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Why We Believe In GodsFollow

#52 May 07 2009 at 10:33 AM Rating: Default
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Do you really believe that agnosticism is in any related to a lack of interest in the subject?


I've spoken with plenty of people who were agnostic simply because they got sick and ******* tired of everyone trying to make them believe something, when they'd much rather go eat a cheeseburger, or shove bamboo under their fingernails, than talk about some esoteric religious subject.

So yes, it can be.
#53 May 07 2009 at 10:35 AM Rating: Decent
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Sarren wrote:
[quote]All that said I STILL think that it's an awfully large mathematical impossibility that all things aligned to have even ONE living creature come to fruition in lieu of the fact no other planet has such success in doing so. I mean everything has to be a-number-1-perfect.


Time (and space, as we know it) is infinite. No matter how infinitesimally small the chance of the specific circumstances that created life as we know it happening are, they were going to happen eventually and will again.

Also, everything has to be perfect if the goal is to make YOU, but there is no goal here. If things had worked out differently life would still exist, it would just look different.
#54 May 07 2009 at 10:38 AM Rating: Good
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Well, there is. Namely the absence of evidence that any other elements can sustain the kinds of chemical processes we see in living things. Silicon and boron display some characteristics but both have fundamental flaws which keep them from being a substitute for carbon.

We can say "Yeah, but maybe something does work just like carbon..." or "Maybe life can rise in completely different ways..." but there's no actual support for those things. We're just making fantasy-fueled guesses.


I fully accept that it's just speculation, but I don't think it should be labeled as fantasy. I don't think it's too far fetched an idea to warrant real interest.
#55 May 07 2009 at 10:38 AM Rating: Excellent
Pensive wrote:
I've spoken with plenty of people who were agnostic simply because they got sick and @#%^ing tired of everyone trying to make them believe something, when they'd much rather go eat a cheeseburger, or shove bamboo under their fingernails, than talk about some esoteric religious subject.

So yes, it can be.


That's not agnosticism, that's just being sick of listening to shit.
#56 May 07 2009 at 10:40 AM Rating: Decent
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Random isn't a good word to use. Not to sound to deterministic, but once I reached a certain level of broad scientific knowledge it seemed inevitable in the sense that everything occurs in line with the laws of nature we've discovered.


If I ever get past the point of being at least a compatibilist about will and matter then I think I'd ******* kill myself.

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Time (and space, as we know it) is infinite.


I'm not sure if I'd call them infinite. Neither can exist without consciousness.
#57 May 07 2009 at 10:42 AM Rating: Good
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Not believing in (a) God is the logical stance, as there is no evidence. You cannot prove an absolute negative. Thus, it is logical to assume God does not exist. An athiest does not possess faith, as conclusive evidence as to God's existence would lead to acknowledgement of God's existence. religious people, however, continue to make a baseless assertion about reality. That is what we call faith. Do you see the difference? I doubt I can be bothered to try and convince you if not.


You have a double standard here. You are saying that the ability to prove something should determine its truth value, but then you ignore this attribute when it comes to believing that God doesn't exist.

Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. There is no way to prove that God does exist, therefore it would be impossible for someone to believe in God following your "logic," because it can't be proven that he does exist.

If it can't be proven true or false, it is just as arbitrary to assume that it is true as to assume that it is false. Both cases are assumptions without any evidence.

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All that said I STILL think that it's an awfully large mathematical impossibility that all things aligned to have even ONE living creature come to fruition in lieu of the fact no other planet has such success in doing so. I mean everything has to be a-number-1-perfect.


I think the argument here should be pointing to things like the universal constant or the gravitational constant. If these fundamental scientific laws that seemingly govern all matter were 1/10000000000th of a degree different, life would not be able to exist, as far as we can tell.

I think whats missing from this argument is the acknowledgment that we are trying to judge this from a very limited perspective. First of all our scientific laws aren't necessarily comprehensive or even true, we are limited to our ability to measure with the senses which is an extreme disability when it comes to studying subatomic particles which are mostly empty space, and we are operating from the assumption that the universe is intelligible to us in a way that we can understand.

And since when was there an actual comprehensive big-bang theory that could answer the fundamental questions such as "where did the big bang come from, what started it, etc..?) Could someone link that theory for me, because I haven't heard of one that existed that could actually explain the "big bang."


#58 May 07 2009 at 10:42 AM Rating: Decent
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Sarren wrote:
I fully accept that it's just speculation, but I don't think it should be labeled as fantasy. I don't think it's too far fetched an idea to warrant real interest.


It is highly unlikely that any significant life form is based on anything but carbon. Carbon works well because it easily makes very large molecules due to it's electron configuration (it binds well with just about everything). The only way I could see life forming and not being based on carbon is in the complete absence of carbon, which you aren't likely to find.

That being said, it is not impossible that there is silicon based life out there, I've argued that point myself, but I wouldn't expect to find it because it's probably not that common.
#59 May 07 2009 at 10:45 AM Rating: Decent
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Allegory wrote:
Elinda wrote:
If life began either consciously or randomly, what are the assumptions that make random creation the more likely explanation.

Because it's consistent with everything else we witness. Also random creation doesn't require the existence of an unproven creator. This is just silly, and I had hoped the conversation wouldn't take this route.
What route were you hoping for? The one that says us scientists are so smart we know everything. Well sorry honey, we don't.

We have not witnessed non-life becoming life, there is nothing to be consistent with.

I suppose that is what being agnostic really means to me. Acceptance that, as of yet, there are many questions about our origin, how life began, if it will begin again, if we are unique in this universe, if the universe has bound, etc, that are unanswered and lack any evidence to support any hypothesis.
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#60 May 07 2009 at 10:47 AM Rating: Good
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Pensive the Ludicrous wrote:
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Time (and space, as we know it) is infinite.


I'm not sure if I'd call them infinite. Neither can exist without consciousness.


False. Neither can be perceived without consciousness. There's a fundamental difference. If life ceased to exist right now, and then reemerged a billion years in the future the planets would not have frozen in place or blinked out of existence for that period of time.
#61 May 07 2009 at 10:50 AM Rating: Good
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Sarren wrote:
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I read back over this and it seems to sound like one of those who resort to anything they can't understand to reduce it to "god did it", it's hard to explain, that's not what I beleive, it's more of a feeling that it just seems AS far fetched to believe it's all a random series of events. Like there's some sort of middle gorund, maybe, idk.


Random isn't a good word to use. Not to sound to deterministic, but once I reached a certain level of broad scientific knowledge it seemed inevitable in the sense that everything occurs in line with the laws of nature we've discovered. I can understand the feeling that there's something more, but I don't think it's necessary to plug anything mystical into the workings of the physical universe to understand them. That's not to say there's no room for thoughts of this kind. It's just not required where you're putting them.

That's just the thing though isn't it, you're in the nicest way possible trying to say "you just don't understand fully what you're talking about, so you're filling the blanks with your feelings". Which is true and is, at the base, my point. Religion, God(s) higher beings etc so on and so forth have been and will continue to be a part of our culture as a whole till our knowledge surpasses our insecurities.

Several things can happen from this point; our knowledge will progress to a point where we will no longer need the thought of a higher power to explain away the things we don't understand (possible). We'll continue to expand our knowledge, slowly, and continue to fill in the blanks with feelings, religion and assumption (likely). OR, we'll find out there is a higher being and it will take us all to the great whatever in the wild blue yonder (unlikely, but possible....not ruling it out).

I appreciate the restraint by the by.
#62 May 07 2009 at 11:00 AM Rating: Decent
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Elinda wrote:
What route were you hoping for? The one that says us scientists are so smart we know everything.

Wow. No, the route where we don't have an inane discussion about the origin of the universe, honey.
Elinda wrote:
We have not witnessed non-life becoming life, there is nothing to be consistent with.

Except we do, constantly. What you you think happens when we ingest sugars and proteins? Amino acids have been produced in laboratory environments as early as 1953. What exactly do you want us to do? Piece together a tyrannosaurus atom by atom?
#63 May 07 2009 at 11:05 AM Rating: Good
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Allegory wrote:
What exactly do you want us to do? Piece together a tyrannosaurus atom by atom?
I do. Sounds interesting, hell I'd pay.

Edited, May 7th 2009 3:06pm by Bauran
#64 May 07 2009 at 12:24 PM Rating: Decent
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Allegory wrote:

Except we do, constantly. What you you think happens when we ingest sugars and proteins? Amino acids have been produced in laboratory environments as early as 1953. What exactly do you want us to do? Piece together a tyrannosaurus atom by atom?
Lol. Yeah, so tell me again how life first began on this planet? What happened to make the inanimate animate? How did your amino acids suddenly transform to the nucleic variety, become a cell and divide. You can't. No one can.

There are plenty of hypotheses, some better than others, but none that are good enough to rule out the less familiar.
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#65 May 07 2009 at 12:42 PM Rating: Decent
I think it is funny that the guy presents all the arguments against religion using all the same tricks he claims religion uses to convert us.

I didn't listen to all the questions people asked him, but I'm guessing they didn't ask that one.

Here's more what an actual scientific talk goes like:

"I'm really interested in topic Y. If we knew about Y, then it would lead to all kinds of great stuff (Z1, Z2, Z3). Well so-and-so did this experiment. And you could interpret the results one way or the other. So we decided to do another experiment to try to figure out which possible way it went. It seems to be going this way, but there was some lingering doubt due to this other factor. And the standard technique for examining that factor is X. Fortunately Smith and Jones were already looking into that (since my lab isn't set up to do X). And their results more or less seem to agree with ours. So that's why we think what we think. But it could still be interpreted this other way. And here's what we hope to do next: (new stuff). That should help shed some light on it. Questions?

Question 1: So I can take all your results you've talked about and interpret them this other way. Also, as I understand it, (new stuff) won't tell the difference between this other way and your result.

Great question! Ya, I didn't have time to talk about that. Smith and Jones already tried another technique X2 to tell the difference between your interpretation and other interpretations (mostly their own, since they are none to fond of ours). Anyhow, they got this result (which doesn't look good for your alternative explanation). The problem is, whenever you do X2, you get all this noise due to (something) and so you could well be right, but after Smith and Jones did it...well...nobody has gone back to it. Maybe you could do it. But I see there are other questions so maybe we can talk more about it after this session..."

In real science, you life for the next experiment - and although you hope it will give a clear result, it is never perfect. Every step in the chain of logic leading to your current best guess ("conclusion") is examined. The reason is, although you may not know anything about X, maybe there is an X expert in the audience who will run off and do that experiment.

Maybe all social scientists talk like this guy. I doubt it, but if they do, they are holding back the rate of progress in their own field.
#66 May 07 2009 at 12:46 PM Rating: Excellent
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Elinda wrote:
Yeah, so tell me again how life first began on this planet?

Almost certainly by atoms grouping together into amino acids, amino acid grouping into proteins, and proteins forming cell-like structure.
Elinda wrote:
What happened to make the inanimate animate?

You're trying to craft a non existent dividing line. When do a bunch of iron supports become a sky scraper?
Elinda wrote:
How did your amino acids suddenly transform to the nucleic variety

They never did? DNA isn't composed of proteins? Also "my" amino acids? You act as if basic biochemistry is my personal pet theory.
Elinda wrote:
become a cell and divide.

You put a bunch of them together? Just like any other structure? Just like our bodies are already doing?
Elinda wrote:
There are plenty of hypotheses, some better than others, but none that are good enough to rule out the less familiar.

That's not how basic reasoning works. You don't think "I can't say for certain I won't be brutally murdered if I step outside, so I guess I should never step outside." You go outside all you want until you have a specific reason to believe otherwise. Do you also not understand the relative differences in the plausibility of each situation? Equating the two into some weird 50/50 setup is like pretending you have a 50/50 chance at winning the lottery, either you win or you lose.

Edited, May 7th 2009 3:49pm by Allegory
#67 May 07 2009 at 12:53 PM Rating: Decent
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False. Neither can be perceived without consciousness. There's a fundamental difference.


I am aware of the fundamental difference. You are still not correct. Time and space exist completely dependently on human consciousness.

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If life ceased to exist right now, and then reemerged a billion years in the future the planets would not have frozen in place or blinked out of existence for that period of time.


I never said that objects would cease to exist, nor that motion would stop, nor that spontaneous destruction and recreation would occur. None of those things are space and time; they are objects which we perceive. Space and time are not themselves objects. You can't perceive things that aren't objects, by definition. You don't perceive time; you perceive with time. Recognize the difference.
#68 May 07 2009 at 12:56 PM Rating: Decent
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Pensive the Ludicrous wrote:
I never said that objects would cease to exist, nor that motion would stop, nor that spontaneous destruction and recreation would occur. None of those things are space and time; they are objects which we perceive. Space and time are not themselves objects. You can't perceive things that aren't objects, by definition. You don't perceive time; you perceive with time. Recognize the difference.

It hurts.
#69 May 07 2009 at 12:59 PM Rating: Good
I'm agnostic leaning towards atheist. I think there is something out there. I don't know if you would call it karma or what ever but I don't believe in the whole God thing. I believe in evolution, I believe that this thing that makes us US, our souls, all of it links to something bigger. I just can't accept that when we die that it's over, nothing else. I think there is a lot out there still unexplained but I don't buy into religion as I think it's nothing more than a money making machine created to oppress people.
#70 May 07 2009 at 1:03 PM Rating: Decent
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It hurts.


Why's that? I don't feel like writing pre-emptive responses to four hypotheticals.

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I just can't accept that when we die that it's over, nothing else.


Neither can I, but it's still probably true. You've already gone through one eternity of non-existence; why not go through another?

Of course that question is nonsensical because there wasn't any "you" to go through the eternity, but I'm not sure how better to make the point by using english.

Edited, May 7th 2009 5:05pm by Pensive
#71 May 07 2009 at 1:09 PM Rating: Good
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Pensive the Ludicrous wrote:
Why's that? I don't feel like writing pre-emptive responses to four hypotheticals.

I'll explain why, but I have absolutely no desire to argue the subject with you.

I think that viewpoint is representative of the philosophies which are wrong, attempt to over complicate, abstract, and mystify a very concrete and simple idea, appeal to those who enjoy over thinking the simple and under thinking the complex, and do a disservice to the intellectual community.
#72 May 07 2009 at 1:19 PM Rating: Decent
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think that viewpoint is representative of the philosophies which are wrong, attempt to over complicate, abstract, and mystify a very concrete and simple idea, appeal to those who enjoy over thinking the simple and under thinking the complex, and do a disservice to the intellectual community.


I don't like to say things like this, but I really don't think you understand the viewpoint. It's not because you disagree; it's because you think it is over-thinking anything simple or concrete.

***

I'd also question your own service to an intellectual community if you're not willing to appreciate efforts at not being a fraud. It's kind of important to have good reasons for believing things allegory.

Edited, May 7th 2009 5:21pm by Pensive
#73 May 07 2009 at 1:22 PM Rating: Decent
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Pensive the Ludicrous wrote:
I don't like to say things like this, but I really don't think you understand the viewpoint. It's not because you disagree; it's because you think it is over-thinking anything simple or concrete.

I think you're wrong, but like I said I don't really want to argue the issue at this time.
Pensive the Ludicrous wrote:
I'd also question your own service to an intellectual community if you're not willing to appreciate efforts at not being a fraud. It's kind of important to have good reasons for believing things allegory.

I do not understand what you mean.

Edited, May 7th 2009 4:24pm by Allegory
#74 May 07 2009 at 1:30 PM Rating: Decent
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I do not udnerstand what you mean.


That is because you do not understand the position, which asserts, among other things, if you are unwilling to make claims beyond your ability to justify (which all scientists should be unwilling to make), then you need time and space to be human created phenomena.

It doesn't really matter whether or not it's true; what matters is that it is an argument born from the very need to make a coherent and intellectually honest appraisal of existence, and that process is what differentiates good science from bad science.
#75 May 07 2009 at 1:34 PM Rating: Decent
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Still not getting it, and I honestly don't feel the communication problem is on my end.
#76 May 07 2009 at 1:45 PM Rating: Decent
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True or false.

Science should be informed by good epistemology. Really there is only one right answer here. I'm assuming you're going to answer in the affirmative.

The position asserted by me, asserts that time and space are created by humans in an attempt to follow the rules of good epistemology.

I can't make that anymore clear.

If you believe that science should not follow the rules of good epistemology, then I don't know what your beef would be at allowing religion and well, anything for that matter, into science.
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