Quote from: QuakeDuke on November 19, 2008, 04:32:06 PMQuote from: [BTF]EyEsTrAiN on November 19, 2008, 12:02:28 PM"For those who believe, no explanation is necessary; for those who do not, none will suffice." I've heard that before, can you tell me who said it? It's true regardless of which side of discussion you're on.I apologize if I'm being wayyy too nit-picky here... But I'm not convinced of the general truth of the claim, "for those who do not believe, no explanation will suffice." (And hopefully this is something I can state without appearing to have been trapped by irony. )But anyway, here are two examples of ways I think the claim that "no explanation will suffice", fails for rationilists.1. We've already seen historical examples of 'belief' which have only survived until the necessary explanation was achieved. For example, Ptolemy and Newton believing a divine agency must be constantly regulating the motion of the planets. But Laplace finally achieved an explanation which sufficed! And so that particular species of belief vanishes as the explanation is understood. Thus I think we must be clear and specific about which species of belief it is being claimed "no explanation will suffice".2. Even if we're narrowing the claim to focus solely on the specific question of the existence or non-existence of an omnipotent, omniscent god, I still think the claim "no explanation will suffice" should fail to be strictly true for rationalists. Such a god, on a whim, could obviously provide endless and overwhelming evidence for its existence. For instance, it could trivially announce itself to all mankind oneday, saying, "Hi, this is God speaking. I've decided that henceforth there will be no more disease. Additionally, from now on, natural cataclysms such as hurricanes, tsunamis, tornados, and earthquakes will no longer occur in populated areas." And 'make it so'. Rationalists would then be obliged to observe, wow, apparently there is some sort of supernatural god. I wonder how its supernatural physics work... (etc.)So it doesn't seem that saying, although pithy, really works very well as phrased. I think it would more truthfully be amended to:"For those who believe, no explanation is necessary; for those who do not, sufficient evidence will suffice." No?Regards,
Quote from: [BTF]EyEsTrAiN on November 19, 2008, 12:02:28 PM"For those who believe, no explanation is necessary; for those who do not, none will suffice." I've heard that before, can you tell me who said it? It's true regardless of which side of discussion you're on.
"For those who believe, no explanation is necessary; for those who do not, none will suffice."
Now imagine hundreds of thousands of boxes each with people claiming theirs holds the answers.
Of all things to prove, or disprove, the question of if there is a 'God' is one of the most unsolvable in my opinion. "For those that do not, none will suffice." If there is no way to concretely prove there is a 'God', no explanation from someone of 'faith' in that 'God' will suffice as an answer. If I can't believe it unless I have evidence, and there is no way to get that evidence, it must not exist? Its a question of having faith versus having evidence.
Quote from: [BTF]DeathStalker on November 19, 2008, 07:37:43 PMabsolutely NO macro evolutionary evidence exists.Apart from the mountains and mountains of such evidence?Quote from: [BTF]DeathStalker on November 19, 2008, 07:37:43 PMAnd i'm pretty sure no one actually observed any either. So therefor Evolution should go aswell based on that.Um, no. There is as much archaeological evidence that evolution happened, as there is that ancient Greece existed.[1] Does the theory of ancient Greece's existence have to "go aswell" ?Regards,
absolutely NO macro evolutionary evidence exists.
And i'm pretty sure no one actually observed any either. So therefor Evolution should go aswell based on that.
Quote from: quadz on November 19, 2008, 07:55:21 PMQuote from: [BTF]DeathStalker on November 19, 2008, 07:37:43 PMabsolutely NO macro evolutionary evidence exists.Apart from the mountains and mountains of such evidence?Quote from: [BTF]DeathStalker on November 19, 2008, 07:37:43 PMAnd i'm pretty sure no one actually observed any either. So therefor Evolution should go aswell based on that.Um, no. There is as much archaeological evidence that evolution happened, as there is that ancient Greece existed.[1] Does the theory of ancient Greece's existence have to "go aswell" ?Regards,for real, i'm no quadz ass kisser. this was straight ownage
- absolutely NO macro evolutionary evidence exists.- In actuallity the theory of Evolution is so full of holes, you trully have to have faith to honestly believe it.- Last i read it was still just a "theory".Seeing posts like this make me cringe..its 2008. Read a book, do research on the internet..something.
More than 400 (public and private university) professors took the survey. They say: they believe teaching kids concepts-- other than evolution-- "harms" their college readiness and makes them less able to compete for jobs in the future.
DeathStalker (and others )Here's a pretty nice evolutionary tree, with timeline annotations:http://www.dhushara.com/book/evol/trevol.jpgImportant to remember, is these evolutionary relationships are verified (cross-checked) in multiple ways.For example, not only by the age and location of the fossils, but also by genetic ancestry of non-extinct species. (If I recall correctly there are something like six independent verification methods.) Everything cross-checks. So essentially, if evolution didn't happen, then God sat there over the past 3.8 billion years simulating an exact mirror image unfoldment of what evolution is described to be.And if so... what's the difference?Regards,
if there was a creator, the universe should look as it is today, a creator would account for all the "why" questions, the perceived perfection of the universe, etc. evolution doesn't suffice. evolution would be a nice method used by god, just like starting the universe out an expanding it into life.
when science provides better answers you can support your beliefs with a strong case (no reasonable doubt), until then a theory of a simple beginnings is a nice thought, but that's all it is. the probablities if god exists are not are as bogus as saying someone saying god exists, and I know it. we don't have the evidence, that's just the way it is.
there is no good scientific evidence concerning how the universe initially came to be, so this isn't nearly as strong of a point he makes it out to be. i would trust my instincts, especially after reviewing the evidence to the contrary, and realizing it supports my beliefs (that there is a god, concerned with human behavior, something like we our the center of the universe)
real "proof" will never be found for either side, but for now, i think i'll stick to NOT believing in the improbable, that the universe (and what may lie beyond) as we know it was created by mere chance. afterall, there was just one big explosion and everything turned out wonderfully lol idiots
It doesn't matter.The point is that scientists are trying to cram their theory down peoples throat.If the school board's vote passes ALL kids will be "required" to have the "THEORY" of evolution crammed down thier throats as fact since science classes are required also.
Well In all honesty the argument is:Evolution vs intelligent design or (creationalism)scientists believe Evolution only.Creationalists believe everything to be to perfect and complex for everything to have "just worked out" through evolution.Well to be perfectly honest, I believe both.I believe "some" evolution did occur, but just not to the extreme most scientists feel.But what I believe most about it is that evolution was the 'tool" in an intelligent design.For me personally that explains both theories. The theory of evolution AND the theory that everything is to perfect and complex to have just worked out.
If the school board's vote passes ALL kids will be "required" to have the "THEORY" of gravity crammed down thier throats as fact since science classes are required also.Theory of gravity.Theory of relativity.Quantum field theory.
Despite these theories having since been replaced by more accurate theories, it doesn't mean those earlier theories should not have been taught when they represented the best hypothses going that fit the available data.The best current "THEORY" is exactly what is supposed to be taught in science class.
Quote from: [BTF]DeathStalker on November 19, 2008, 09:59:25 PM The theory of evolution AND the theory that everything is to perfect and complex to have just worked out.The latter is not a scientific theory. It's an argument from incredulity.
The theory of evolution AND the theory that everything is to perfect and complex to have just worked out.