That's an opinion of an attitude, based on assumption. I'd wait for the rejection letter before assuming they'd allow one thing or the other.
Well, nothing has passed the threshold to be called a theory yet, in scientific terms, but there's hypothesis' that have made predictions and had those predictions come true, so it's at least come part-way. So we've got a better idea, a theory in colloquial terms, at the very least.CaptainMarvelous said:If you want to believe God caused the Big Bang, as it stands, we haven't got a better theory for what caused it (to my knowledge, feel free to correct me physicists) so I'm completely OK with that.
I retract my earlier pass to believe God started the universe, that hypothesis looks pretty solid.Cerebrawl said:-snip-
You have no idea how great it is to hear people actually discussing this instead of making the same old arguments.SilverStuddedSquirre said:I have often wondered why so few firmly devout people have not yet tried the argument "Evolution: It's a Miracle!"Nyaliva said:I like how the Creationist is a scientist of astronomy and physics and is debating a biological concept. A completely trustworthy source there.
THANK YOU!!!!!!!! I'm so glad I finally found SOMEONE who sees the obvious. Go! Spread the good word!Nooners said:Or, you know. All science that we see everywhere is true because God did it. Why is it so hard for these two views to coexist? God made the universe able to run on science. He made it with a firmly established set of rules for physics, biology, geology, etc, etc... Why is this so hard to understand?
As a person who doe not believe in any God, I am perfectly open to discovering that this is true. You would have to be able to demonstrate properly that God (which /whatever God it turns out to be in this case) exists. But, Hypothetically speaking if this occurs, I rather think God would have no trouble making the Physical Universe, running on "The Science," then watching with the delight of a Dedicated Miniatures Hobbyist as His Children learn more about Creation and go "Oooo!" And, "Aaah!"
My Issue with religion, (as opposed to the IDEA of a God) is that Human Beings do NOT know ANYTHING about God. All the writings, all the scriptures, were written by the hand of a person. Everything people "know" about God is things that Humans wrote. There is a great line in Babylon 5: "The closer we think we are to defining God, the further we are from Him." I think it nicely sums how I feel about religion and God.
Then you're misunderstanding what miracle means, and you're also moving the goalposts.Nyaliva said:If anyone writes a book on this topic, I'd love it if they called it 'Evolution: It's a Miracle!'.
Cerebrawl said:Then you're misunderstanding what miracle means, and you're also moving the goalposts.Nyaliva said:If anyone writes a book on this topic, I'd love it if they called it 'Evolution: It's a Miracle!'.
Of course it does also contradict the bible, which is hardly surprising since it's a collection of bronze age and early iron age writings.
It made me think of this:
"Religion doesn't kill people, people kill people."Nyaliva said:I fully agree that the problem with religion is people ('Religion doesn't kill people! PEOPLE kill people!' ), and I think so many people who agree with Creationism are scared to hold science as fact because it will make God seem somehow less miraculous. 'I mean the universe can make ITSELF in a few billion years but God did it in 7 DAYS! Wow!' Something like that. As much as I've called out some atheists who refuse to discuss religion in any way for claiming religious people are close-minded, this is one aspect where most devout religious people really are.
If anyone writes a book on this topic, I'd love it if they called it 'Evolution: It's a Miracle!'.
In theory, Creationism and Intelligent Design are two different hypothesis. The first states that the events depicted in the Bible are literally true, that God created us, there was Noah's flood, and God created life 6,000 years ago. Intelligent Design states that there is an ill defined "creator" and that there is "irreducable complexities in life." When pressed, the designers tend to dodge the question of who the designer is, some saying things like "it might of been aliens," or that the being has god like powers, but avoiding the term "God."The Great JT said:Creationism or Intelligent Design or whatever you care to call it isn't science. Creationism is religious dogma dressed up to seem like science. Their proof is hogwash and their theories obviously based in Judeo-Christian creation myth as opposed to scientific findings. I won't say their viewpoint is invalid (hey, I don't know if they're right or wrong) but if your source of scientific proof is the Bible, you're just wrong. The Bible, for as much as it is claimed to be "the one true word of the Lord" has been tampered with, altered, edited and had entire verses left out by the hands of man over the last 2000+ years and therefore is ineligible as a source of truth. Even the King James Bible, the version I've heard described as the definitive version of the Bible, is not the original, unaltered work and therefore is not the true word.
*Looks back at what I said* Wow, I'm sorry if that came across as spiteful, vitriolic or anti-religious, that was not my intention. I just get sick of the argument "Creationism is just as valid as Evolution." I just see it as religious nutjobs trying to stick their fingers where they shouldn't be.
Not even in theory, it's a plain old rebranding.Not G. Ivingname said:In theory, Creationism and Intelligent Design are two different hypothesis. The first states that the events depicted in the Bible are literally true, that God created us, there was Noah's flood, and God created life 6,000 years ago. Intelligent Design states that there is an ill defined "creator" and that there is "irreducable complexities in life." When pressed, the designers tend to dodge the question of who the designer is, some saying things like "it might of been aliens," or that the being has god like powers, but avoiding the term "God."
I say in theory, since about everyone behind Intelligent Design (mostly the "Discovery Institute") are Christian, and Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District made this ruling on ID:
"Teaching intelligent design in public school biology classes violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States (and Article I, Section 3 of the Pennsylvania State Constitution) because intelligent design is not science and "cannot uncouple itself from its creationist, and thus religious, antecedents."
-John E. Jones III
There are some creationists that disagree with Intelligent Design, and ID has been trying to desperately keep it's distance from Creationism from the start. Neither is an entirely unified movement.Cerebrawl said:Not even in theory, it's a plain old rebranding.Not G. Ivingname said:In theory, Creationism and Intelligent Design are two different hypothesis. The first states that the events depicted in the Bible are literally true, that God created us, there was Noah's flood, and God created life 6,000 years ago. Intelligent Design states that there is an ill defined "creator" and that there is "irreducable complexities in life." When pressed, the designers tend to dodge the question of who the designer is, some saying things like "it might of been aliens," or that the being has god like powers, but avoiding the term "God."
I say in theory, since about everyone behind Intelligent Design (mostly the "Discovery Institute") are Christian, and Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District made this ruling on ID:
"Teaching intelligent design in public school biology classes violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States (and Article I, Section 3 of the Pennsylvania State Constitution) because intelligent design is not science and "cannot uncouple itself from its creationist, and thus religious, antecedents."
-John E. Jones III
The ID books were old creationism books with ID sloppily copy-pasted over creationism. As in someone used a "replace all" function where creationism was replaced with ID, and the rest of the text was identical.
(I'm talking about "Of Pandas and People", the book that the ID movement tried to get into schools).
It's not the first rebranding they've done either, "creation science"(sic) is a previous rebranding of creationism, of course there's nothing scientific about it, they just wanted to make it sound like they had a basis for their claims.
I'm afraid you may be misunderstanding the implied humour in the title, I didn't mean evolution is a literal miracle. And I don't see how I'm moving the goalposts, I'm simply discussing a possible middle ground.Cerebrawl said:Then you're misunderstanding what miracle means, and you're also moving the goalposts.Nyaliva said:If anyone writes a book on this topic, I'd love it if they called it 'Evolution: It's a Miracle!'.
Of course it does also contradict the bible, which is hardly surprising since it's a collection of bronze age and early iron age writings.
It made me think of this:
-Video Snip-
A gun may not tell someone to pick it up and kill, but it's sole function is to kill and its use throughout society indirectly enforces that use. The person uses the gun to kill because of the memes associated with having a gun.SilverStuddedSquirre said:"Religion doesn't kill people, people kill people."Nyaliva said:I fully agree that the problem with religion is people ('Religion doesn't kill people! PEOPLE kill people!' ), and I think so many people who agree with Creationism are scared to hold science as fact because it will make God seem somehow less miraculous. 'I mean the universe can make ITSELF in a few billion years but God did it in 7 DAYS! Wow!' Something like that. As much as I've called out some atheists who refuse to discuss religion in any way for claiming religious people are close-minded, this is one aspect where most devout religious people really are.
If anyone writes a book on this topic, I'd love it if they called it 'Evolution: It's a Miracle!'.
Absolutely incorrect. Religion tells people not only TO kill other people, but WHICH people, WHERE they live, and in some cases, HOW to kill them. Examples include The Crusades, The Inquisition and the Witch Hunts in the USA.
You are using the argument that a Gun, which is an inanimate object functions like Religion, which is a Meme. A meme in the true, scientific sense of the word: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meme NOT an amusing picture with witty comment attatched.
A gun, will not TELL you to pick it up and kill somebody. All the Christ / Ihova based religions say that ALL other religions are wrong, and must be replaced with themselves. If they cannot be converted, than you must kill them. (Crusades) If they say anything other than what we have declared is truth, then you must Kill them, even if they are of our religion. ( Inquisition) If they diplay any evidence of thought beyond what we have told them they may think, or dare to step out of the approved roles we have assigned them, you must Kill them. ( Witch Hunts)
Captcha: She's a Witch! ^5 captcha, ^5
[edit] not as sure about Judaism on this point, but Moses DID have God kill all the first-born Sons of Egypt, so.....yeah. Mass Murder.
Oh I have done quite a lot of proper research. I would say I still have an open mind, I've just logically ruled out all major religions. To quote Holmes "Once you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth". I've done a lot of eliminating the impossible.Nyaliva said:I did once find a book which purported to describe what we know about the beginning of the universe and life on Earth and show it's very close to a metaphorical interpretation of Genesis. I unfortunately can't remember the title (or more accurately, what I believed was the title was actually one for a different book), and it could just be a collection of post hoc misinterpretations but I intend to do a little more research before condemning it completely.
I'm not arguing for Creationism, what most people argue from that side is a complete contradiction of facts. However, I think too many people condemn all religion because of them and I don't think it's within the bounds of 'keeping an open mind' to do so without some proper research.
I never sneer at a good wall of text, although I know others do, so forgive the snippers, and the wall I seem to have put up in its place.Cerebrawl said:-Snips-
I think core values of religions are often bad rather than good, and that the secularisation of society has been gradually blunting them as they become more and more unacceptable as society's morality and ethics has evolved. I have no problem calling the original biblical laws and commandments to be predominantly evil(or irrelevant, like prohibitions against mixing cloth fabrics), and if you described them to today's christians while obfuscating where they're from(such as saying it's from islam), most find them abhorrent, it's not until you reveal that they're biblical that people start rationalising and making excuses to aleviate their cognitive dissonance.Nyaliva said:Your comment about human behaviour is one I mostly share, and is sort of what I've tried to say previously. I've always observed the unfortunate consequences of religion to be the peoples' misinterpretation of the teachings, as well as selectively enforcing the teachings they believe are more important on others, while forgetting the core values. I've come to the conclusion that the way humans act using religion is what causes religion to be a problem, although I put the people who follow religion at fault rather than the religion itself, based solely on what I've seen. I've considered the varied problems which religion fosters and found general human thinking to be the source (I had a few examples but cut them for space). However, I've also concluded that given this general human thinking, it would be nearly impossible for the religion to be interpreted any other way by the majority of its followers. So my dilemma is determining whether this means the religion is at fault implicitly since it will always foster this kind of thinking. However, this does come from having not researched religion thoroughly enough to as of yet determine that the way of thinking it breeds is encouraged EXPLICITLY. I suppose that is exactly what you found by your research?
While I wouldn't personally call most religions 'evil', I do agree that their intention to provide a set of rules for morality is a hindrance to their core values. It's like reading a book on how to 'pick up chicks', it doesn't always apply, there's more to it and it dehumanises both parties. And I agree that it's an implicit (or in some cases explicit) consequence that anything outside a religion's moral blanket is either blindly assumed to be okay or argued by different parties as to which rules it breaks, causing confusion, dissent and a superficial discussion of the subject.Cerebrawl said:-Snip again-