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Topic ClosedTheism vs. Atheism ... will it ever be settled?

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The T View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 20 2010 at 18:37
Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

you should spend a few months in another country.. "Mail? We don't need no stinking mail."



USPS is the BEST mail service in the entire world.... 

I mean, does it really have to be perfect? 


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 20 2010 at 19:10
A little side question: Is belief in religion (or specifically belief in miracles perhaps) equivalent to belief in magic? To explain what I mean, let's take the miracle of the loaves and fishes. If we take the story as true, do the believers think there was some sort of process which obeyed physics whereby particles were transmuted into food stuff (science) or did it simply just happen (magic)?
I think we have to go for magic because if you have an omnipotent god it would seem to follow that the laws of physics don't apply to him but perhaps others disagree.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 20 2010 at 22:05
Originally posted by Textbook Textbook wrote:

A little side question: Is belief in religion (or specifically belief in miracles perhaps) equivalent to belief in magic? To explain what I mean, let's take the miracle of the loaves and fishes. If we take the story as true, do the believers think there was some sort of process which obeyed physics whereby particles were transmuted into food stuff (science) or did it simply just happen (magic)?
I think we have to go for magic because if you have an omnipotent god it would seem to follow that the laws of physics don't apply to him but perhaps others disagree.


Good question. While I may not be particularly religious, I absolutely believe in magic. However, I think that "magic" is just a term for things that happen which science does not yet understand. Something my appear to violate what we understand to be the laws of physics, but in reality our understanding of science is merely incomplete. In this sense there is no such thing as the "supernatural." Everything is natural, we just don't fully grasp nature.

At least that's my theory.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 20 2010 at 22:26

Well I think you're saying you don't believe in magic, really. It seems to me what you are saying is that there is no magic, just science we are not capable of explaining. Belief in magic would mean belief in things that simply happen without cause and effect or regard for physical states- reality is altered because somebody (divine or otherwise) willed it.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 20 2010 at 22:26
A book in the Barnes and Noble discount area told me majick was real. It came with focus stones. Science never gave me focus stones, the dick.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 20 2010 at 22:30
Yes, a huge part of the appeal with magic is the gemstones. The cool manly gemstones that is, like obsidian and garnet that you can actually afford to buy things made of, none of that girly bank-breaking diamond nonsense.
And look how magicians get to dress. Would you rather dress like Doctor Strange or Stephen Hawking?
Incidentally I wish there was a band with a prog vocalist who dressed like Doctor Strange. Ooh and a guitarist who dressed like Dormammu. The firey head would be so rock and roll.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2010 at 00:39
Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

Originally posted by Tony R Tony R wrote:

I'm with Mike. The Baldies are being ridiculously childish with this pursuit. To me it's borderline harassment, though Mike has not complained.

If we are playing at looking up definitions then today's homework for the Baldies is to look up "boorish" in the dictionary. Wink

Mike applied Occam's razor to a situation where it cannot be applied. so it is only natural for us to assume that he has misunderstood the principle. this is not boorish at all


You still haven't mentioned which situation you're referring to, have you? You always do that ... and in that condescending tone, too. I would be stupid if I took that bait.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2010 at 00:49
BaldFriede finally shed some more light on the matter. I am quite sure though that I never used Occam's Razor to prove the Big Bang theory. Background radiation and cosmological red shift do that just fine, so we don't need to assess any likelyhoods here. But we could still apply the principle and say that there's no need to assume divine intervention, when we already have a workable theory of how it happened, which doesn't need such unlikely additional factors. As far as the laws of physics are concerned: Maybe we'll need to refine them, just like the theory of relativity was a refinement of the Newtonian laws.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2010 at 01:05
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

Originally posted by Tony R Tony R wrote:

I'm with Mike. The Baldies are being ridiculously childish with this pursuit. To me it's borderline harassment, though Mike has not complained.

If we are playing at looking up definitions then today's homework for the Baldies is to look up "boorish" in the dictionary. Wink

Mike applied Occam's razor to a situation where it cannot be applied. so it is only natural for us to assume that he has misunderstood the principle. this is not boorish at all


You still haven't mentioned which situation you're referring to, have you? You always do that ... and in that condescending tone, too. I would be stupid if I took that bait.

you know pretty well I referred to the big bang


A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2010 at 01:57
No I don't
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2010 at 03:55
the big bang is a singularityin time-space. this means that all the laws of the universe as we know them were invalid for the moment of the big bang. do you honestly claim that throwing all physical laws overboard to have an explanation for the creation of the universe falls under the principel of Occam's razor ? and is not such a throwing overboard simply equivalent to saying that a deity created the universe? if a God created the universe then that was a similar singular act. that''s why saying "God created the universe" and "the univeerse was started by the big bang" are totally equivalent proposals


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2010 at 04:35
^ Who says that physical laws have to be thrown overboard? In fact the theory of the big bang depends on the universality of the physical laws.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2010 at 04:39
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ Who says that physical laws have to be thrown overboard? In fact the theory of the big bang depends on the universality of the physical laws.

Mike, the big bang is a singularity. do you know what that means? it means it is an extreme exemption..in the moment of the big bang all laws of physics as we know them were non-existent.
and, by the way, it is a hypothesis, not a theory


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2010 at 05:19
When Jean refers to "The Big Bang" she seems to be applying a narrow definition that suggests the term only applies to the moment the singularity "exploded" whereas I guess many of us consider the expression to refer not just to that moment but the protracted after effects and conditions.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2010 at 05:38
^ Agreed ... the Big Bang is not something that happened at the beginning ... it is still happening.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2010 at 05:41
Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ Who says that physical laws have to be thrown overboard? In fact the theory of the big bang depends on the universality of the physical laws.

Mike, the big bang is a singularity. do you know what that means? it means it is an extreme exemption..in the moment of the big bang all laws of physics as we know them were non-existent.
and, by the way, it is a hypothesis, not a theory


Of course I know what a singularity is. I also know that humans may lack the mental capacity to imagine non-dimensionality.

If you like you can insist on calling it a mere hypothesis, I would however challenge you to come up with an alternative hypothesis that explains the background radiation at least equally well.


Edited by Mr ProgFreak - July 21 2010 at 05:42
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2010 at 06:09
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ Agreed ... the Big Bang is not something that happened at the beginning ... it is still happening.


This is making for some engrossing viewing MikeThumbs Up
<font color=Brown>Music - The Sound Librarian

...As I venture through the slipstream, between the viaducts in your dreams...[/COLOR]
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2010 at 09:26
and  here I thought the big bang was back in 1967 when I first.........well you know
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2010 at 10:13
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

BaldFriede finally shed some more light on the matter. I am quite sure though that I never used Occam's Razor to prove the Big Bang theory. Background radiation and cosmological red shift do that just fine, so we don't need to assess any likelyhoods here. But we could still apply the principle and say that there's no need to assume divine intervention, when we already have a workable theory of how it happened, which doesn't need such unlikely additional factors. As far as the laws of physics are concerned: Maybe we'll need to refine them, just like the theory of relativity was a refinement of the Newtonian laws.

Mike, even years after the discovery of the red shift and the 3° Kelvin radiation scientists still hotly debated several cosmological models; it is by no means as clear as you put it.. one  has to be aware that the big bang is as much a rabbit pulled out of the hat as anything else, which is all we ever wanted to point out. the state the world was in at the moment the big bang happened. is "undefined", which is rather mystic. scientists have worked their way as close as a fewmoments towards that big bang, but what state the world was in before it happened is very mysterious; any speculation is as good as the other. I am not a mathematician, but Friede is, and she says that the statements "Let there be light",, if you allow me to use this phrase for a creation by God, and "There was a big bang" are absolutely equivalent., and I trust her on that; I know she is a brilliaint mathematician.
by the way, looking back on the past it can be shown that applying the principle of Occam's razor sometimes led to wrong results. sometimes the complicated explanation is the right one. Occam's razor is a good guide, but not one that can be blindly trusted


Edited by BaldJean - July 21 2010 at 10:16


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 21 2010 at 10:39
all speculation and I would hesitate to believe anything is "absolutely equivalent" differentiation is everywhere you look
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