Correct. Only fools will argue for a supernatural realm that they can know nothing about.
As to children, and here I am looking at the world in total and the U.N. 10 year warning,
We are clearly showing as ma species that we will not defend the lives of our children as we are giving them a corrupted environment to live and likely die in.
That not caring for our children shows that we collectively have apathetic souls.
Regards — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Correct. Only fools will argue for a supernatural realm that they can know nothing about.
As to children, and here I am looking at the world in total and the U.N. 10 year warning,
We are clearly showing as ma species that we will not defend the lives of our children as we are giving them a corrupted environment to live and likely die in.
That not caring for our children shows that we collectively have apathetic souls.
Regards
DL — Gnostic Christian Bishop
A poor religious trait seen in the worst of religions and mostly absent in the religions that seek knowledge and wisdom instead of imaginary supernatural gods. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Hate is indeed a human trait. So is love, and we default to love as our first instinct for survival. The hate is passed up from the bigoted peers.
IOWs, the religious feed the hate to maintain their tribal differences.
A poor religious trait seen in the worst of religions and mostly absent in the religions that seek knowledge and wisdom instead of imaginary supernatural gods.
Regards
DL — Gnostic Christian Bishop
The book doesn't say who wrote the book about a Jewish prophet. What makes you think it was written by a Babylonian king? How would you prove it either way, except by textual exegesis and historical records? I say "apparently" because I was not there to witness the events related. Besides, if we can't prove it either way, why believe it? — Gnomon
The Christian line is that Jesus altered Judaism (abolishing the "law", forgiving sins, and demanding faith in him) and welcomed non-Jews into the fold, while non-Christian Jews rejected him and his message - and even had him killed. — Relativist
Besides, early evangelists couldn't proselytize to Roman citizens that an official of Rome had lynched the very Lord who would "save" them, so the propaganda (Gospels) had to blame the "Jewish mob" - thus, by extension all Jews in perpetuity - of "deicide" who extorted Pilate to "Crucify him!" (i.e. blood libel)
Muslim antisemitism merely plagiarizes Christian antisemitism. Such is history. — 180 Proof
Jesus was a Jew. Why do some Christians and Muslims hate Jews? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
βFor the Son of Man is going to come in the glory of His Father with His angels, and will then repay every man according to his deeds. Truly I say to you, there are some of those who are standing here who will not taste death until they see the Son of Man coming in His kingdom.β — 180 Proof
How would we prove this to be true either way. Why the use of the word apparently? I think chapter 4 of the book of Daniel (could be a different chapter) was actually written by Nebuchadnezzar the 2nd himself. How would we go about proving for sure whether the book of Daniel was written at the time of Nebuchadnezzar the 2nd or at a much later date? It appears it would be highly beneficial to those who hate religion to say it was written much later. — christian2017
Some, such as those in Daniel were apparently written years after the events prophesied, hence retro-prophecy. — Gnomon
imagine the series of motions as a bunch of pictures. Together they flow to create time, but there is no time before the first motion. Gravity causes the whole series to move and time to flow, but there is no before so a God or anything else outside the series is not needed. The world is uncaused, having its own causality within it, as you say of the dude out there — Gregory
Einstein and Hawking, the two greatest thinkers of the last century, didn't think the universe required a God separate from it. — Gregory
You need to give up the the Newtonian idea of time — Gregory
We have a self-contained universe. — Gregory
Maybe this will help you rustle people's jimmies.
(1) Countries' legal systems should be able to punish those responsible for working conditions that provably and significantly impede health.
(2) Working conditions that provably and significantly contribute to death and sickness impede health. (1, consequence)
(3) There are many independent reports of working conditions at Orange significantly contributing to deaths and sickness and they should be trusted and treated as evidence. (Premise)
(4a) It is reasonable to believe that working conditions at Orange contributed significantly to deaths and sickness. (3, using the evidence).
(4b) It is unreasonable to believe that working conditions at Orange did not contribute significantly to deaths and sickness (3, using the evidence).
(5) France's legal system should be able to punish those responsible at Orange for the working conditions at their company as they provably and significantly impeded health. — fdrake
The logical meaning of something is "at least one". This definition of something is incomplete because if something means just "at least one" then all/everything, because it is indubitable at least one, is also something. Since logicians aren't prone to silly mistakes like this it's probably the case that the definition of something is at least one but not ALL and it's so obvious that it's left undeclared. — TheMadFool
Insight in my opinion is a educated guess done by a somewhat ignorant person.
β christian2017
Fine, but what is the function of the neural net in biology and machines then? What does it do? I refer to its output as insight. What do you call it? — Mikey
We will never, ever, be able to empirically prove spacetime is continuous, but we might be able to empirically prove it is discrete. — Devans99
Statistics (as you point out) show some understanding of particle events in the aggregate. The obvious question is, "What makes the individual particles behave as they do, so that they produce the aggregate behavior?"
For example, if 100 coins are thrown in the air and allowed to land on the floor, there will be about 50 heads and 50 tails. If the actual numbers are 52 heads and 48 tails, we might ask why that is so. The statistics for the aggregate outcome are not an explanation of the particular outcomes.
The classical laws of physics can, in principle, provide the answer so long as the initial conditions of the coins, and the environmental conditions, are known. The outcome is predictable and comprehended.
There is neither comprehension nor predictability for individual particles. The operation of the universe is not understood. — GeorgeTheThird
Yes, and that's a mistake. They're not doing the same thing - that's why 'science' exists as a distinct discipline.
These questions: what is morality? what is free will? what is truth? what is time? and so on, are 'not' questions science investigates. Why? Because you can't answer them by looking down a microscope. You have to apply your intelligence to them - that is, you have to reason. The questions have answers, but you're not going to find them by inspecting sensible matter ever more closely.
Without applying some field of mathematics or even a science, how do you expect to get a real answer other than "time is a banana split sundae."?
β christian2017
And there it is: the arrogant dismissal of philosophy. You're one of those people you just mentioned above, aren't you? — Bartricks
Question begging - you're just assuming that time is a stuff or dimension, that it is something we travel about in. I provided 3 arguments that appear to refute that idea. You've just blithely ignored them. — Bartricks