Science is based on faith?

Recommended Videos

disgruntledgamer

New member
Mar 6, 2012
903
0
0
NotALiberal said:
disgruntledgamer said:
NotALiberal said:
In this regard, yes, science can also be "faith" based.
But it's not in that regard, the term faith has been completely taking out of context in general for this thread, it's like showing a picture of a ball bat and asking how can bats fly?
No, it's exactly what I said it was.

It takes faith to assume Gravity will hold up tomorrow just because it has held up the day before. It may not take much faith, but it's still faith.
No it isn't and if you think you need faith so you won't fly off planet earth tomorrow I don't know what to say to you, but obviously your argument has degraded into the ridiculous so there is no point in continuing.
 

gwilym101

New member
Sep 12, 2011
45
0
0
NotALiberal said:
Wrong.

You were also going well until you stated evolution as undisputed fact (and gravity for that matter too).

You can never prove a hypotheses, only disprove it. That IS science in a nutshell. Just because the theory of gravity has still held up, doesn't mean tomorrow it will. You may argue this to be "semantics", but this is science 101. In this regard, yes, science can also be "faith" based.
We know gravity exists (i'm not going to talk about evolution although that's equally valid as gravity). You can see there is a force keeping us on this planet, keeping this planet orbiting the sun. There is no room for doubt in this. We might discover some new aspect of it, but that still won't change the fact that there is a force pulling us towards the centre of the planet.

The theory of gravity, is an explanation for how this force works. This can be wrong (hugely unlikely), but if the theory is proven wrong that won't mean that gravity doesn't exist, it'll just mean that we don't know how it works.
 
Jun 16, 2010
1,153
0
0
I have been arguing this point since long before the Extra Credits episode. In fact, I was quite amazed when it came out, because they covered almost all of my favourite points.

I've stopped getting into these arguments however, because it seems to be a black-or-white issue with people's understanding. I find it boils down to whether or not you correctly understand the term used, "faith", which in this philosophical context has a very specific meaning: accepting unprovable axiomatic statements as true. This is the fundamental basis of all positivism.

Some people who like science (and I say this in place of 'scientists', because most actual scientists have studied Philosophy of Science in college and already know this) object to the term faith, because they associate it with religion. However, they don't really understand the implications of saying "I have no faith in any axioms." This is essentially the definition of ontological nihilism: nothing is true or logical.

These same people follow this up with "I don't need faith, I rely on evidence to prove my axioms," but this simply demonstrates a major lack of understanding of how science and logic actually works. Every mathematical or scientific proof begins with an axiom, i.e. the results of another proof. There is no such thing as an original proof: if your axiom is "true because it is true", then it is known as a tautology and is considered logically unsound. No matter what you offer to prove another statement, another scientist can keep saying "now prove that." Eventually, you both have to agree on something that is taken for granted as true, rather than enter into an infinite loop of trying to prove each successive axiom. This is technically an act of faith.

It may be a much slighter act of faith than say, believing in the bible. But that's just a matter of scale. I don't think anyone is arguing that the scientific method requires as much faith as religion. Only that fundamentally, the two systems of belief are configured much the same, just with different axioms.

This is my understanding of things, as a current MSc student who has studied philosophy of science in university.
Take from this what you will. I just wrote this post in the hopes that it will help some genuinely science-minded people to overcome their inherent defensiveness (I was the same way when the topic was first broached in uni) and consider this logically.
 

Vegosiux

New member
May 18, 2011
4,378
0
0
floppylobster said:
You. You're exactly the sort of person I'm talking about. I still can't believe there's such a thing as close-minded scientists.
Asking for specific information is not closed-minded. To a scientist, things like "Some people say..." or "This one guy once had this happen..." is worthless. Utterly, completely, worthless.

What, when, why, how, that's what a scientist is after. Specific, hard data. So if you say "Too many scientists act like this or that", sorry, that's nothing. Inquiring as to who is acting how exactly is not closed-minded.

As for why people embrace faith, there are several explanations for it out there, from fear of death to empowerment and so on.

And by the way, just because a scientist will analyze and calculate the refractions of different wavelengths of visible light through water droplets, doesn't mean that the same scientist can't see the simple beauty of the rainbow. A common misconception, I might add. Understanding how things work and being able to write them in equations and formulas takes no beauty out of those workings. To me, I'd say it adds another level of it. Science is beautiful - and whoever believes that an analytical approach "reduces everything to boring symbols and numbers" could not be more wrong.
 

Smeatza

New member
Dec 12, 2011
932
0
0
Is science based on faith? No, it's based on evidence.
The only way you can imply science if based on faith is if you used the word "faith" in the sense meaning "confidence."

You can faff about with circular thought exercises if you want, but René Descartes was wasting his time with that philosophical mess 400 years ago.
 

Saxnot

New member
Mar 1, 2010
212
0
0
disgruntledgamer said:
So you think all the 240+ religions and gods (Including Scientology) are valid and perhaps should taught in schools as probable theories?
No. I have no idea what relevance this has to the question of the place proof has in religion. This is an interesting question as well, but really deserves a seperate discussion.

disgruntledgamer said:
The fact is you CAN debate god in tems of proof of existence because unlike the general concept of god which cannot be disproved in general, just like the Giant Spaghetti Monster cannot be disproved, "Religion" of that god can be.

I cannot prove the general concept of god is false, but I can prove the book people claim is the word of god is full of %$#&. I can show through geographical evidence that there was no grate flood, I can show with mountains of evidence that the earth is older than 6,500 years, I can show that male Fluid does not come from between a man's backbone and ribs.(Qur?an BTW) Not to mention the crap the Bible and Qur?an share like the sun rotating around the earth and the earth being stationary.
Disproving factual assertions in holy books does not really invalidate them. Or usually cause believers to question their faith. There are actually very few people who interpret the bible literally, and really think that yes, the world is 6000 years old. More importantly, those assertions aren't really essential to the religion. People don't believe in the idea that male fluid comes from beetween a man's backbone and ribs, they believe that there is no god but Allah and Muhammed is his prophet. Religions don't base their claim to your faith on their ability to explain how everything works, but on why it works and who made it. To a religious person, the value in the story of the great flood is not in explaining the state of the world, but in reaffirming the importance of faith.

To make a scientific analogy: say someone came up with a small snag in gravity theory. A planet is not where it should be according to our current models. This would not in itself be enough to invalidate the entire theory. You might ignore it, or trust that the answer would be found later and the model slightly modified, but relatively small elements of the entire theory being in doubt is not usually enough to discredit it.

disgruntledgamer said:
If someone came up to you and said Zeus was the real true god and you should worship Zeus, but had no evidence or "proof" you probably wouldn't take him or his worship of Zeus seriously and it is for that exact same reason I'm not taking you seriously.
I would take his religion as seriously as i do all religions. I would listen to his ideas, and if he doesn't convince me, i would always keep in mind that he might just be right. I cannot disprove him, so i must remain uncertain about the (non)existence of Zeus. I might be more inclined to listen to him than a priest in fact, the greek gods certainly seem more lively an relatable than Jahwe.

If you don't take me seriously that's a shame. I'm being very serious, and i'm certainly taking you seriously. i wouldn't be writing all this if i wasn't.
 

disgruntledgamer

New member
Mar 6, 2012
903
0
0
Smeatza said:
Is science based on faith? No, it's based on evidence.
The only way you can imply science if based on faith is if you used the word "faith" in the sense meaning "confidence."
Ding Ding and we have a Winner! Someone finally looked up the definition of faith and found the hidden definition. I explained this like 3 times.
 

Something Amyss

Aswyng and Amyss
Dec 3, 2008
24,756
0
0
Saxnot said:
Disproving factual assertions in holy books does not really invalidate them. Or usually cause believers to question their faith.
Actually, disproving factual assertions does invalidate them. The latter part is true, however.

The thing is, if something or someone asserts facts that can be rebutted, rebutting them does challenge the validity. And it does challenge the tenets of the faith; it undercuts the majority of Abrahamic tenets (for example, especially since they're the ones who tend to most fervently assert their faith).

You're right that it usually doesn't change minds, but that's a horse of a different colour.
 

EvilRoy

The face I make when I see unguarded pie.
Legacy
Jan 9, 2011
1,859
560
118
James Joseph Emerald said:
I have been arguing this point since long before the Extra Credits episode. In fact, I was quite amazed when it came out, because they covered almost all of my favourite points.

I've stopped getting into these arguments however, because it seems to be a black-or-white issue with people's understanding. I find it boils down to whether or not you correctly understand the term used, "faith", which in this philosophical context has a very specific meaning: accepting unprovable axiomatic statements as true. This is the fundamental basis of all positivism.

Some people who like science (and I say this in place of 'scientists', because most actual scientists have studied Philosophy of Science in college and already know this) object to the term faith, because they associate it with religion. However, they don't really understand the implications of saying "I have no faith in any axioms." This is essentially the definition of ontological nihilism: nothing is true or logical.

These same people follow this up with "I don't need faith, I rely on evidence to prove my axioms," but this simply demonstrates a major lack of understanding of how science and logic actually works. Every mathematical or scientific proof begins with an axiom, i.e. the results of another proof. There is no such thing as an original proof: if your axiom is "true because it is true", then it is known as a tautology and is considered logically unsound. No matter what you offer to prove another statement, another scientist can keep saying "now prove that." Eventually, you both have to agree on something that is taken for granted as true, rather than enter into an infinite loop of trying to prove each successive axiom. This is technically an act of faith.

It may be a much slighter act of faith than say, believing in the bible. But that's just a matter of scale. I don't think anyone is arguing that the scientific method requires as much faith as religion. Only that fundamentally, the two systems of belief are configured much the same, just with different axioms.

This is my understanding of things, as a current MSc student who has studied philosophy of science in university.
Take from this what you will. I just wrote this post in the hopes that it will help some genuinely science-minded people to overcome their inherent defensiveness (I was the same way when the topic was first broached in uni) and consider this logically.
I guess I'll state my background since you stated yours so we can move forward without assumptions about each other. I'm an engineering alumni with a masters of engineering in my chosen field, although I have never studied philosophy of science opting instead for symbolic philosophy and a bit of nihilism (waste of time).

The thought I've always had about the axioms we depend on in science is that we don't so much assume that they are true, we just accept that they exist. That is, we aren't assuming that it is correct that a+b=b+a and so forth, but we are defining a set of rules that all the work we do is based on. The idea being that in order for one mathematical equation to have any relevance to any other, they both need to have been based on the same set of rules.

So to my mind the question has always been "does it matter what rules we use, so long as everyone follows the same rules?" Of course the very first problem that comes to mind is "x=x". If "x~=x" it's pretty tough to even communicate a formula in general, but thinking about this I always come to rest on the proof a friend of mine produced for either his BSc or MSc in mathematics (I've forgotten which), "1+1=2". In this proof he exhaustively defined "1" and "2" and depended on "x=x" to prove that "1=1", but couldn't he have simply duplicated his pages of work for the definition of "1" to define, say, "y" and then defined the system as "1+y=2" where "y" has been defined separately from but the same as "1"?

This kinda stuff has always been pretty interesting for me, I wish I had taken the philosophy of science courses just for my own curiosity but I was more focused on passing and leaving at the time. I'm interested in your thoughts on this. Can axioms, like general rules, simply be swapped out for other axioms without changing the "truth" communicated by an equation, so long as those equations both fully follow their respective rules?
 

Saxnot

New member
Mar 1, 2010
212
0
0
Zachary Amaranth said:
Saxnot said:
Disproving factual assertions in holy books does not really invalidate them. Or usually cause believers to question their faith.
Actually, disproving factual assertions does invalidate them. The latter part is true, however.

The thing is, if something or someone asserts facts that can be rebutted, rebutting them does challenge the validity. And it does challenge the tenets of the faith; it undercuts the majority of Abrahamic tenets (for example, especially since they're the ones who tend to most fervently assert their faith).

You're right that it usually doesn't change minds, but that's a horse of a different colour.
My point is those things are not essential. The question is whether you can debate the existence or nonexistence of god in terms of (factual) proof. But the place of a religion is to give spiritual meaning and context to the world. To challenge their factual asserions of the type 'this spins around that' is to debate the most minor and unimportant element of the religion. Trying to invalidate a religion this way completely misses the essential point of religion. if you already believe, disproving these things is unlikely to change your mind. That is why factual errors don't invalidate holy books. Because factual asserions about the functioning of the human body or the arrangements of planets are not the point of holy books.

The tenets of christianity are not based on the question of whether there was a great flood. They are (for example) based on the ten commandments. If you believe those are valid and correct assertions, thats a reason to obey and believe in them, not whether or not Sodom and Gamorrah existed.
 

disgruntledgamer

New member
Mar 6, 2012
903
0
0
Saxnot said:
Disproving factual assertions in holy books does not really invalidate them.
Yes it does.

Saxnot said:
Or usually cause believers to question their faith. There are actually very few people who interpret the bible literally, and really think that yes, the world is 6000 years old.
Oh really

http://www.patheos.com/blogs/friendlyatheist/2012/06/01/gallup-poll-46-of-americans-are-creationists/

Saxnot said:
More importantly, those assertions aren't really essential to the religion.
Yes they are.

Saxnot said:
People don't believe in the idea that male fluid comes from beetween a man's backbone and ribs, they believe that there is no god but Allah and Muhammed is his prophet.
Um no there is more to the Qur'an than just Allah and Muhammed as his prophet, and fluid comes from between a man's backbone and ribs is in the Qur?an 86:6-7. I gave you the verse look it up.

Saxnot said:
Religions don't base their claim to your faith on their ability to explain how everything works, but on why it works and who made it. To a religious person, the value in the story of the great flood is not in explaining the state of the world, but in reaffirming the importance of faith.
Yes they do, religions don't explain how anything works. Faith is not only unimportant, but by definition foolish. Faith in the religious context is to believe in something not only without evidence, but despite the evidence.

Saxnot said:
To make a scientific analogy:
Please don't even try......

Saxnot said:
say someone came up with a small snag in gravity theory. A planet is not where it should be according to our current models. This would not in itself be enough to invalidate the entire theory. You might ignore it, or trust that the answer would be found later and the model slightly modified, but relatively small elements of the entire theory being in doubt is not usually enough to discredit it.
Science is always updating, changing /modifying it's models when new information/evidence comes in. This isn't a hypothetical it's happening now to most scientific models, and there are more than a few small snags in the theory of gravity, and there are objects in space that shouldn't be where they are, once again not a hypothetical in fact evolution is a stronger theory than gravity.

I have no idea what point you were trying to make with this as it is so far attached from the topic it's astounding.

Saxnot said:
I would take his religion as seriously as i do all religions. I would listen to his ideas, and if he doesn't convince me, i would always keep in mind that he might just be right. I cannot disprove him, so i must remain uncertain about the (non)existence of Zeus. I might be more inclined to listen to him than a priest in fact, the greek gods certainly seem more lively an relatable than Jahwe.
No you wouldn't you don't even lie good.

Saxnot said:
If you don't take me seriously that's a shame. I'm being very serious, and i'm certainly taking you seriously. i wouldn't be writing all this if i wasn't.
No I don't, for the same reason I wouldn't take someone seriously who believed the moon was made out of cheese. That might sound mean, but I never said I was nice.
 

TheRightToArmBears

New member
Dec 13, 2008
8,672
0
0
That's a silly and misleading way of putting it. There's a world of difference between proving something beyond all reasonable doubt and 'faith'. Just because most people aren't pedantic enough to point out that every fact has a small chance of being untrue doesn't mean that they're always talking in absolutes.

Basically, doing a load of research before claiming animals evolved is completely different to saying they were created by God because you faith in the bible.
 

disgruntledgamer

New member
Mar 6, 2012
903
0
0
Saxnot said:
are not the point of holy books.

The tenets of christianity are not based on the question of whether there was a great flood. They are (for example) based on the ten commandments. If you believe those are valid and correct assertions, thats a reason to obey and believe in them, not whether or not Sodom and Gamorrah existed.
No I don't believe in tenets of Christianity or that we should obey the ten commandments. Why because they're a list of Bronze age barbaric rules.

I don't want to kill my neighbor if I catch him working on a Sunday, I don't think owning slaves is moral even if you decide not to rape them, I don't believe in god at all and I certainly don't think people should be restricted to not to make images of him, I don't think stoning disbandment children is moral and certainly not selling your daughter into slavery, Having bears kill children for calling someone bald will get you on my giant douchebag list and I'll take the lords name in any goddam way I please.

Seriously looking to the bible as a moral campus is absurd.
 

AngloDoom

New member
Aug 2, 2008
2,461
0
0
TheRightToArmBears said:
That's a silly and misleading way of putting it. There's a world of difference between proving something beyond all reasonable doubt and 'faith'. Just because most people aren't pedantic enough to point out that every fact has a small chance of being untrue doesn't mean that they're always talking in absolutes.

Basically, doing a load of research before claiming animals evolved is completely different to saying they were created by God because you faith in the bible.
I think the main crux of many people's reasoning behind why science = faith is that we have 'faith' that the scientists who tell us the findings of their studies are correct and aren't outright lies. I can see what they mean, really, since I've never gone and cut open a human head to find the brain myself so I'm taking it on 'faith' that it does exist. The big problem is that faith has so many religious connotations that I almost feel we need to invent a new word for religious faith, or faith outside a religious context. 'Trust' is the closest word I can think of, but since trust has to be earned then that doesn't really work either.

Regardless, the reason I wrote this out was so I don't feel so guilty about writing a short line complimenting your avatar for being amazingly psychedelic and crazily close to being 3D.

Your avatar is fantastic. It is amazingly psychedelic and crazily close to being 3D.
 

peruvianskys

New member
Jun 8, 2011
577
0
0
I think science requires faith in quite a few unfounded assumptions: That laws are constant, that things really exist, that all things are material, that there is only one reality, that reality necessarily obeys laws, that the Correspondence Theory of Truth is accurate, that things exist without being perceived, and most importantly, that cognitively meaningful representations of reality can accurately be produced through symbols. All of these assumptions are not particularly reasonable to assume for any other reason than that they are necessary, i.e. we have to assume them in order to do anything. So in that way, science is based in a faith fundamentally separate from reason or observation.

But there's nothing wrong with that. The whole debate about this is silly because it assumes that science exists to explore and describe fundamental, ultimate reality instead of just explaining and predicting phenomena. Science is a tool, and it's a tool that is more concerned with pragmatic prediction than any kind of existential or ultimate knowledge. Grand unfounded statements about the essential "nature" of things is the realm of religion, not science, and those who have decided to turn science from a tool that predicts to an oracle that illumines are guilty of Scientism and are essentially religious in their devotion.

So yeah, science takes a first step of essential faith when discussing the axioms that guide it, but that's fine because science is only interested in predicting and explaining mechanisms, not finding out ultimate truth. Even if our general assumption that things really exist is wrong, as long as that assumption helps us predict in accurate ways a phenomenon, then I have no problem with it.
 

Hyper-space

New member
Nov 25, 2008
1,361
0
0
Ultimately, whatever parallels people draw between religion and science and their supposed equal ground (read: false equivalencies) will never change the fact that science has a utilitarian purpose and is useful in almost all circumstances, whereas religion is not.

"But what about the philosophical implications?"

Well, philosophical nitpicking only goes as far as our minds, it never becomes anything more than just theoretical problems that we try and provide (theoretical) answers to. Expanding people's minds and questioning everything is what has lead the entirety of human civilization to what we are today, but only because we questioned physical (emphasis) problems that if solved would provide us with physical (again, emphasis) benefits. So the purpose of philosophy has (at least historically) always been utilitarian.

At the end of the day there is a clear reason why we trust science to solve our problems, instead of relying upon prayers.
 

TheScientificIssole

New member
Jun 9, 2011
514
0
0
Nope, it is not based on faith. Let me bring it down to religion to make my point clearer: in religion you are told things and have no way of proving them, in science nature is supposed to assume patterns, cycles, and the like. These patterns and cycles will reach a similar point they did thousands of years ago. For example, evolution can be proven by a species evolving in the modern day. This is possible, because according to science, the rules haven't changed from what they were thousands of years ago. According to real faith, the rules change all over different texts and books, and also within those texts.
Joccaren said:
I agree so much, in science you are supposed to assume that you are supposed to only see evidence as success in an experiment. Every experiment in science, large or small is made to be easily replicated. This is because in science, theories are meant to be tested, even if you have just been told of the product. Science wants you to see to believe, or to have enough evidence to support a larger matter.
 
May 29, 2011
1,179
0
0
Saxnot said:
Use_Imagination_here said:
Following basic logic here you can make a statement that a deity does not exist in the sense that there is no evidence for one and things that have no evidence to support their existence can be assumed to not exist because otherwise an infinite amount of things would exist. (okay based on some scientific theories an infinite amount of things DO exist but this would imply that an infinite amount of things exist everywhere).
Can it be assumed? If you're talking about the fundamental structure of the universe and the place of belief in our understanding of it, you can't really use an argument like this. Just because it seems ridiculous and silly to you that an infinite number of things potentially exist everywhere, does not mean it isn't true.

The existence or nonexistence of god is fundamentally unsolvable. To illustrate: can you think of a situation that would definitely, without any doubt, prove or disprove the existence of god?
No, but it seems to me that you've missed the point.

I don't NEED to do anything to prove or disprove the existence of a god. Things that can't be proven or disproved can be assumed to not exist. What annoys me is that this would be a great time to start talking about how irrational god is as a concept but this thread is about faith and not god so I can't.

What you're doing here is placing the existence of a god in a special category for no rational reason. I can't prove or disprove that there are an infinite amount of marshmallows inside a magic compartment in one of my cells but I don't NEED to.

Because since you can't definitely prove or disprove anything 100% then if you can't claim that things that can't be proven or disproved to exist or more accurately in this case things that have no proof for them and can't be disproven don't exist then you can't can't actually make any kind of definite claim about things in our reality, ever.

However at this point things have gotten sufficiently philosophical that this is just my opinion. If your opinion is that you can't make definite statements about our reality, that's fine, my opinion is that that's absurd. But it's just MY opinion.
 

Saxnot

New member
Mar 1, 2010
212
0
0
disgruntledgamer said:
Saxnot said:
Disproving factual assertions in holy books does not really invalidate them.
Yes it does.

Saxnot said:
Or usually cause believers to question their faith. There are actually very few people who interpret the bible literally, and really think that yes, the world is 6000 years old.
Oh really

http://www.patheos.com/blogs/friendlyatheist/2012/06/01/gallup-poll-46-of-americans-are-creationists/

Saxnot said:
More importantly, those assertions aren't really essential to the religion.
Yes they are.

Saxnot said:
People don't believe in the idea that male fluid comes from beetween a man's backbone and ribs, they believe that there is no god but Allah and Muhammed is his prophet.
Um no there is more to the Qur'an than just Allah and Muhammed as his prophet, and fluid comes from between a man's backbone and ribs is in the Qur?an 86:6-7. I gave you the verse look it up.
you seem to be missing my point.

disgruntledgamer said:
Saxnot said:
Religions don't base their claim to your faith on their ability to explain how everything works, but on why it works and who made it. To a religious person, the value in the story of the great flood is not in explaining the state of the world, but in reaffirming the importance of faith.
Yes they do, religions don't explain how anything works. Faith is not only unimportant, but by definition foolish. Faith in the religious context is to believe in something not only without evidence, but despite the evidence.
Again, i wasn't giving my or asking for your opinion about faith. If you are not religious that is your business.

disgruntledgamer said:
Saxnot said:
To make a scientific analogy:
Please don't even try......
Don't be so grumpy. Analogies are helpful and fun.

disgruntledgamer said:
Saxnot said:
say someone came up with a small snag in gravity theory. A planet is not where it should be according to our current models. This would not in itself be enough to invalidate the entire theory. You might ignore it, or trust that the answer would be found later and the model slightly modified, but relatively small elements of the entire theory being in doubt is not usually enough to discredit it.
Science is always updating, changing /modifying it's models when new information/evidence comes in. This isn't a hypothetical it's happening now to most scientific models, and there are more than a few small snags in the theory of gravity, and there are objects in space that shouldn't be where they are, once again not a hypothetical in fact evolution is a stronger theory than gravity.

I have no idea what point you were trying to make with this as it is so far attached from the topic it's astounding.
The point i'm trying to make is that attempting to disprove god by quoting parts of the bible that turned put to be factually wrong doesn't discredit it to believers, because their belief is (usually) not based on its factual accuracy, but on it's moral and spiritual value to them.

A holy book is not an encyclopedia. Its value does not lie in factual accuracy, but in spiritual and moral guidance. to say that its incorrect about the earth and the sun is obvious, but doesnt adress the essence of why people believe in it and doesn't adress the existence or nonexistence of god.

I agree it's off-topic, but that doesn't mean it's not interesting or worthy of discussion. Especially if you're against religion, which i get the impression you are, it is useful to try and understand why people still believe in something that is full of obvious factual errors.

disgruntledgamer said:
Saxnot said:
I would take his religion as seriously as i do all religions. I would listen to his ideas, and if he doesn't convince me, i would always keep in mind that he might just be right. I cannot disprove him, so i must remain uncertain about the (non)existence of Zeus. I might be more inclined to listen to him than a priest in fact, the greek gods certainly seem more lively an relatable than Jahwe.
No you wouldn't you don't even lie good.
You asked me what i would say, i answered what i would say, and you concluded that i would not say what i said. If you didn't want an answer, why did you ask the question?

disgruntledgamer said:
Saxnot said:
If you don't take me seriously that's a shame. I'm being very serious, and i'm certainly taking you seriously. i wouldn't be writing all this if i wasn't.
No I don't, for the same reason I wouldn't take someone seriously who believed the moon was made out of cheese. That might sound mean, but I never said I was nice.
Again, i'm sorry you feel that way. You could always try to understand and respond to the point i'm making. After all, critical open-mindedness and a welcoming but sceptical attitude towards new ideas are hallmarks of science.


disgruntledgamer said:
Saxnot said:
are not the point of holy books.

The tenets of christianity are not based on the question of whether there was a great flood. They are (for example) based on the ten commandments. If you believe those are valid and correct assertions, thats a reason to obey and believe in them, not whether or not Sodom and Gamorrah existed.
No I don't believe in tenets of Christianity or that we should obey the ten commandments. Why because they're a list of Bronze age barbaric rules.

I don't want to kill my neighbor if I catch him working on a Sunday, I don't think owning slaves is moral even if you decide not to rape them, I don't believe in god at all and I certainly don't think people should be restricted to not to make images of him, I don't think stoning disbandment children is moral and certainly not selling your daughter into slavery, Having bears kill children for calling someone bald will get you on my giant douchebag list and I'll take the lords name in any goddam way I please.

Seriously looking to the bible as a moral campus is absurd.
Ok. You're not christian. That doesn't really enter into it. I never said religion was good or evil. I said that attempting to debate religion in terms of proof and factual correctness misunderstands (in my view) the nature of religion.