Yet we have environments that haven't changed and species that haven't evolved for millions of years because they are already the pinnacle of evolution for their environment. Sharks are a great example of this. So God created the universe for sharks, then?That can be the case, but is not always the case. A random variation which gives any advantage over the existing population will be preserved by natural selection, and this can happen even if no changes in the environment occurred. — Jeremiah
Not. The fact that species are no longer suited is because the environment changes, and continues to change. Environments come and go, the same environments coming about again - warm age to ice age and back again, so why not re-evolve those same animals, or why cause some species to go extinct when you end up bringing that environment back millions of years later? It would be considered inconsistent behavior if performed by an intelligent hand with a purpose. It is what is expected, however, if there is no intelligent hand guiding things.Yes, those species no longer well suited to the current environment are removed, to be replaced by other better adapted species. And god, should there be one, doesn't have to lift a finger because the system is automated. Intelligent. — Jake
Manage life? Most of the species ever to exist are now extinct. If what you claim is the case, then humans are just fodder for other species. It seems like God likes cockroaches more than humans being that they have survived longer than most other species, and maybe cockroaches are the reason why "god" created the universe. What reason would "God" have to do this? Is "God" a scientist doing experiments? If so, then it really isn't a "God" is it?I'm sorry, but evolution proves no such thing. As example, if there is some highly intelligent agent operating over our heads, evolution would be a highly intelligent way to manage life. — Jake
We used to think that we were separate from nature, and not animals. It is only when we took a more objective look at ourselves and nature did we realize that we are animals too. So from the POV of god (the most objective POV there is), we are animals.So, from the POV of God, there's no reason to not compare us to animals. — BlueBanana
Evolution by natural selection is one theory, and one I believe is accurate.I think what you're really saying is that nobody has provided a "why" which you personally find to be credible. I have no argument with that. — Jake
It used to be absurd to think that humans could land on the moon. It seems to me that we are simply talking about how we see the glass as half-empty or half-full.BTW, I'm not trying to prove there is a God. I'm trying to prove that it's absurd that any of us could answer such a question. Yes, theists too. — Jake
That is very strange being that we are made of the same stuff and share many features, and even share parts of our genes. Humans ARE animals.So, from the POV of God, there's no reason to not compare us to animals. — BlueBanana
We don't understand why that is for reasons that we don't understand, but can infer are the same reasons for which squirrels don't understand those things. — BlueBanana
Well he did create squirrels. — BlueBanana
But you were the first to compare us to animals - namely squirrels. So, I'm not suppose to take you seriously now?Apologies, but comparing ourselves to animals is a very common logical error, in regards to God questions. — Jake
The God idea is ONE proposal about the most fundamental nature of everything everywhere. There are others that don't require the existence of a God and work just fine without it.The God idea is a proposal about the most fundamental nature of everything everywhere. And...
We don't know what "everything everywhere" refers to in even the most basic manner such as size and shape etc.
When it comes to ideas the scale of gods, we're like the squirrel who can see the computer monitor and the blinking lights on the screen, but simply doesn't have the ability to grasp the level of abstraction involved in the Internet. — Jake
Please prove that something as small as human reason would be able to meaningfully analyze something of such enormous scale as gods, should such a thing exist.
As example, please prove that squirrels are capable of understanding the Internet in even the most basic manner. — Jake
What if the individual basis for believing something is based on how it makes them feel, as opposed to consistent observations and experimentation? How does the concept of god NOT conflict with fact or reason?I would define faith as an individual basis used to believe something is true — Rank Amateur
This is correct. Self-awareness is a linguistic habit that evolves culturally. We are socially constructed as individual beings. Check out Vygotskian psychology or symbolic interactionism for the arguments.
So this is something that is not widely believed or appreciated. Yet within social psychology, it just pretty obvious. — apokrisis
Is there a difference? Are we not being the process of observing? We must be our own processes or else how can we talk about the differences in what we observe from each of our own unique points in space-time?The Difference of Being a Process and Observing a Process — schopenhauer1
That would be a category mistake to say that minds are sub-processes of another mind.Process philosophy itself has been pretty much hijacked as a term by theist philosophers. So that shifts you into a different kind of distinction. You wouldn't be seeking a better description of physical nature but talking about what it is like to be participating in the divine cosmic mind. :grin: — apokrisis
Yes, and of course they don't want us looking in their direction as the source of the problem. They would much rather have us pointing our fingers at each other than at them.Politicians seem more interested is getting serially reelected than they do in addressing the nations problems. The two party system practically renders members of the senate as puppets to the leadership, told how to vote and warned of the consequences should they fail to follow party leaderships directions (no funding, no committee appointments, support for primary opposition opponents). — prothero
None of these questions have anything to do with solipsism. Solipsism is the absence of any other minds, not the existence of other minds that might experience the world differently. If anything that would be a form of realism.How do we know that we all perceive the same reality?
If a person points out something to another person and that other person does the correct thing in the situation to interact with whatever then it would seem that we all perceive alike. But, on the mental or psychological level how do we know that their perception of the world isn't more like a person with a sensory disorder? And what's to say that the person with the disorder isn't the one who actually sees things as they are? If one person sees the world as it is it does not guarantee that other people do, obviously. — MountainDwarf
No, it's not.QM undermines classical causality. QM puts forward its own causal story. Experiment determines which story we are inclined to believe. It's really simple. — apokrisis
No it doesn't. It seems like the other way around to me. Believing in a merciful God allows you to do whatever you want because you will just be forgiven, as long as you believe.To boil things down- atheism gives a person a pass to do whatever they want. — Ram
Atheists are not necessarily materialists or physicalists.Materialism's gaping hole is its brute-fact, and Materialists inability to define the "objective reality", "objective existence" and "actuality" that they attribute to this material universe, to argue for Materialism over Idealism.
Some Materialists declare that the world of their Materialism is absurd (They're called "absurdists"). Of course they're right about that. ...but it doesn't seem to make them question their Materialism.
I'm dismayed by the way this thread is going. Yes, Ram's post spoke of some negative things, but so, uniformly, do the shorter posts of our aggressive Atheists.
When I reply to aggressive Atheists here, I reply to at least some of the points that they make in their posts and which I disagree with. That's what a reply is. I don't use one-line dismissals of what they say. — Michael Ossipoff
Sorry, I'm not searching the forums for your incoherent nonsense. If you can't post your position here then I guess it really isn't that important after all.I’ve stated my impressions, beliefs and reasons for them throughout these forums, in various threads. — Michael Ossipoff
Then why is it so difficult and contradictory to define?The standard theist claim is that God is ultimately simple -- not that He is complex — Dfpolis
No. You have a bad habit of doing the things that you accuse others of doing. I have never mentioned materialism nor used the term physical.Let me guess: Is Harry a firm believer in Materialism? …a believer in the brute-fact of an objectively existent and objectively real (whatever that would mean) physical universe that is the fundamental reality, and is all of reality, and is the metaphysically-prior basis on which all else “supervenes”? — Michael Ossipoff
1. If God who designed the universe needs a designer, then either the designing of intelligent beings is an infinite set of successive events, or there is an Ultimate Designer who is not designed.
2. The designing of intelligent beings is not an infinite set of successive events.
3. It is not the case that there is an Ultimate Designer.
4. Therefore, it is not the case that God who designed the universe needs a designer. — CYU-5
How do you know that other people's beliefs in something indescribable and undefinable is a "theism"? You have a big problem of putting your words in other people's mouths.I take your word for that, and accept the situation as you describe it: To the best of your knowledge, all the Theisms that you know of are ones for which you aren't aware of evidence. ...and for which you likewise aren't aware of any other justification for faith. — Michael Ossipoff
It's odd because you've conflated my post with some other belief and put words in my mouth that I never said.Odd though, because people with Harry's other Fundamentalist beliefs and tendencies would typically have a lot to say about describing and defining their deity, and would take any opportunity to do so. — Michael Ossipoff
But I said that they are indescribable and undefinable, so how do you know I was talking about some anthropomorphic notion of creation? Again, you go and put words in my mouth because you just don't want to face the fact that your own arguments are nonsensical. That is the whole point of the "Humpalumps". Haven't you gone and done the same thing you have accused me of doing - of rejecting your own notion and definition of what a "Humpalump" is, not mine? If I never define "Humpalumps" for you, then you only ever reject your own notion of what a Humpalump is. Do you see the problem with your position now?Harry likewise believes in the antrhopmorphic notion of creation, further distancing him from anyone that I agree with. — Michael Ossipoff
No, I'm only talking about Humpalumps. Do you believe in their existence? You should. They created the universe. Humpalumps are also indesribable and undefinable.I’ll assume that you’re referring to people who claim and argue about the existence of God. — Michael Ossipoff
It’s for you to define the God that you’re rejecting. — Michael Ossipoff
You mean like how there was a logical basis for the idea that the Earth was flat and the center of the universe because the Earth really is flat and the center of the universe? Oh, wait it isnt. You're simply appealing to the majority, which can be wrong. And there is such a thing as a mass delusion.There's a logical basis for the idea that vast numbers of humans have imagined spirits because something like spirits really do exist. — Jake
I will explain this to you. Everything here needs to be based on "Reason". And "Reason" is that which operates from atheistic premises. That which goes against atheism is against "Reason".
And so if you go against "Reason" (which is code for atheism)- then you need to be censored. — Ram
But it isn't reasonable to believe that. It isn't reasonable to believe that because believing that requires you to believe in another being that created the other in order to be consistent. It also adds a lot more complexity that isn't necessary to explain existence of the universe. Where does this being exist in relation to us?We are working on different definitions. I have never said it is not reasonable to believe science will not answer every question. As I will say it is reasonable to believe in a non contingent or necessary being is. — Rank Amateur
You seem to be conflating religious faith with inductive reasoning. If you don't know the difference, I can't really engage in a reasonable conversation with you.But while each is reasonable we both make a leap of faith to believe as true and act accordingly as a matter of our world view that future beliefs of our respective religions is in fact true. That trust, while reasonable, if a belief based on faith. — Rank Amateur
Exactly. When we are wrong, we admit it. Has any religion ever admitted that they were wrong, or have people simply come to reject that for which there is no evidence (like the Norse and Greek gods)?The history of science is a long series of incorrect propositions held as true, until surpassed as a new truth. — Rank Amateur
I didn't just give up and say I have faith that science will answer those questions. I showed the reasons why science can answer those questions and religion hasn't. So you're really just ignoring what I said, without any argument against, and just repeating yourself. You are the one relying on faith when you just ignore things that are said so that you can keep on saying the same thing over and over again.This in no way diminishes the actual work of science, or mans ability to use reason to explain and understand the universe.
It is a reminder and caution to those who elevate science over its purpose to a religion. And outside of fact or reason, by faith alone believe it can and will answer all human questions. Both the physical, as designed to do, and the metaphysical, by returning them to the physical. — Rank Amateur
