Well, I guess an idealist would argue that everything we see, we take for granted as real when it is actually a product of mind. — Tom Storm
' The pain itself (the quale) is like the hole in a donut. — lll
Dreams – Almost everyone, if not all, claims that they dream. We accept this claim without requiring proof. We use our own experience of dreaming to validate the other person’s claim of dream. — L'éléphant
You made me laugh, friend — lll
Is this not just as weird as the idea of there being dead junk for no reason that eventually evolved so that it talk about itself ? — lll
Continue on with your fake entitlement though. :wink:
— chiknsld
I know the difference is apparently too subtle for you comprehend
— chiknsld
Acting innocent again, eh?
— chiknsld
you probably should have very little to say.
— chiknsld
It's almost like you keep forgetting that you don't believe in God
— chiknsld
you're just here to troll believers.
— chiknsld — Tom Storm
A classic objection to this approach is to ask where the gods come from — lll
There must be a 'The Physics Forum' where such issues are vehemently discussed. — Tobias
Some pieces, like the |||, could only move through other pieces. — lll
The brilliance of the theory of evolution is that it makes the emergence of complexity and intelligence — lll
I have no idea what physics would say, I am not a physicist. If when physicists speak of reality they actually speak of 'laws and constants' that is well possible. — Tobias
Until quite recently what was thought did not include quantum physics or astrophysics. We still to understand them and there may be things beyond our capacities of understanding. — Fooloso4
So is it the case, that ultimately, any faith-based or belief-based proposal has AT BEST, the same status as a scientific hypothesis and is no more valid than any other human musings such as a faith in the proposal that Harry Potters ancestor, also conveniently called god created the Universe using the spell (first revealed here folks, on this very thread) 'Creatus Universeearse!' — universeness
It does, but I was going for |||.
It's a symbol I used for a piece in a chess-like game I once made up. — lll
Do you have evidence of anything that is not natural? I thought not... — Tom Storm
And you prove this constant once again, lil D-Ker: "stupid is as stupid does". — 180 Proof
'Time' is a metric of asymmetric change (i.e. physical transformations) ... — 180 Proof
I think thermodynamic time Is constituted the irreversible processes. You can quantify these processes by putting a clock besides them. — EugeneW
It is the height of human hubris and folly to think that what is, was, and will be are limited by what we can think or comprehend or can give an account of. — Fooloso4
'Time' is a metric of asymmetric change (i.e. physical transformations) ... — 180 Proof
No asymmetric changes, no measurable time. — 180 Proof
No asymmetric changes, no measurable time. — 180 Proof
But it's doubtful whether it is coherent to talk about time itself having or not having a beginning or end in time. — Cuthbert
Let it be that time is constituted by collective motions of particles. Let is also be that time can be understood in terms of before-and-after processes but that time itself is not one of those processes. And let it be that time is an affect of motion - that motion is what makes time what we understand it to be. It seems to me that EugeneW, 180 Proof and Aristotle are not so far apart after all — Cuthbert
In other words things change relative to each other. The relationship between one change and another is time. — Harry Hindu
Time cannot exist without change — Harry Hindu
Create themselves? :brow:
What does that have to do with anything anyway? — jorndoe
I agree with this. I also challenge the claim that motion defines time. It does not. Motion makes time measurable, but it does not define it. Time exists outside of motion. — god must be atheist
Further, how can there be any 'before' and 'after' without the existence of time? Or how can there be any time without the existence of motion? If, then, time is the number of motion or itself a kind of motion, it follows that, if there is always time, motion must also be eterna
And if you agree (which you can't, seeing you have no education in science) that scientific teachings are not a matter of belief but a matter of knowledge based on evidence; — god must be atheist
If mama giant made them eat, it's proof of an unfree will. Poor babies! — EugeneW
Some! Proof of free will? — Agent Smith