Quote from: quadz on February 01, 2011, 04:01:51 AMBy attempting to hold your arguments and 'theories' to scientific standards, I "seem to be saying" you should revert to a primitive state????????Yes. You're implying that my argument should be subject to more primitive ideas around natural selection than those which I am proposing.
By attempting to hold your arguments and 'theories' to scientific standards, I "seem to be saying" you should revert to a primitive state????????
Quote from: Tubby on February 01, 2011, 04:12:38 AMQuote from: quadz on February 01, 2011, 04:01:51 AMBy attempting to hold your arguments and 'theories' to scientific standards, I "seem to be saying" you should revert to a primitive state????????Yes. You're implying that my argument should be subject to more primitive ideas around natural selection than those which I am proposing.Nice job trolling, I guess.
Btw - since you're so big on 'facts' - can you provide some 'facts' as to why 'all of my examples were wrong' and yours are all so obviously right?As I stated in a previous post (#73), I admit that I don't have any 'facts', hence the debate. (Maybe you need to research the word 'debate').
Yes, and my offspring will take my ideas and beliefs into the next generation, and your offspring will take yours.
Additionally, my offspring will be capable of making an informed decision on their own; especially one that requires nothing more than common sense. If you want to brainwash your offspring into thinking otherwise, that is your decision. The decision of a forum poster between our two "sides" still has nothing to do with natural selection, no matter how much you want it to.
LMAO, like raising your child in the Christian / Jewish / Muslim or whatever faith isn't 'brainwashing'???!!!Oh my God! (pardon the pun)
my 11 year old daughter frequently wears a Christian Cross around her neck.I have no problem with that. I have enough faith in my daughter to believe that she will make up her own mind around which idaes and beliefs she will choose to follow as she becomes more aware of the world as it really is - as opposed to those which she has been conditioned to believe in (including mine).
Quote from: quadz on February 01, 2011, 04:23:48 AMNice job trolling, I guess.Same conclusion I have drawn about this guy.
Nice job trolling, I guess.
It's possible to meditate without believing anything on insufficient evidence.
As it happens, there are some reasons I tend to suspect that nonexistence is coincident with death. For instance: - I have no memory of having existed before I was born. - All evidence so far indicates our cognitive function is determined by the material structure of our brains. - A botched lobotomy can leave a patient in a child-like state.
Nicotine has never been addictive to me, whatsoever, no matter how many years I've smoked or how many I smoke a day.
Quote from: Tubby on February 01, 2011, 01:48:10 AMQuadz, you make a good point, but what you're saying also assumes that ideas and beliefs - or in this case theories - cannot be adapted to situations for which they were not originally intended.If we use the weak form of 'theory' which is synonymous with 'speculation', then, sure! Anyone can pull a new 'theory' out of their ass.It may be possible to adapt a scientific theory "to situations for which they were not originally intended", but not without doing science.Quote from: Tubby on February 01, 2011, 01:48:10 AMTo me, that's a stagnant and defeatist attitude: Imagine if our ancestors had refused to take the ideas, beliefs, and theories of their own fathers and apply them to the newer, more enlightened world that they found themselves in... We would still be sacrificing children to Moloch.Are you kidding me? Our ancestors applied endless creativity to inventing new bullshit theories to differentiate themselves from their forefathers.For someone who claims to value science, you appear not to have the foggiest notion of what differentiates science from bunk.Quote from: Tubby on February 01, 2011, 01:48:10 AMSometimes I think that that's what many religious people actually want to do - revert to a primitive state in which things were much more black and white - as you seem to be saying I should also do.By attempting to hold your arguments and 'theories' to scientific standards, I "seem to be saying" you should revert to a primitive state????????
Quadz, you make a good point, but what you're saying also assumes that ideas and beliefs - or in this case theories - cannot be adapted to situations for which they were not originally intended.
To me, that's a stagnant and defeatist attitude: Imagine if our ancestors had refused to take the ideas, beliefs, and theories of their own fathers and apply them to the newer, more enlightened world that they found themselves in... We would still be sacrificing children to Moloch.
Sometimes I think that that's what many religious people actually want to do - revert to a primitive state in which things were much more black and white - as you seem to be saying I should also do.
If you don't think this looks stupid then you need to seriously evaluate your own chain of thoughts....Quote from: Tubby on January 31, 2011, 01:53:02 AMFor example, I don't take my child to church / synagogue / mosque, etc., therefore she is unlikely to be exposed to the concept of god Quote from: Tubby on February 01, 2011, 02:51:32 AMmy 11 year old daughter frequently wears a Christian Cross around her neck. She got this cross from a school camp she attended which was held on a Christian - owned property.seems she's already been exposed to the concept of god. do you read what you write?Quote from: Tubby on January 30, 2011, 05:14:33 PMYes, and my offspring will take my ideas and beliefs into the next generation, and your offspring will take yours. You said this...now it's changed all of a sudden and your daughter will make up her own mind? Which is it....
For example, I don't take my child to church / synagogue / mosque, etc., therefore she is unlikely to be exposed to the concept of god
my 11 year old daughter frequently wears a Christian Cross around her neck. She got this cross from a school camp she attended which was held on a Christian - owned property.
I think where you and I differ is that you're stuck in the idea that basic scientific principles as they stand today are infallable. My idea is that science is a fluctuating and malleable beast which can only be tamed by debates exactly like this one.<snip>Don't fall into the trap of worshipping science as your god, Quadz.
... while the theist is trying to defend the existence of santa with no real proof and his personal feelings. ... Arguing as to why there's no reason to think there's a god, is to an atheist what praying or going to church is to a theist. That is their entire foundation.