- Joined
- May 24, 2007
- Messages
- 73,061
- Likes
- 10,860
- Points
- 113
It will take some time. You may not want to wait up.
barfo
The full court press could start anytime. But it won't, so I won't hold my breath.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
It will take some time. You may not want to wait up.
barfo
Hmmm. I'm not talking about discovering evidence of strings. I understand it is purely mathematical at this point. But the entire idea of string theory is to find TTOE. From what I have read, very few string theorists, as opposed to philosophers, are set on determining why strings exist. Many string theorists use the analogy of strings being like letters. You can break paragraphs into sentences, sentences into words, words into letters, but trying to break down letters is futile and meaningless. To me, I can say people created letters, like I would say God crated strings.
I don't mean the evolutionary sense, or the neuroscience. I'm talking about why it exists. Why do we have a inate desire to live and love? We have these strange urges to survive and protect offspring at all costs, and I wonder why.
Hypothsis: God Exists.
Let's see science do a full court press to prove it.
![]()
The full court press could start anytime. But it won't, so I won't hold my breath.
I'm not even sure what you're talking about. Obviously religion isn't about clear cut evidence. That is why it is religion and faith. If the existence of God is proven, it won't be called faith anymore. Just like it doesn't take faith to know that death exists.
It is interesting that you are so quick to go on the attack towards those that believe and have faith.
Typically, you make a hypothesis that you plan to test.It's easy to set the agenda for other people's time, but there's no good reason why they should do your bidding, eh?
If you feel it's good, testable hypothesis, please research it and submit it for peer review!
which one?
People who do believe tell me they see the evidence everywhere. In a tree, a butterfly, a rock. That God gave us free will means we are free to investigate these things to any degree we can. A lot of these peoples' peers agree.
That's just a comment of the current state of things, as far as I know, not a pronouncement on the future. There are a lot of things, like quantum "randomness," which are true based on the models we possess now, but don't say anything about where human knowledge will go in the future.
Also, examining the "why" is a different thing from "not wanting to go any further." Science isn't predominantly about the why (though that's examined when it can be), it's about predictive models. Assuming there is ever evidence for strings, science may or may not ever know why they exist...but science will keep investigating them, to discover the rules that govern them, what makes up strings, etc. If that uncovers "why," then that's great. It may just yield a new and better model.
Isn't the gene survival mechanism a fairly good inquiry into the why? That love creates a compelling reason to look out for those who share your genes, thereby giving them a greater chance of surviving into future generations?
Not to say you shouldn't be spiritual, but I think love and other human behaviours/motivations can be investigated quite reasonably in a scientific or rational manner.
My point is that, IMO, for any more basic element we find, we can always ask the question of how that element exists or was created. Maybe it is my own lack of intelligence or small-mindedness, but I believe we will always be in that situation.
I think they can be investigated in a manner that shows those behaviours/motivations are indeed there. But not at the level of why they are there.
I believe that something created our desire to care if our neighbors have access to medical treatment, or to care if people are starving and dying in Africa.
there are examples of similar empathetic behavior to various extents in the animal kingdom that appear to be beneficial for those species. no reason to think empathetic tendencies in humans didn't evolve like everything else.
Jesus's nature as a Deity has zero bearing on whether I think his moral principles are of potential social benefit. He's the Son of God to me in part b/c he fulfilled hundreds of prophecies written hundreds of years before he was born, in part b/c of my faith (which I don't expect any others to "get" or believe), and in part b/c no one's ever given me a reason to not think so.
Really? I'm asking you how you can parse a verse in half, believe the first half is moral and the second half can be discarded? How you can pick and choose which of his commandments were moral, and which were delusional? And it's "irrelevant"?
Sort of like the theory of evolution, eh?that's only funny because it's profoundly ignorant
Sort of like the theory of evolution, eh?
Not true. I'm willing to admit to some kinds of evolution, such as certain breeds of animals developing survival-enhancing traits over time, but I don't buy the idea that humans evolved from amoebas. That's a dramatic and radical kind of evolution for which there is no evidence.Looking on from a neutral point of view, both sides are extremely stubborn. The Christians won't even think about the Theory of Evolution while the "Realists" won't think about some sort of higher power. Pointless argument.
Looking on from a neutral point of view, both sides are extremely stubborn. The Christians won't even think about the Theory of Evolution while the "Realists" won't think about some sort of higher power. Pointless argument.
Not true. I'm willing to admit to some kinds of evolution, such as certain breeds of animals developing survival-enhancing traits over time, but I don't buy the idea that humans evolved from amoebas. That's a dramatic and radical kind of evolution for which there is no evidence.
crowTrobot said:I agree with you. There is something spiritual out there
wishful thinking. there could be, but if you're claiming to be certain about it you're just as delusional as fundamentalists.
Lets use that human evolution theory as an example. Surely we evolved from an amoeba to enhance our chances of survival in the same way animals evolve to help cope with their surroundings. You're saying that animals evolve but we do not?Not true. I'm willing to admit to some kinds of evolution, such as certain breeds of animals developing survival-enhancing traits over time, but I don't buy the idea that humans evolved from amoebas. That's a dramatic and radical kind of evolution for which there is no evidence.
I agree and accept the fact that we evolved through millions of years, but that alone doesn't explain how we came to be, how earth started, how the universe started, etc.
Looking on from a neutral point of view, both sides are extremely stubborn. The Christians won't even think about the Theory of Evolution while the "Realists" won't think about some sort of higher power. Pointless argument.
Looking on from a neutral point of view, both sides are extremely stubborn. The Christians won't even think about the Theory of Evolution while the "Realists" won't think about some sort of higher power. Pointless argument.
Stop contradicting yourself then. If you're going to make a point, stick to one side.
Also, the thread title is "The God that wasn't there" so a higher power the is the key point of this thread.