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Topic ClosedEvolution vs. Creationism

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Poll Question: What represents your opinion best?
Poll Choice Votes Poll Statistics
2 [3.23%]
3 [4.84%]
12 [19.35%]
45 [72.58%]
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jampa17 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 10:21
but what about dicks...???
Change the program inside... Stay in silence is a crime.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 10:26
Another eternal question that nerdy scientific types seem to have little handle on...Tongue
 
 
I finally voted option 3 as its closest to what I feel at the moment. "Divine Intervention" implies action from the outside and I think of the Universe as an ongoing manifesting and de-manifesting of the Divine omni-potentiality. Evolution is a subset of God, so to speak.


Edited by Negoba - December 03 2009 at 10:28
You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 10:27
LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 10:59
Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by Citizen Erased Citizen Erased wrote:

Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by Citizen Erased Citizen Erased wrote:



Pah. I was cynical of it myself beforehand. It's not something I could control.

But if that's your response I'll hardly convince you. Either I'm a raving lunatic or I am telling you the truth about what I experienced.

Believe me or not. I don't really lose or gain anything from it.


You're neither, actually. Just somebody who gets so caught up in the motion that you join in with the others. I have no doubt that you actually do believe in it, yet it's very curious . . . why is it that only certain congregations are able to do that? If it's truly something God-given, shouldn't every church be able to do it? 'Course the only churches who do speak in tongues are the churches who actually believe it to be possible.

See what I'm getting at, here? If you believe something to be true, you will convince yourself of it as well, in one way or another. For you it's making incoherent noise, for others it's allowing snakes to bite them, but for most Christians it's just simply believing, and nothing else is required to ''sell'' the illusion to the participants.

I don't think regular church attendees are liars. I just think they are greatly misguided.


I doubt I'll be able to convince you. I can't remember much of the meeting up to that point but I barely knew a word of the songs (this was in Canada) and I didn't know anybody. I just asked God to 'move in me' and boom.

As for why can't all churches see the same results? They don't ask for it/don't believe it quite simply. I've spoken to a priest from down south before and his logic was similar to yours, except he believed that God didn't "manifest himself in such ways". Basically, he'd blocked the idea from his mind and so wasn't letting God in, is my theory.

This is a bit of a tangent anyway.


So you're saying that if somebody doesn't believe in something, it simply dosn't exist for them?

Well that sounds nice, and all, but it just isn't true. I don't believe in rainstorms. Does that mean when I go outside, I'll never be able to see or feel rain?

If the ability for God to enter somebody is real, then He should be able to do it with anybody. Now you'll argue that he only chooses to enter the hearts of His believers. Okay, fine . . . I was a believer for 19 years, yet I never once experienced being 'taken over' by anything, much less the Holy Spirit. It wasn't because I didn't believe it was possible, or that I simply chose to block it out. I believed, and God could have done that at any time. But He didn't. Because it just isn't possible.

Even most Christians know this. Even if you go by the Bible itself, it confirms this. The pentecost was a one-time incident, and it never happened again. God does that kind of stuff all the time in the Bible when he allows certain events to take place only once for a certain reason, then he brings everything back to normal again, and those abilities are no longer possible. But people in churches like yours choose to ignore that completely.

Also, the whole 'unkown tongues' thing is also misunderstood. The word 'unkown' is italicized. Meaning that it has been ADDED to the already existing scripture. It's to make the english readable. It does not exist in the actual manuscripts. These 'tongues' were understood by everybody else there, not just the supposedly possessed.

Here ya go:

http://www.biblestudysite.com/tongues.htm

But of course, that won't convice you, either, because guess what? You don't really want to know the truth. You would rather remain in the dark and unaware of the actual answers because it comforts you to believe in such things. That's fine, but if you're that kind of person, you have no business jumping on here and accusing us non-believers of being the stubborn ones.


To be honest, your arrogant tone is beginning to irritate me. I've not accused anyone of being stubborn. Please direct me to such a post? Or is it just my 'tone'? Sleepy

I don't want to know the truth? It's like trying to tell someone who has tasted water that what he just tasted isn't water at all. Seriously, experience counts for a lot when it comes to somebody's beliefs. I remember discussing this with my philosophy teacher years ago - he had a lifechanging incident that convinced him there was a God despite finding scientific evidence that told him he was wrong for years.

As for tongues, if you actually listen to people 'possessed' as you seem to put it (it's actually just a special language for talking to God), many of the words are pure hebrew. How would you explain being able to speak hebrew if you've never spoken it in your entire life? At the time I was saying words that I had no idea meant Jewish for love etc.

As for saying, he should be 'able' to do it with anybody - God isn't a circus act. And believe me, it IS about the heart. I know people that have gone over to South America and seen miracles of a monumental scale.

Quote I was a believer for 19 years, yet I never once experienced being 'taken over' by anything, much less the Holy Spirit. It wasn't because I didn't believe it was possible, or that I simply chose to block it out. I believed, and God could have done that at any time. But He didn't. Because it just isn't possible.


So how come it 'worked' with me then? I don't try and explain God's actions, I'm just saying what happened to me. That's all I can do after all?
And lo, the mighty riffage was played and it was good


<a href="www.last.fm/user/jonzo67" targe
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 11:07
^ I think he is angry because he didn't felt nothing and now he is pissed off with God... if we don't learn to see God in everything that surround us we are just wasting time... there are thousand of different behavoir in many different cultures of how to see or feel or speak or hear God... religions are methods to help that attempts... So I do feel sorry for him... not a pretentious one, but the sorry for what he is missing, when one learned to hear God or his manifestations, you have a happier life, as you are supported in something that worth enough as all the suffering in this life...
Change the program inside... Stay in silence is a crime.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 11:54
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ whatever you said about miracles is not really relevant to the point I was making. And as for "kill all homosexuals": The bible says that. Of course I picked a statement which I know few Christians are taking literally today. But that's also exactly why it's such a good example of cherry picking.


Gee Mike...I also eat pork and wear clothes of two different kinds of fabric.  That isn't cherry-picking.  It's understanding that Old Testament law was done away with in favor of a new covenant (a very common understanding)...regardless I (as a Gentile) was never bound by the Mosaic law in the first place...because God never made that covenant with Gentiles, but with Hebrews.
Duuno if this was responded to because damn this thread has words and stuff.
 
The problem is why you would make a Covenant, with moral commands, that won't be absolutely true, or good.
 
I can't buy the argument that ancient peoples needed a "stepping stone" morality. If God really wanted to, he could have endowed them with reason, spoken in more than parable, vague metaphors, smoke and mirrors, and given real true good reasoning. And we'd be so far ahead now morally if he did.
 
But this stepping stone morality doesn't make sense to me coming from a Creator that is supposed to be eternal, amongst other things.


And you are telling God what He should be?  That's rich! 

....

But of course, everyone has an assumption of what God must be, and if God doesn't fit that mold, He can't exist. 



It's perfectly reasonable to outline what aspects a creator should have.

Say God kills all Inuits and says he was right in doing it (via some text somewhere). It's an old philosophical question: "Is something right because God says it is?" I cannot accept that. It's too counter-intuitive, for one thing, but it can't stack up even to various philosophical arguments completely away from intuition. The heart of the matter we have to deal with, as humans, is we cannot accept something is right because "a God" in one text of many is supposed to be justified in doing it because it's his will. It cannot be that way. We have to use our own reason, and if the best we can muster agrees that God wasn't moral in acting that way, God was wrong. If it turns out that God does exist, and somehow by some tragic cosmic anomaly was right in acting that way, we are all slaves to a malevolent being who somehow endowed us with enough cognitive dissonance to despise his actions while making us pay for it.
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:


Anyway, it is incorrect to assume that God made a covenant with the Hebrews to instill moral character in them (that is really an incidental aspect of the covenant).  If you want to know why, figure out why God commanded even their diets (or to do no work on the Sabbath day).  It's so much deeper than than morals...and it's rather profound.  Smile


You could explain, but I think the profundity of it all will be lost on me. Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 11:55
Originally posted by jampa17 jampa17 wrote:

but what about dicks...???


Oh now you're really helping it get closed....Angry

I think I'm somewhat capable of not careening these kinds of threads off into closed-land. Why aren't others?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 11:59
I watched every episode of Cosmos as a kid and I had no recollection of the turtleneck. Funny thing memory.
You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 12:09
Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ whatever you said about miracles is not really relevant to the point I was making. And as for "kill all homosexuals": The bible says that. Of course I picked a statement which I know few Christians are taking literally today. But that's also exactly why it's such a good example of cherry picking.


Gee Mike...I also eat pork and wear clothes of two different kinds of fabric.  That isn't cherry-picking.  It's understanding that Old Testament law was done away with in favor of a new covenant (a very common understanding)...regardless I (as a Gentile) was never bound by the Mosaic law in the first place...because God never made that covenant with Gentiles, but with Hebrews.
Duuno if this was responded to because damn this thread has words and stuff.
 
The problem is why you would make a Covenant, with moral commands, that won't be absolutely true, or good.
 
I can't buy the argument that ancient peoples needed a "stepping stone" morality. If God really wanted to, he could have endowed them with reason, spoken in more than parable, vague metaphors, smoke and mirrors, and given real true good reasoning. And we'd be so far ahead now morally if he did.
 
But this stepping stone morality doesn't make sense to me coming from a Creator that is supposed to be eternal, amongst other things.


And you are telling God what He should be?  That's rich! 

....

But of course, everyone has an assumption of what God must be, and if God doesn't fit that mold, He can't exist. 



It's perfectly reasonable to outline what aspects a creator should have.

Say God kills all Inuits and says he was right in doing it (via some text somewhere). It's an old philosophical question: "Is something right because God says it is?" I cannot accept that. It's too counter-intuitive, for one thing, but it can't stack up even to various philosophical arguments completely away from intuition. The heart of the matter we have to deal with, as humans, is we cannot accept something is right because "a God" in one text of many is supposed to be justified in doing it because it's his will. It cannot be that way. We have to use our own reason, and if the best we can muster agrees that God wasn't moral in acting that way, God was wrong. If it turns out that God does exist, and somehow by some tragic cosmic anomaly was right in acting that way, we are all slaves to a malevolent being who somehow endowed us with enough cognitive dissonance to despise his actions while making us pay for it.
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:


Anyway, it is incorrect to assume that God made a covenant with the Hebrews to instill moral character in them (that is really an incidental aspect of the covenant).  If you want to know why, figure out why God commanded even their diets (or to do no work on the Sabbath day).  It's so much deeper than than morals...and it's rather profound.  Smile


You could explain, but I think the profundity of it all will be lost on me. Wink


Evolution is counter-intuitive.  Therefore it isn't real.

I see how this works.  Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 12:12
^ but...but..but...!!!

I as soon as I heard the general concept, I thought it was pretty intuitive. It depends on how far you wanna take "intuition." "A baby loves its mother" is about as minimal as I can think to take it. Wink

Anyway, intuition is one factor, but what I was talking about also conflicts with tons of philosophical schools of morality, not just intuitive ones.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 12:18
If the Christian God created the world, then the Christian God gets to determine moral absolutes.

After all, such a God is the only Being anybody will ultimately answer to.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 12:19
Originally posted by Negoba Negoba wrote:

Originally posted by Kestrel Kestrel wrote:

Originally posted by Negoba Negoba wrote:

Originally posted by Kestrel Kestrel wrote:


Huh? What faith do we put in science?
 
You have faith that this way of thinking will give you the answers to questions regarding the Universe. And it does, but not all of them. It is not designed to do so.

I don't have faith that science gives me answers. It does. Time and time again. And it gives answers that work.

It depends on what kind of questions you're asking about the universe - science takes care of the questions I wonder about, but I guess I don't really understand what you're trying to get at.


And any scientist would gladly tell you that our understanding of the Universe is quite limited - that's why there are still scientists!

Most real scientists will admit this for their particular field. Most of the atheists who put their faith in science are not scientists (interesting converse to a previous argument). Far too few admit to the limits of the scientific method in general.

Maybe. Maybe not. I haven't encountered any atheists that think this way.

I've seen this said so many times and I have yet to actually be shown these "other truths." Can you tell me some?
 
As long as you remain limited to a scientific / objectivist perspective, you will not be able to perceive these truths. But I'll try anyway. Religions work best in helping an individual, subject self find their place in the Universe. Much meditation regards fine tuning your perception, your ability to discern self from other. It's about direct experience of the here and now, trying to shed the filters of our expectations and teaching. In that way the goal is like science, except for the individual subject rather than the group objective point of view. And these are ancient traditions, some non-theist, which predate "New Age" by millenia.

Yep, that's just a bunch of mumbo jumbo to me.

And yes, some "New Atheists" do want to get rid of religion. Not sure what is wrong with that.
 
They do not understand what they're trying to get rid of. They deny the good and exaggerate the evil that is done in the name of religion, most often by persons who themselves had very little understanding of the religions whose banners they flew.

Even if that's the case, people like Dawkins or myself argue that how good or bad a religion is is ultimately irrelevant. What matters is if it's correct or not.

These "why" questions are mostly nonsensical if you want anything beyond evolution.
 
Of course they are. but I do want something beyond evolution. I work in a field completely dependent on science but where science leaves major gaps and will always. It forces me to think a little bigger.

Can't help you here.
 
You're intelligent and consistent, but you're choosing a 2-dimensional outlook on a 3 (or more) dimensional existence. But you've stated you don't want to venture outside those questions, which is fine. It's also a shame since you're clearly intelligent enough to handle more.


Uh, thanks, I guess? Haha. My comment about questions was more something to say to see how you would respond. What kind of questions are we talking about here? I don't ask questions like "Why are we here?" and "What is my purpose?" because I see them as basically meaningless, but perhaps that is more of the 2D outlook? Not sure what you mean by that.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 12:33

Nevermind whoever God is... If God is God and he creates the universe, you cannot come here and say "You don't have the right to aloud evil or pain"... if God is god, he can do anything... and most religions are focus in the historical facts that lead us to understand a litlle more the plan of God, if there's any... so, you have the right to "not believe" the rules of God... but that you believe it or not doesn't count if it's real or not... don't you get it...???



Edited by jampa17 - December 03 2009 at 12:37
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 12:33
Originally posted by Negoba Negoba wrote:

I watched every episode of Cosmos as a kid and I had no recollection of the turtleneck. Funny thing memory.

Carl Sagan is actually an alien whose real name is C'aal Sgngn. Tongue
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 12:37
I do ask those questions all the time, and feel like I am a better person for it. In fact, I think the depth of my existence during this life is defined by it.
 
I LOVE thinking about populations and natural selection and the subjects people group under the poorly monikered "evolution." But early names stick and it's certainly better than "America" or "Indian."
 
Because I love this subject, it irks me to no end when people who understand much less than I about it start talking about "Facts" and "Certainty" and things that tend to fall under faith. I am especially critical of the lay view of evolution about natural selection and mutation. Boundary conditions of systems are their defining characteristics, and when we look for the hows and whys of speciation, we should be looking first and foremost about boundary conditions.
 
The creationists often ask "Show me the intermediaries?" Well there aren't that many because of the phenomenon called punctuated equilibrium. Again a concept based on boundary conditions. The sad fact is that most boundary conditions (and mutations) are terminal. The individuals who happen to land in favorable areas where there traits make life livable survive on. This is coined genetic drift. AFTER those conditions happen, then actual competition starts happening, that is what we normally think of as natural selection. I find it strange that no one has answered this question with its answer.
 
I personally feel that the next revolution in human knowledge will happen when we have the math to truly utilize systems theory. There are much smarter minds than I working on this and many are in the field of Evolutionary biology. I personally find systems theory a beautiful and almost magical thing, but I'm sure everyone involved in the development of Relativity and Quantum Mechanics thought so too.
 
These systems ideas bridge a gap between objective and subjective questions, and that's why I find them so fascinating.
 
 


Edited by Negoba - December 03 2009 at 12:38
You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 12:42
Originally posted by p0mt3 p0mt3 wrote:

Originally posted by AmbianceMan AmbianceMan wrote:

 
I was referring to the part where you said it's ok to cut off genials.


Oh, I never said it was. God did, though:

Genesis 17:9-10: "And God said unto Abraham, Thou shalt keep my covenant therefore, thou, and thy seed after thee in their generations. This is my covenant, which ye shall keep, between me and you and thy seed after thee; Every man child among you shall be circumcised."
 
After reading this, I really think you're just trying to bait me now.  You seriously don't think that means "cut off genitals" do you?  You're continued exaggeration explains a lot.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 12:46
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It's perfectly reasonable to outline what aspects a creator should have.


 
What? LOL how does that even make any sense?  Think about what you just said.  Let's say you make a drawing.  Does that drawing get to tell you what kind of person you should be?  No, it has no power over you.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 13:00
Originally posted by AmbianceMan AmbianceMan wrote:

Quote
It's perfectly reasonable to outline what aspects a creator should have.


 
What? LOL how does that even make any sense?  Think about what you just said.  Let's say you make a drawing.  Does that drawing get to tell you what kind of person you should be?  No, it has no power over you.
 
Herein lies the disconnect between many of Robert's arguments and some of our atheist friends. If you assume that God is a construction of the human mind, then you can challenge the constructions, or even make alternatives of your own. If God simply is and we have a desire to better understand the nature of that Divinity you look to figure out the nature of what is. Robert (seems) to have take an intense study of the historical Bible from a specific Christian point of view as his primary source in that search. I look all over the place, picking and choosing and remaining confused much of the time.
 
One can say "I firmly disagree with XXXX idea about the nature of God or the nature of the Universe." I think it is impossible to say "I am certain there is no thing as God at all," when you don't understand the breadth of different things people mean when they say that word.


Edited by Negoba - December 03 2009 at 13:02
You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 13:08
Originally posted by Negoba Negoba wrote:

Originally posted by AmbianceMan AmbianceMan wrote:

Quote
It's perfectly reasonable to outline what aspects a creator should have.


 
What? LOL how does that even make any sense?  Think about what you just said.  Let's say you make a drawing.  Does that drawing get to tell you what kind of person you should be?  No, it has no power over you.
 
Herein lies the disconnect between many of Robert's arguments and some of our atheist friends. If you assume that God is a construction of the human mind, then you can challenge the constructions, or even make alternatives of your own. If God simply is and we have a desire to better understand the nature of that Divinity you look to figure out the nature of what is. Robert (seems) to have take an intense study of the historical Bible from a specific Christian point of view as his primary source in that search. I look all over the place, picking and choosing and remaining confused much of the time.
 
One can say "I firmly disagree with XXXX idea about the nature of God or the nature of the Universe." I think it is impossible to say "I am certain there is no thing as God at all," when you don't understand the breadth of different things people mean when they say that word.


This is a great point, Jay.

We've all come to the table with our own ideas of what certain words mean, and with such a diverse bunch of cultures and experiences, the resultant discourse is rather...chaotic.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 03 2009 at 13:21
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by jampa17 jampa17 wrote:

Lucky I'm Catholic... we don't cut off nothing of our bodies... Give me sometime... I have to read another two pages of answers to know what I miss...
Now, there's the thing - I expect that is the result of selective interpretation. My interpretation is that Paul (& Barnabas?) was asked whether gentiles who converted to judeo-christianity should be circumcised, and he decided that it would be unfair to expect adults to undergo that and probably thought it would scare off potential converts, so he said no - but he did say they should only eat kosher food (he later changed his mind on that too). He never said anything about the children and offspring born to converted gentiles and their descendants.


I think my point has been missed somewhere along the way.

The only reason I brought up circumcision was to point out that God supported child mutilation at some point, if you believe the Bible to be true. I don't care who was required and who wasn't; the point is that it shouldn't happen! Circumcision deadens sensation, causes an internal organ to be external and therefore be unprotected, and it is a brutal practice that has no logical reason behind it. You can say that it helps protect people from disease, but just as many studies show the contrary. Besides, if you wanna protect yourself, wear a condom!

It's the tip of your dick, people! You're cutting off a piece of your body! Does nobody see the insanity in that but me?!
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