You see. Rather than answering the question it is a redirection.That question cuts both ways: How do you know that the laws of the universe were put into place by a creator? — TheMadFool
I agree, that is why I specified scientists, not science.As for science, it's not on any side of the debate. — TheMadFool
Oh, they must love debates then.Atheists don't have to prove anything. — TheMadFool
Yes, you are right, they do. But with nothing to prove, I guess they just have to say theists are wrong to win the argument, which is pretty much what they do.the design argument is based on the order/patterns that exist in the universe. Atheists think this argument from design is flawed. — TheMadFool
One specific area where science actually disagrees with relgion is on the matter of creation - the Bible says the Earth is 6000 years or so old and Geology says its 4 billion years old. So, who is right? Evolution too is considered anti-religious in a similar fashion. What do you think? Is science anti-theism? — TheMadFool
If they make the demand on you, demand it back from them.— MikeL
Well, it seems that we have to slide the viewing window back to the origin of the issue. We can then see that the first move in this game was made by theists. Theists argued for the presence of a creator based on design. The atheistic position is the refutation, the second move, so to speak. The ball is in the theists' court I'm afraid. — TheMadFool
Well, I understand the scientific position as that of remaining within the bounds of the observable and measurable. Science is descriptive - it studies phenomena and looks for patterns. — TheMadFool
This information is used by theists to claim God's existence but, as I said above, atheists think this analogy is like comparing apples to oranges and they're right. We don't have a collection of universes governed by laws made by a creator. If this were the case then the analogy would be a good one but it isn't so it fails. — TheMadFool
Hoffman's book gives an overview of where biology is nowadays on what life actually is, how it works. Cells, it turns out, are nothing at all like what I learned in AP Biology a hundred years ago! That means we're only now beginning to see the shape of what a theory of abiogenesis would look like. It's helpful to know what you're explaining the origin of, don't you think? — Srap Tasmaner
I just don't see how you get from the "haven't" we could all agree on to the "can't" you insist on. — Srap Tasmaner
Things in the past are fixed, determined. With respect to the future we can work to avoid unpleasant things, and create pleasant ones. So clearly there is a substantial difference between things of the past, and things of the future. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you accept that space and time are inseparable entities?— MikeL
No, I do not accept this. What "time" refers to, and what "space" refers to are completely distinct. I do not believe that it is possible that the future contains space, I think that this idea is a misunderstanding of the relationship between space and time. I believe that spatial existence comes into being at the present. The fact that the human being is capable of changing things in the physical world, annihilating thing setc., at any moment, at will, is evidence that there is no spatial existence on the other side of the present (future). — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, I believe it is necessary to assume two dimensions of time. I would say that the present has breadth. This is what you call the duration of the present. — Metaphysician Undercover
Oh I believe there is something on the other side of the present (future), this is necessary to account for the continued existence which we observe at the present. However, the fact that we can interfere with that continued existence, at any moment, at will, indicates that the continued existence is not necessary. If it is not necessary, thenwe cannot hold it as a fundamental principle. — Metaphysician Undercover
And the fact that anything can be destroyed at any moment indicates that there is no spatial existence on that side of the present. — Metaphysician Undercover
It makes sense to us assuming God exists and that's what we want to prove isn't it? — TheMadFool
Clearly the future is completely distinct from the past. Our living experience demonstrates that the two are not the same at all. — Metaphysician Undercover
I agree that the past is determined, But I do not agree with your conclusion, that the future must be also, because they are both parts of the same thing. Two parts of the same thing may be very different in nature, so long as there is a proper separation, or boundary, between the two parts, and this is what we find with the present. — Metaphysician Undercover
When you talk about "continuous time" I assume you refer to the present. The present appears to be continuous, but it is neither the future nor the past, it is some sort of division between the two. — Metaphysician Undercover
The present is like a massive wall, and behind that wall is nothing, in relation to your experience. — Metaphysician Undercover
It appears that we have to justify that if there's design then there's a designer (a conscious agency) since we make that claim and arguments such as your depend on this premise being true. — TheMadFool
If conscious agency arises in the way that all hierarchical states have arisen: from atoms to cycles to cells to tissues to systems then consciousness as an emergent hierarchical state fits right in, wouldn't you agree?
— MikeL
I'm not sure how this helps your argument for God. — TheMadFool
So is seeing believing or not? You can't have it both ways. Either we see the graininess and believe it, or we do what you do and still seek to deny it. — apokrisis
So let me ask, how do they know that a radiating body actually does stop radiating heat?
— MikeL
Just turn on your light. Did it vaporise the planet with an instant blast of infinite heat? — apokrisis
And all bodies indeed radiate some heat as they will have some relative temperature. — apokrisis
any radiating body would radiate an infinite amount of heat (there being no smallest contribution if the underlying reality doing the radiating were continuous). — apokrisis
every electron - has been checked out to a greater number of decimal places than any other scientific fact. — apokrisis
And we happen to be 35 orders of magnitude distant from the Planck (distance) scale. That is 1 followed by 35 zeroes. — apokrisis
Semiotics it seems is becoming an explanation for the mind as well as our understanding of the world.the bare semiotic relation that is the ultimate cause of "mindfulness" of any kind. — apokrisis
Is the interpretant in your definition now describing the response of the subject to the object or signifying element?An interpretant is an established habit. — apokrisis
There is as little thought or interpretance going on as possible ... yet also the first definite evidence of thought or interpretance. — apokrisis
So is a "hardwired" evolutionary habit evidence of a choice having been made, but there then being also only the one choice? Is it an example of sentience manifest, or instead an example of the ground state in which sentience is first beginning to arise? — apokrisis
Which is then what you did in saying chemoreception is "just signal transduction".
In material terms, that might be true. In informational terms, it is missing the point. — apokrisis
IE, the triadic nature of sign, interpretant and object does not necessarily occur solely between humans or in a derived virtual plane from the activity of humans — fdrake
This levelling of the playing field facilitates a flat ontology, in the sense that there are no privileged stratum of interpretant required for semiogenesis; there is no subject held monopoly on meaning; we objects can be said to play amongst ourselves. — fdrake
Since thoughts of things are not the things that are thought, it is necessary to explain how thoughts are related to things while distinguishing their causal connection from their justificatory relation. This is the Kantian problem. It cannot be dismissed by simply levelling the distinction between thoughts and things, which is what flat ontology seems to require. — Ray Brassier, Delevelling, Against Flat Ontologies
Future and past are immaterial, but what of the present? It must also be immaterial, and yet it contains materiality -- space-time.Future and past, being parts of this immaterial thing, time, do not need to have material existence. — Metaphysician Undercover
Rather than interpretation you have signal transduction,
— MikeL
You could say that about the brain too. — apokrisis
Or maybe a count of food fragments is a sign that points meaningfully towards a food source? — apokrisis
The reason is to get food. Are you suggesting the interpretant is a sentient entity that decided to make one, or that evolution is sentient?There is a reason for the whole chemoreceptor set-up? — apokrisis
I'm not denying free will but I am saying there are rules to the entire process (laws of nature, social interaction, etc) and so, even if there is free will, it's restricted for the most part. — TheMadFool
There is no real need to tear down the Kantian wall between mind and world — apokrisis
touching on something critical Mikel did mention — apokrisis
You are missing that the conversation in biology has gone way beyond this stage now. The organism is neither a random assemblage nor a deterministic machine.It is already starts its story with the irreducible complexity of a semiotic relation. — apokrisis
In just the same way as we naively imagine there must be objects independent of our experience, and yet just as we experience them; so it is with the idea that "a path was walked" independent of our experience and understanding. This cannot be anything more than a groundless assumption. — Janus
But yet path there was and it was only the single path.
— MikeL
So we do assume. — Janus
I wouldn't say that. I'd say "a person watching from the future" constructs a story of events that he posits as the path. — Janus