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

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Snow Dog View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 06:06
^ I saw a programe about the acceptence of miracles once and the conclusion was at the end that God would have to physically move the stars in the night sky to spell out " A Miracle"
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 06:26
Turn all the Christmas trees, including artificial ones and all the images, representations and descriptions, green, then erase every memory of them ever being pink from everyones mind...
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 06:28
^ I would never forget!Cool
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 06:34
^ most people "forgot" there never were any snakes and reptiles in Ireland.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 06:37
^ That confused me for a few moments, but now I understand your reference.Approve
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 06:38
Actually "never" is not quite right. Never since the last Ice Age for sure.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 06:42
Before the last Ice Age (which never happened because that was supposed to have happened 6,000 years before the world was created) Ireland wasn't an island.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 06:46
I am a Lawnmower
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 07:06
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Before the last Ice Age (which never happened because that was supposed to have happened 6,000 years before the world was created) Ireland wasn't an island.

Yes. I know. But the land there may have had lizards and reptiles at some point in time. If one goes back far enough the whole area of the British Isles were a collection of tropical islands. But I bet you knew that.

But I agree...the Ireland we know today, has never had snakes.


Edited by Snow Dog - December 09 2010 at 07:09
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 09:45
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

 

How can a lawyer, of all people, make such a horrible mistake?

Courts declare people "not guilty". The difference between "not guilty" and "innocent" is essentially the same as the one between "we don't know what caused the cure" and "god did it". You need positive evidence to convict someone of a crime, you need positive evidence to identify miracles.

Now, who is being naive?

When a client comes to me, I only have his word of innocence, in some cases not even all the evidence in the world can prove if A, B or C killed another person, in some cases all have the same interest, all have an alibi with 100 witnesses tha hey were 100 miles away from the scene of crime. .

In the same way, the juries nor the judges can read minds, a the end they declare a person guilty or innocent because they believed more the arguments presented by the lawyer or the DA, science can only give an approach (in most cases) the rest is deduction..

Only on TV series you can get all the evidence, in most of he cases you  don't have a weapon (most criminals use illegal weapons without register and they dispose of them after a crime) or a single witness, you only have three or four suspects with similar possibilities too be the criminal, and still the Judge has to decide and give a ruling.

In the same way, science don't tell us what is a miracle, it helps us to know which are not  miracles.

Iván
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 10:08
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

 

How can a lawyer, of all people, make such a horrible mistake?

Courts declare people "not guilty". The difference between "not guilty" and "innocent" is essentially the same as the one between "we don't know what caused the cure" and "god did it". You need positive evidence to convict someone of a crime, you need positive evidence to identify miracles.

Now, who is being naive?

When a client comes to me, I only have his word of innocence, in some cases not even all the evidence in the world can prove if A, B or C killed another person, in some cases all have the same interest, all have an alibi with 100 witnesses tha hey were 100 miles away from the scene of crime. .

In the same way, the juries nor the judges can read minds, a the end they declare a person guilty or innocent because they believed more the arguments presented by the lawyer or the DA, science can only give an approach (in most cases) the rest is deduction..

Only on TV series you can get all the evidence, in most of he cases you  don't have a weapon (most criminals use illegal weapons without register and they dispose of them after a crime) or a single witness, you only have three or four suspects with similar possibilities too be the criminal, and still the Judge has to decide and give a ruling.

In the same way, science don't tell us what is a miracle, it helps us to know which are not  miracles.

Iván
Ah, no.
 
The point Mike was making was that proving someone is innocent is not the same as not proving they were guilty. A not guilty verdict does not mean the person was innocent, it means they could not prove he was guilty.


Edited by Dean - December 09 2010 at 10:09
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 10:58
Not correct everywhere Dean, in USA and I believe in UK the only two veredicts are Guilty and Not Guilty, there's no innocent veredict 

Quote Juries never find defendants innocent. They cannot. Not only is it not their job, it is not within their power. They can only find them "not guilty."

Hugh Duval 

I believe only in Scottland they have a Non Proven verdict.

Don't know about the rest of Europe.

Iván
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 11:01
^ Dean never said there was an "innocent" verdict. I can't find it anyway.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 11:03
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Not correct everywhere Dean, in USA and I believe in UK the only two veredicts are Guilty and Not Guilty, there's no innocent veredict 

Quote Juries never find defendants innocent. They cannot. Not only is it not their job, it is not within their power. They can only find them "not guilty."

Hugh Duval 

I believe only in Scottland they have a Non Proven verdict.

Don't know about the rest of Europe.

Iván
At least you now acknowledge (in this thread) the difference between not guilty and innocent - which was the point Mike was making.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 11:06

one reason  I don't study law is that the book is so huge, you need a year to plow your way through it

 
thats how thick a law book is for a country of 4.7 millions, only think of the lawsbook for a country with 300 million people Dead
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 11:11
For example, Mike Tyson was declared guilty based exclusively on the word of the accuser and his fame, because there wasn't a single witness or piece of evidence of rape in date.

As a fact, after he was declared guilty, a photo in which he and Desiree Washington left the hotel hugging the following morning to the rape morning appeared.

That verdict was purely subjective.

On the other hand, despite the evidence O.J. Simpson was declared not guilty because people believed him.

A good percentage of the verdicts are at the most educated guesses, a proof of this is that since DNA is available, 261 convictions have been overturned (17 with death penalty), and this is the tip of the iceberg, thousands of wrongfully convicted don't have the money or interest or have short terms to serve..

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 11:13
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Not correct everywhere Dean, in USA and I believe in UK the only two veredicts are Guilty and Not Guilty, there's no innocent veredict 

Quote Juries never find defendants innocent. They cannot. Not only is it not their job, it is not within their power. They can only find them "not guilty."

Hugh Duval 

I believe only in Scottland they have a Non Proven verdict.

Don't know about the rest of Europe.

Iván
At least you now acknowledge (in this thread) the difference between not guilty and innocent - which was the point Mike was making.

Dean, I'm saying that each and every case is a guess in certain degree, almost never a judge or a jury can have 100% of evidence of the guilt or innocence of a person, no matter what science does.

Iván


            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 11:51
Originally posted by seventhsojourn seventhsojourn wrote:

I'm not saying that every statement is a provocation, but what exactly do Northeast Indianan Wild Unicorns and invisible pet dragons have to do with Christianity? (Rhetorical question, obviously.)


Maybe rhetorical, but I'll answer anyway.

The church declares itself an authority over an unprovable thing (miracles).

I declare myself an authority over unprovable things (NI Wild Unicorns).

Just because the church has more people in on the joke doesn't mean it's not a joke.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 11:52
Originally posted by Paravion Paravion wrote:

It would be a disaster to assert and accept that all unexplainable phenomena is ' a miracle'. Surely we need curiosity and further investigation. 

In linguistics, explanations are in many cases impossible. (theorist speak of theories with varying degrees of explanatory force)  

There's no explanation as to why English allows
           Peter loves Mary 
but not
          *Peter love Mary 

We can't explain why Greenlandic has only 3 phonemic vowels and Danish 9.    

But it's highly likely that it's not because God wants it that way. A lot of 'phenomena' just has no reason - so it currently seems. 
Also, it's presumptious to think that humanity (at present and future stages) is capable of explaining and grasping all the complexities of the world. But it's stupid, lazy and far worse to invent some fairy-tale like explanations involving Gods and miracles in order to make sense of the world. 
 
This is (in a roundabout way) basically the point I was trying to make a few pages back. I've never asserted that unexplained phenomena are divine miracles. I only claim that unexplained phenomena happen. All too often I see atheists employing the logic that something can't have happened if we don't have an explanation for it. Pat quite rightly pointed out (although it was tongue in cheek) that it is foolish to say that something has happened which is impossible. I think in many cases it would be wiser to say "X is not impossible" rather than "X didn't happen."

Let's take the original example of the coworker whose wife had a vision of Jesus. If one of my loved ones who I trust completely swore that they had seen something like this, I would tend to believe them, rather than laugh at them and call them delusional or a liar. That doesn't mean that I would believe what they saw was a divine message, but I would believe they saw something. When this point was brought up here, those on the atheist side had a good chuckle at the poor ignorant people and their impossible beliefs. They instantly concluded that nothing extraordinary had happened.

You can admit the possibility of extraordinary events without being a theist. I hear the complaint that such claims cannot be verified in laboratory settings, which is fair enough, but if the vision was what it appeared to be, then wouldn't you expect it not to repeat itself on command? By it's very nature, such a vision would be reluctant to manifest itself on command.

Also, there was a time when many of the phenomena we now take for granted couldn't be verified in labs and had to be believed as hearsay. Would it be irrational for a stone age man living in the tropics to believe in snow, even if he;d never seen it, just taking the word of travelers he encountered? Such a person wouldn't possess the science to verify the claim.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 09 2010 at 12:07
Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

 
This is (in a roundabout way) basically the point I was trying to make a few pages back. I've never asserted that unexplained phenomena are divine miracles. I only claim that unexplained phenomena happen. All too often I see atheists employing the logic that something can't have happened if we don't have an explanation for it. Pat quite rightly pointed out (although it was tongue in cheek) that it is foolish to say that something has happened which is impossible. I think in many cases it would be wiser to say "X is not impossible" rather than "X didn't happen."

Let's take the original example of the coworker whose wife had a vision of Jesus. If one of my loved ones who I trust completely swore that they had seen something like this, I would tend to believe them, rather than laugh at them and call them delusional or a liar. That doesn't mean that I would believe what they saw was a divine message, but I would believe they saw something. When this point was brought up here, those on the atheist side had a good chuckle at the poor ignorant people and their impossible beliefs. They instantly concluded that nothing extraordinary had happened.

You can admit the possibility of extraordinary events without being a theist. I hear the complaint that such claims cannot be verified in laboratory settings, which is fair enough, but if the vision was what it appeared to be, then wouldn't you expect it not to repeat itself on command? By it's very nature, such a vision would be reluctant to manifest itself on command.

Also, there was a time when many of the phenomena we now take for granted couldn't be verified in labs and had to be believed as hearsay. Would it be irrational for a stone age man living in the tropics to believe in snow, even if he;d never seen it, just taking the word of travelers he encountered? Such a person wouldn't possess the science to verify the claim.


Hallucinations often have a religious subtext, and there are still a lot of things about the brain we don't understand. It's a precarious organ, and changing the chemical compositions in it just a little bit can be the difference in sanity and insanity, night and day, hallucination and reality. I doubt most atheists here at least will say "X event positively did not happen" but  are careful to not when acknowledging to possibility of an extraordinary event, the danger that people will take their admission and run with it. "The atheist/scientist told me something unexplainable happened to me. Jesus walks among us now!"
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