious for it.Turbo said:So often atheists pretend that their atheism is founded on science. But it's refreshing to see so many in this thread candidly acknowledge in this thread that they cannot even account for the existence of the natural universe from their worldview, and that they really don't care.
Why, Lionel... I didn't know you cared. And you spelled my handle correctly! I think I'm going to get emotional.Caledvwlch's confession that his atheism is based on blind faith and willing ignorance is especially eloquent:
I know it sounds a little dogmatic, but it's what I believe. Even as a Christian, there are things that have to be taken on faith, not knowledge. You cannot know that the Genesis creation account is accurate. You believe that it is accurate. I've never encountered a Christian (in my Christian days, or otherwise) who could not concede that the creation is mainly a point of faith. Surety of faith is not the same thing as raw knowledge.That last phrase, "because nobody really does," bothered me when I first read it. How could he possibly know what everybody else does and doesn't know? It's stated so dogmatically; it sounds like something PureX would write (but PureX's post would be at least 10 times as long ).
Not blind faith, as I explained above. Was it right for me to say that no living human knows? Perhaps not. I hope you can understand the difference when I say I believe that nobody knows. And as far as my beliefs concerning the origins of the universe, at least I have the honesty to admit that I do not know.But then I realized that this is but another belief that Caledvwlch bases on blind faith.