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Negoba
Prog Reviewer
Joined: July 24 2008
Location: Big Muddy
Status: Offline
Points: 5208
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:09 |
Kestrel wrote:
Negoba wrote:
It's about subjective experience and the limits of empiricism. |
Still not getting it. You're assuming that richer world exists.
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Several people here have told you that they've personally experienced that richer world. I have. As a skeptic myself, I don't claim that the bits and pieces I have personally experienced mean that God's name is Joe or even if anything resembling what some call God exists.
But I "know" to the same degree that you know genes determine traits that the richer world exists.
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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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The T
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 16 2006
Location: FL, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 17493
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:16 |
Planting the seeds of doubt seems much healthier to me than dogma. Of any kind. Doubt leads to discovery. Dogma leads to dogma. Of any kind.
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Negoba
Prog Reviewer
Joined: July 24 2008
Location: Big Muddy
Status: Offline
Points: 5208
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:17 |
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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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AmbianceMan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 30 2009
Location: Dayton, OH
Status: Offline
Points: 113
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:18 |
Theist in the strongest sense of the world. Personal God of the bible of the original writings.
Religious in no way whatsoever.
So, basically I'm saying that I have subjective evidence that convinced me and proves to me beyond a reasonable doubt that he exists, So I also do not believe out of blind faith. I do not have exclusive knowledge and I am not better than anyone else.
Not all people have seen their own subjective evidence, nor will they. But many have. Not by priviledge, but because I opened my mind to the possibility and explored it.
So when I say I'm not religious it means that I believe for reasons not based on feeling but by evidence. The people I meet with for spiritual strength are also those who are not extremist, but who also wish to open their minds to what the truth is. I'm around people all the time who see god (or rather his spirit) move and cause action, often referred to as miracles, but not like statues bleeding etc., and too illogical and unexplainable to be coincidences. I'm not saying if you don't believe as I do that you are closed minded.
The truth is out there! So I'm not going to convince you otherwise. I don't have the ability. That's why you have to seek it out for yourself. My guess is most atheists and agnostics have not genuinely put God to the test from a genuine place in their hearts. Sure, you can get supporting arguments, you can read it, and you can study it. But without a genuine desire, you'll go nowhere. If you go into it with the attitude "it's all bogus, whatever" and try to read it, you'll end the same place you started.
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:18 |
Kestrel wrote:
I don't deny God's existence. I just don't believe one exists.
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But didn't you said that you can't respect a belief not based in evidence? In the same way you shouldn't respect a disbelief not bases in uncontroversial evidence.
Your disbelieve in God has no evidence at all.
Isn't this a contradiction?
BTW: Not believing and denying are two faces of the same coin.
Iván
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:19 |
I'm not completely convinced that colour 100% subjective and can't be objective. If I radiate you with electromagnetic radiation at a wavelength of 650 nm you're going to say get that damn red light out of my eyes. Why do you call it red? Because that is the name of whatever stimulates the L cones in your eye and not the M or S cones, and what does that is light of wavelengths greater than 650 nm, which you learnt as an infant was called the colour red. It really doesn't matter how your brain interprets or perceives that information, but colour mixing theory suggests that every one generally sees it the same way so when you mix the wavelength of light that you have learnt is called Red with the one you have learnt is called Green the resulting perceived colour is the one you have learnt is called Yellow - but it is not Yellow light.
I chose purple because purple light does not have a wave length - it is not a spectral colour - it can only be seen by people with working L and S cones.
Edited by Dean - December 05 2009 at 19:20
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What?
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AmbianceMan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 30 2009
Location: Dayton, OH
Status: Offline
Points: 113
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:25 |
Dean wrote:
I chose purple because purple light does not have a wave length - it is not a spectral colour - it can only be seen by people with working L and S cones. |
Not sure I follow this. All electromagnetic energy has a wavelength whether it can be seen or not. Is purple and violet different? If it is light, it is electromagnetic energy. Explain please! I am intrigued.
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weetabix
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 20 2008
Status: Offline
Points: 170
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:27 |
Thank God I am an Atheist
Edited by weetabix - December 05 2009 at 19:28
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The T
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 16 2006
Location: FL, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 17493
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:28 |
^hey Ivan, as a lawyer that you are, aren't the ones that want to prove that something happened the ones with the burden of proof? (or whatever it is called in english). First time i see someone requiring evidence for a negative... Evidence that something isn't there??? If there isn't, by pure logic, how the hell can you have evidence that there isn't?
That's why I prefer doubt over 100% certainty that god doesn't exist. Though I tend to favor this idea
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Negoba
Prog Reviewer
Joined: July 24 2008
Location: Big Muddy
Status: Offline
Points: 5208
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:28 |
Dean wrote:
I'm not completely convinced that colour 100% subjective and can't be objective. If I radiate you with electromagnetic radiation at a wavelength of 650 nm you're going to say get that damn red light out of my eyes. Why do you call it red? Because that is the name of whatever stimulates the L cones in your eye and not the M or S cones, and what does that is light of wavelengths greater than 650 nm, which you learnt as an infant was called the colour red. It really doesn't matter how your brain interprets or perceives that information, but colour mixing theory suggests that every one generally sees it the same way so when you mix the wavelength of light that you have learnt is called Red with the one you have learnt is called Green the resulting perceived colour is the one you have learnt is called Yellow - but it is not Yellow light.
I chose purple because purple light does not have a wave length - it is not a spectral colour - it can only be seen by people with working L and S cones. |
Color is still a characteristic of the subject and not the object. The same object will be perceived differently by species with different methods of gathering light information.
Dean was actually helping the argument by picking purple. (I actually didn't know that but it makes sense. I'll have to go look that stuff up)
Edited by Negoba - December 05 2009 at 19:30
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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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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:34 |
AmbianceMan wrote:
Dean wrote:
I chose purple because purple light does not have a wave length - it is not a spectral colour - it can only be seen by people with working L and S cones. |
Not sure I follow this. All electromagnetic energy has a wavelength whether it can be seen or not. Is purple and violet different? If it is light, it is electromagnetic energy. Explain please! I am intrigued. |
Yes purple and violet are different. Violet is short-wavelenght light (ultra-violet end of the spectrum) - it is a single em-wave of known wavelength (~400 nm) - if you pass Violet light through a red filter onto a photdetector nothing will get through. Purple is a mix of Red (long wavelength) and Blue (medium to short wavelength) - it is two (or more) em-waves - pass that light through a red filter then the red component will get through and the photodetector will register a value.
It's like White light - not one single em-wave, but a mix of lots of em-waves.
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What?
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AmbianceMan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 30 2009
Location: Dayton, OH
Status: Offline
Points: 113
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:39 |
Negoba wrote:
Dean wrote:
I'm not completely convinced that colour 100% subjective and can't be objective. If I radiate you with electromagnetic radiation at a wavelength of 650 nm you're going to say get that damn red light out of my eyes. Why do you call it red? Because that is the name of whatever stimulates the L cones in your eye and not the M or S cones, and what does that is light of wavelengths greater than 650 nm, which you learnt as an infant was called the colour red. It really doesn't matter how your brain interprets or perceives that information, but colour mixing theory suggests that every one generally sees it the same way so when you mix the wavelength of light that you have learnt is called Red with the one you have learnt is called Green the resulting perceived colour is the one you have learnt is called Yellow - but it is not Yellow light.
I chose purple because purple light does not have a wave length - it is not a spectral colour - it can only be seen by people with working L and S cones. |
Color is still a characteristic of the subject and not the object. The same object will be perceived differently by species with different methods of gathering light information.
Dean was actually helping the argument by picking purple. (I actually didn't know that but it makes sense. I'll have to go look that stuff up) |
I guess maybe I'm late to the argument but...
The "color" of the light itself is interpreted differently by different people. The energy, however is constant regardless of who you are. What we call it is irrelevant and a matter of semantics. It seems that the waters are muddied by arguments over what we call something. I've always been a straight shooter and call things out for what they are, which probably surprises people that I could be a theist with that attitude. Arguments over semantics can be important, but they are usually used to change the subject to avoid talking about another point in the argument.
Anyway I think I am off subject from what was intended at this point.
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:40 |
Negoba wrote:
Color is still a characteristic of the subject and not the object. The same object will be perceived differently by species with different methods of gathering light information. |
Agreed, but differnet species can't talk about it so they never learn what red is they just know that most things that reflect light at that wavelength will probably kill you..
Wanna see the cooolest creature onthe planet? Look up the Mantis Shrimp on Wiki - it will blow your bloody socks clean off.
Edited by Dean - December 05 2009 at 19:41
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What?
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ExittheLemming
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 19 2007
Location: Penal Colony
Status: Offline
Points: 11415
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:40 |
The colour 'thang' is damn good fun. Problem - given that I recognise a portion of wavelength as 'red' and Negoba recognises that exact same portion of wavelength as 'blue' (or one of us cannot see that part of the visible spectrum at all) - surely the only concrete reality that this proves to exist is that we both have genetically limited sense organs - some people can perceive more colours than others but as you have already explained, colours are illusory, they may very well enhance your life but that doesn't make them any more real. Taking this a step further, it seems clear that the authorship of any belief system based just on what the 5 senses we have available to us report back to our brains as raw experiential data, ain't going to win many design awards. Like I said earlier, it is transparent that I have no scientific schooling, but shouldn't more stringent/objective/verifiable/quantifiable methodology etc blah be used to argue your case: that even if I cannot perceive your subjective reality, the latter really exists ? (or am I guilty of a non sequitur - like the dog that chases its own tail ?)
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AmbianceMan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 30 2009
Location: Dayton, OH
Status: Offline
Points: 113
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:42 |
Dean wrote:
AmbianceMan wrote:
Dean wrote:
I chose purple because purple light does not have a wave length - it is not a spectral colour - it can only be seen by people with working L and S cones. |
Not sure I follow this. All electromagnetic energy has a wavelength whether it can be seen or not. Is purple and violet different? If it is light, it is electromagnetic energy. Explain please! I am intrigued. |
Yes purple and violet are different. Violet is short-wavelenght light (ultra-violet end of the spectrum) - it is a single em-wave of known wavelength (~400 nm) - if you pass Violet light through a red filter onto a photdetector nothing will get through. Purple is a mix of Red (long wavelength) and Blue (medium to short wavelength) - it is two (or more) em-waves - pass that light through a red filter then the red component will get through and the photodetector will register a value.
It's like White light - not one single em-wave, but a mix of lots of em-waves.
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Nice pic lol. My fave, came out the year I was born. Anyhoo, so you are saying that a mix of em waves is not em energy?
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Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 08 2008
Location: Sweden
Status: Offline
Points: 5195
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:43 |
Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:
Your disbelieve in God has no evidence at all.
Isn't this a contradiction?
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The reason why many Atheists don't believe in (any) God is that there is no evidence that it exists. Absence of evidence can be evidence of absence, if evidence should exist. I can refer you to the other thread about Evolution vs. Creationism - one of the pieces of evidence that support the existence of God should be evidence that the world was created like it was described in the Bible. But when we look at the actual evidence (fossils, DNA etc) it suggests that it happened completely differently, and everything suggests a development that was not guided in any way (there was no designer). This is why I say that I'm certain, beyond reasonable doubt, that the kind of God that we're talking about when we use the word "Theism" doesn't exist. There may exist supernatural beings outside or beyond this universe, but even then two things would be clear: 1. They wouldn't interfere with life on earth, so their existence would be totally irrelevant to our personal lifes. 2. It still would not explain existence in general, and that question ("why do we exist") will probably never be answered. Even if you try to answer it through your (illogical) Christian God, you would next have to explain who created God, and why.
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:49 |
AmbianceMan wrote:
Nice pic lol. My fave, came out the year I was born. Anyhoo, so you are saying that a mix of em waves is not em energy? |
Where the did I say that? I said it does not have a single wavelength...
sin (a) + sin (b) = 2 sin ˝(A+B) * cos ˝(A-B)
Edited by Dean - December 05 2009 at 19:51
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What?
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AmbianceMan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 30 2009
Location: Dayton, OH
Status: Offline
Points: 113
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:52 |
Mr ProgFreak wrote:
2. It still would not explain existence in general, and that question ("why do we exist") will probably never be answered. Even if you try to answer it through your (illogical) Christian God, you would next have to explain who created God, and why.
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Ah, a common misconception. You assume that time and space existed before God. I believe that God is the author of time, space, light and all that we know. I think that you assume that if you personally do not comprehend it, then it can't be true.
Heck, I don't comprehend this either. I accept that my mind is limited.
Before God there was no creator. You are confining God to the same laws of physics that we are constrained by. Yet if he created the laws of physics, he can change the laws to suit him.
Yes, yes, yes I know you think it is illogical, and don't believe etc. etc. etc. All I'm saying is that if there is a God (and I know you don't think there is), point #2 really can't be used. It is the ultimate weak argument to a theist. Please don't use it anymore. It's for your benefit, really.
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Negoba
Prog Reviewer
Joined: July 24 2008
Location: Big Muddy
Status: Offline
Points: 5208
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:54 |
If you don't perceive color, your ability to enjoy certain aspects of visual art will be drastically altered.
Certainly this board can appreciate that art is part of what makes life worth living.
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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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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
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Posted: December 05 2009 at 19:55 |
The T wrote:
^hey Ivan, as a lawyer that you are, aren't the ones that want to prove that something happened the ones with the burden of proof? (or whatever it is called in english). First time i see someone requiring evidence for a negative... Evidence that something isn't there??? If there isn't, by pure logic, how the hell can you have evidence that there isn't?
That's why I prefer doubt over 100% certainty that god doesn't exist. Though I tend to favor this idea |
T: There's a difference:
Doubt = Agnosticism = I don't know if God exists, I can't prove if he exists or not
Disbelieve = Atheism = I believe God doesn't exist
Iván
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