I might, also, except that it too easily comes across as a kind of secular fundamentalism. Most of the so-called new atheists - they're no longer new - fall into that trap. — Wayfarer
If anything has value - should exist, should be done - there must be a proper use of the galaxy... — Leftist
who use evolutionary theory to bludgeon religious belief. — Wayfarer
All that aside Natural selection and survival of the fittest is more value laden than most scientific theories — Andrew4Handel
Yes, it's true. They had no money, either. Once you invent money, you need police to guard it. — Vera Mont
If the text-quote is from "The Dawn of Everything," then the their own text contradicts their proposition, inasmuch as the proposition calls me wrong, when I said there have always been hierarchies in social arrangements, so much among humans as much among other social animals. — god must be atheist
The Dawn of Everything , a book by anarchist anthropologist David Graeber and archeologist David Wengrow, claims that the above received wisdom is wrong. Their arguments have created quite a stir in anthropological circles. — Joshs
The morally-challenged were evolutionarily successful (might was right) and the good were simply killed off. Now, I somehow don't feel as proud about my ancestry anymore, not that there was anything there to begin with, its bad vs. bad or worse vs. bad — Agent Smith
How many issues can be resolved by evidence? — Andrew4Handel
Everything is classed as evidence for evolution. — Andrew4Handel
Can we decide whose beliefs are right and should be prioritised? — Andrew4Handel
I don't see our position as insignificant. — Andrew4Handel
The universe apparently doesn't know it exists — Andrew4Handel
our individual consciousness that allows to imagine concepts such as infinity and allows us to see and experience a huge range of phenomena.
As with Descartes Cogito ergo sum I can only be certain that I exist. Everything else is filtered through individual consciousness.
But you seem to have highlighted the theories need to denigrate the human position. Evolution does not explain consciousness — Andrew4Handel
All domestic dogs are considered the same species. — T Clark
I'm am overstepping the boundary of my knowledge, but it is my understanding that saying "accidental and random" is an overstatement. Much of what happens is influenced by self-organization. Scientists think that living cells develop out of chemical/catalyst cycles that develop naturally. Don't bother to ask for details, because I'm already on thin ice. I refer you to "Life's Ratchet" by Hoffman. — T Clark
Understand it in what sense?
As a history of our origins up to this date?
As something that should guide future human development?
There is a limit to the scope of validating (or falsifying) explanations of things that happened before we existed or developed modern technology. It becomes narrative that then quickly becomes and became ideological.
Is The theory make us stop believing in gods? Is it supposed to make us become physicalist/materialist naturalists? Are we supposed to reevaluate the status and value of humans and other animals? — Andrew4Handel
Well it has been accused of either being a banal tautology (ie anything that survives is fit) or a dangerous prognosis and value judgement (we should weed out the unfit to improve a species) That powered Social Darwinism.
Darwin Himself said in the descent of man:
"With savages, the weak in body or mind are soon eliminated; and those that survive commonly exhibit a vigorous state of health — Andrew4Handel
The universe that we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but pitiless indifference.”
So yes he has a charming prognosis for us that we should be eager to embrace. — Andrew4Handel
People like Darwin and Dennett (The Universal Acid proponent) have strongly advocated that evolution should change how we view life and ourselves. They apparently are un aware of the is - ought barrier that Hitler et al crossed. If evolution is true should we respond in anyway are we obliged to? — Andrew4Handel
I think it can be argued that believing in concepts like survival of the fittest, natural selection and animal hierarchies etc has been more harmful than not believing them. — Andrew4Handel
Context is important here. There is a significant difference between a barroom and a classroom, but even so... incivility in a barroom might earn a punch in the nose. — BC
Yes, but my question is about your inital comment. On the sites you mentioned: — Tom Storm
Could you call Dawkins a smug cocksucker? — Tom Storm
Craig is a smug cocksucker. — Tom Storm
Atheists want religion to be perfectly clear and this itself is against faith. Faith involves using discretion and reacting even when reason doesn't give a reason. "How am I supposed to know which religion to follow" implies one is not immersing themselves in religion — Gregory
Consider Richard Dawkins for example. Religion pours hot coals on his mind everyday and it clearly has caused him a lot of suffering — Gregory
It often seems to me that some atheists use the lack-theism definition as a way of getting out of having to meet their burden of proof and/or epistemic justification. — deletedmemberbcc
So everytime a change in the species happens it happens with a handful of members at most, because it's random. So why did they survive every time there was a mutation — Gregory
We have a dog. What is the first member of its ancestor that is just like it such that our perception recognizes it as a dog.?Now that dog came from non-dog parents? — Gregory