As you stated, the authors are obviously religious.
Quote from: quadzAll I'm saying is that it seems unbelievably boneheaded to postulate the necessity for such an uber-complex being to exist, to SOLVE a COMPLEXITY problem.As you stated, the authors are obviously religious.
All I'm saying is that it seems unbelievably boneheaded to postulate the necessity for such an uber-complex being to exist, to SOLVE a COMPLEXITY problem.
3. If I have a theory that seems too complex, it is OK to solve it by inventing a meta-solution that is millions or billions of times as complex as the original problem.Because I am saying #3 is what is being done, by invoking God to solve the complexity objection for the universal constants.
the bible was written by many many individuals over the coarse of many years, from many different parts of the middle east, but yet they all tell of they're personal contact with God in the exact same way.
Now this is just one small reason for the belief in the fact that the bible is in fact a factual testomony.So if the bible is factual, then it's obvious to us the God's record of creation must also be factual.
Can you tell us WHY you don't find it to be strange that at one point, some supernatural force would blink into existence from nothing and then be capable of coherent thought that surpasses that of every great human mind ever, in order to impose some relatively arbitrary values upon a universe that this being does not inhabit and which it can alter without leaving any trace?
What about the idea of the universe having always existed? Does that have no validity?
Indeed. It's hard to know how to respond because in essence, I would LOVE to have better pro-religion arguments on this thread; but I would also love to try to tear them apart. Personally, I think it should be OK to try to deconstruct anyone's argument and try to point out where it fails in terms of logic or reasoning. But that can all be done without being rude.
If we could eliminate the sarcasm and ridicule, I wonder if the result would be any different. Sorry Could Not Resist,quadz
Actually I posted that video because I thought it was funny. Thanks for assuming I posted it to "ridicule"..assuming would be the religious thing to do :>
Quote from: quadz3. If I have a theory that seems too complex, it is OK to solve it by inventing a meta-solution that is millions or billions of times as complex as the original problem.People believed in god, well before we knew about the constants of the universe.
3. If I have a theory that seems too complex, it is OK to solve it by inventing a meta-solution that is millions or billions of times as complex as the original problem.
Quote from: Robot on July 27, 2007, 03:24:09 PMWhat about the idea of the universe having always existed? Does that have no validity?this involves one of my strongest opinions on this subject, which i have stated previously. I feel that this is impossble (that is, saying that time goes on backwards to infinity). Time is a measurable entity in the real world, where real life events take place. Infinity, on the other hand, is an immeasurable, non-numerical value that simply cannot be used for any kind of quantification. It is a concept and nothing more, and a correlation (that actually holds water) between these two just does not make sense to me (ie infinity cannot exist in the physical realm - measurable events cannot go back in time infinitely).
(And yet, I somehow doubt I've been able to communicate my point, even yet.)(But I appreciate the ongoing discussion.)
you communicated your points just fine.Quote from: quadzHowever, what I do mind is the sort of two-faced sleight of hand that occurs when theists run out to the gaps at the fringe of cosmology and say, OK we can accept this big bang and evolution stuff now, but what about these universal constants?
However, what I do mind is the sort of two-faced sleight of hand that occurs when theists run out to the gaps at the fringe of cosmology and say, OK we can accept this big bang and evolution stuff now, but what about these universal constants?
I think a God (im using god because thats the word most recognized when talking about a higher power) does exist, I don't know if it's the god spoke of in the bible, but never the less I do believe there is something there--I think that is middle ground some people can meet on if you're willing to accept the truths of today and apply it to reasoning--1 big question for everyone.Couldn't God be the answer to "Why" and not the answer to "How"?
I prefer to think of everything that I see in the world and the universe as Nature - a much more diffuse and vast interaction of everything that exists down to the last molecule. I don't need to simplify and embody that into a person.