I understand believers of god cannot say, look at this, look at all my evidence on this sheet of paper, but the other side is lacking similar evidence as well.
quadz,when there's a lot you don't know, how can you say for sure there is life on other planets?
have you seen the life? have you heard it?
Quote from: reaperyou don't have enough information to say there should be no god, at least that's my opinion. Quote from: dahangIn general, what could be enough information? Isn't the fact that there's not a shred of evidence for god the desired way of not believing (until evidence arrives)?when science has a better explanation other than, "we are here by accident, but we do know it looks like an impossible stretch for form a universe that could have life like this - unless there is x,y, or z which we know nothing about".
you don't have enough information to say there should be no god, at least that's my opinion. Quote from: dahangIn general, what could be enough information? Isn't the fact that there's not a shred of evidence for god the desired way of not believing (until evidence arrives)?
In general, what could be enough information? Isn't the fact that there's not a shred of evidence for god the desired way of not believing (until evidence arrives)?
then you need to know why the universe is there (maybe it just is, whatever is fine), and how it came about.
Let me rephrase it so you don't misrepresent science. Science generally claims "We are improbable, and the way the universe formed appeared to as well been a very improbable event as we understand the big bang today. The anthropic principle may or may not account for this."Even if humans are in the tragic position of not understanding everything at the deepest possible level, this in no way favors the existence of an invisible, intelligent agent guiding the universe.
I don't think there is scientific evidence for the existence of god. Mainly I think god exists, because it feels natural, and the world seems perfected.
I was just pointing out the lack of evidence on your side.
While you practically claim we know the answers to all things for - sure -.
Even if humans are in the tragic position of not understanding everything at the deepest possible level, this in no way favors the existence of an invisible, intelligent agent guiding the universe.
There is only a complete lack of scientific explanation. We do not know how things came about. If we do not know how things came about, what do we really know? Not a whole lot, we just know we have more to learn.
i'm saying the case you make is not solid. you are saying, I know god is extremely unlikely, because a natural explanation for all things, is in our grasp, and this explanation is probable. but for your belief to be true x,y, or z have to be true, and you have no more of a legitmate basis to say that, then someone saying they believe in god, because of x,y, or z.
You can put your case up against an argument for believing in god, but the evidence is not stronger. it's a matter of opinion, and not verifiable. I don't think we have enough information to say something like "there are four ways we can avoid the problem of probabilities (to create similar life) at the big bang's inception, so it is likely one of these four theories are true". There is much evidence against any of these theories that solve the mentioned probability problems. Personally I think science has bitten off more that it can chew, and were going to be stuck for a while, at least as far as the questions we've been referring to.
i'm saying the case you make is not solid.
There is 0 information about god, as there is for the flying spaghetti monster. This is not something to relish in.
science, which changes it's mind about things as soon as the textbooks are printed is no more reliable in predicting the beginning or the end of our existence as religion.
DaHanG, it seems you people need to understand what natural selection is.
DaHanG, it seems you people need to understand what natural selection is. Natural selection is just the fact that organisms with unfavorable traits tend to die off and organisms with favorable traits will continue to live on. What does this have to do with the the mechanism for the mutation of a bacterium that's exposed to antibiotics? You expect me to believe it takes eons of "random mutations" by antibiotics (assuming you can prove that) occuring before there's antibiotic resistance? That's easily disproved because antibiotic resistance can be done in a short time. And the wikipedia article only talks about the fact that some bacteria are already resistant, while others aren't.