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True that, I did consider that, but figured that worships words werent wholly dependent on defining agnosticism as atheism.

Anyhow, just to clarify. I would call myself agnostic rather than atheistic. That is to say... I do not believe that there is a god or w/e, it seems highly unlikely to me, and I do not find that there is any proof I find convinving. But at the same time, the basic premise of atheism, being convinced of non-existence of god is something very unreasonable (in most cases) since you (generally) cant really back it up with objective considerations. That is... you can't unless you use a very specific definition of god. (The problem of definition could be shown I suppose through these 2 sentences. "I don't believe in the existence of God." and "I don't believe in the existence of a god.") Personally I think that the former has (limited) potential for being a reasonable opinion, but the latter is hard to defend with argument/reason unless one would again tie very specific attributes to anything defined as a god. (In order to, for example, construct a contradiction in an attempt to disprove the existence of a god based on analytically logic arguments. Of course, such a reasoning would only hold water for as long as this definition is agreed upon by the parties involved.)

Anyhow, so yea...

a·the·ism
n.
1. a. Disbelief in or denial of the existence of God or gods.
    b. The doctrine that there is no God or gods.
2. Godlessness; immorality.

I don't feel that I can reasonably rule out the existence of a god.

ag·nos·tic
n.
1. a. One who believes that it is impossible to know whether there is a God.
    b. One who is skeptical about the existence of God but does not profess true atheism.
2. One who is doubtful or noncommittal about something.

But I seriously doubt it anyway. smile

"We must face the fact that the preservation of individual freedom is incompatible with a full satisfaction of our views of distributive justice."

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So, Crov, I did not read you're whole post, but if Im not totally misstaken you say that atheists are totally sure that there is no god. And if you arent sure you are agnostic, or at least that is ur opinion?

Would this not make it so that everyone who belives in god or similar are agnostics as well? Because there is no proof of that vile pervert...

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Re: Peasant Guild

Browen that is not true... Christians bring up there proof through the Bible..

I don't question my sexuality, my sexuality questions me.
Self Gratification is God's greatest gift to man.

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Re: Peasant Guild

Well done, Crov. Summed up my beliefs pretty well. A lot of people call me an atheist, because when we talk about God in America people are almost always talking about the Christian idea of such. And I openly dismiss this as a reasonable possibility. But I wouldn't claim there is "nothing" that could be interpretted spiritually. I think it's pretty naive to claim a monopoly on truth when it comes to these things. That goes for both sides. So I call myself agnostic, because it is the most fitting of terms.

It is not a "belief system", but quite the opposite.

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Re: Peasant Guild

Animals do not possess a moral capacity, and do not possess an immaterial component like mankind does.

I would contend this, but I really can't be arsed to get into an argument over religion since to be honest I consider the whole thing, when taken too literally and seriously,  to be trivial. That is just my opinion of it though, obviously. smile

Well, this is worthy of being contended. It is this viewpoint that has alone caused much of the world's mistreatment of animals. It wasn't that long ago that people were claiming animals didn't feel pain. Thankfully, people have abandoned that, but have embraced the still limited opinion that animals are incapable of feeling higher emotions, such as love, regret, and shame.

When seemingly convincing anecdotal evidence to counter this is presented it is brushed aside as "instintice responses". In other words, people claim animals only act in their self-interest. When a dog shows affection, or what seems to be guilt it does this because it knows these reactions reap rewards. This would prove a reasonable explanation, had it not been undeniably hypocritical.

I say this because that outlook can be applied to human behavior, as well. It is just as easy to say we always act in our own self-interest. We have friends and relationships because of the obvious benefits they provide us with. We make what seems like selfless sacrifices in these relationships, because we know that through reciprocity, we'll get ours, too. We have children for our own immortality, and treat them well so they take care of us when we need them to. We feels guilt, and regret, because, from an evolutionary standpoint, without these emotions we would fail as a social animal living in a tight social environment.

This can obviously be extended, but my point is, there is not clear-cut, easily justifiable way to claim animals lack moral capacity or the ability for selflessness anymore than we do.

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Re: Peasant Guild

Browen that is not true... Christians bring up there proof through the Bible..

The bible is proof of nothing. If I write in a book that 2 + 2 = 5, and declare it to be the word of god, then that is proof that 2 + 2 = 5? The bible was written by the hand of man (we all know the nature of man). Would such an all mighty and powerful being require the work of lowly mankind to spread his message? After all, man was created to have a relationship with god. So why would god distance itself from man and only speak through prophets.

There are 2 basic elements to our existence, + and -. Without these, nothing would exist.

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Re: Peasant Guild

The bible is proof of nothing. If I write in a book that 2 + 2 = 5, and declare it to be the word of god, then that is proof that 2 + 2 = 5? The bible was written by the hand of man (we all know the nature of man). Would such an all mighty and powerful being require the work of lowly mankind to spread his message? After all, man was created to have a relationship with god. So why would god distance itself from man and only speak through prophets.

"Didn’t men write the Bible?"
Absolutely. When you write a letter, do you write the letter, or does the pen? Obviously you do; the pen is merely the instrument you use. God used men as instruments to write His "letter" to humanity. They ranged from kings to common fishermen, but the 66 books of the Bible were all given by inspiration of God. Proof that this Book is supernatural can been seen with a quick study of its prophecies.


"What if someone claims to have read the Bible and says it’s just a book of fairy tales?"

Call his bluff. Gently ask, "What is the thread of continuity that runs through the Bible—the consistent theme from the Old Testament through the New Testament?" More than likely he won’t know. So say, "The Old Testament was God’s promise that He would destroy death. The New Testament tells how He did it." Then appeal directly to the conscience by asking if he has kept the Ten Commandments.

"What if someone claims to have read the Bible and says it’s just a book of fairy tales?"

Call his bluff. Gently ask, "What is the thread of continuity that runs through the Bible—the consistent theme from the Old Testament through the New Testament?" More than likely he won’t know. So say, "The Old Testament was God’s promise that He would destroy death. The New Testament tells how He did it." Then appeal directly to the conscience by asking if he has kept the Ten Commandments.

"The Bible has changed down through the ages."

No, it hasn’t. God has preserved His Word. In the spring of 1947, the Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered. These manuscripts were copies of large portions of the Old Testament, a thousand years older than any other existing copies. Study of the scrolls has revealed that the Bible hasn’t changed in content down through the ages as many skeptics had surmised.

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Ignorance = the act of ignoring evidence.

So when some paper is found...its believable.

But when Bones and carbon dating and DNA proves that Man has evolved from animals....We are the Ignorant ones for believing that.... roll

No No...lets believe the paper we found because they prove the existance of man.

I look forward to this discussion.

I'm opening up a shop that sells 13" rulers just so Fireborn stops complaining.

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Re: Peasant Guild

Worshiploud . . .

Fact: The Bible has been changed.
Fact: The Bible has been edited.
Fact: The New and Old Testaments have contradictions.
Fact: There is no proof that the Bible is supernatural.
Fact: This very lack of proof is the reason "faith" exists.

Opinion: Making your arguments based on this assumed faith will get you nowhere with people who do not share it.

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Re: Peasant Guild

But when Bones and carbon dating and DNA proves that Man has evolved from animals....We are the Ignorant ones for believing that.... roll

Bone fragments are found and pieced together to form what the paleontologist envisions. This fact is prominent throughout paleontology.
Archaeoraptor a.k.a. Piltdown bird, Piltdown Whale, and Piltdown man, a paleontological "man who never was". All of these examples were animals that never existed and were formed from a tiny bone fragment.

As for DNA, there is no link from animal to man.
DNA shows similarities yet these are the same type of similarities that Darwin had pointed out when he began to categorize species base on physical characteristics. According to DNA evidence, we are closer to a dolphin than a chimp and Darwin said we were closer to a chimp than a dolphin.

Carbon Dating has been proven to be inaccurate. This fact was reinforced by Willard Libby (the inventor or Radiocarbon Dating)

Each of these three topics can be dealt with in length.
Science has long been thought the search for truth.
When a person has a predetermined idea, and finds evidence to
support that idea, yet rejects any evidence that contradicts
is predetermined truth, that is not science.

I have studied all evidence and I had no preconceived notion.
I was just like you, yet I wanted to know why things that were
taught to me in high school didn't jive when scrutinized.

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Re: Peasant Guild

Bone fragments are found and pieced together to form what the paleontologist envisions.

Talk about ignorance. To dismiss scientific findings and discoveries, well accepted as truth by the scientific community, as some manifestation of an individual's wish, because you don't like the results is stupid. It's just stupid. Yeah, so you listed a couple examples of such mistakes that you learned because they are repeated and repeated and repeated by people like yourself . . . and? And so what. They were mitakes, people make them, and people correct them. Who corrected them? Other scientists. You think the Pope went out and conducted some field research and debunked these theories? No. That was done by other scientists. And then you turn that against them as proof that your "side" is correct in it's unfounded claims. It's just wrong. You see, Worshiploud, that's what scientists do. That's why they call everything theories (something used against them all too often). Science changes, it advances, it evolves. That is the very nature of science, and it's quite the opposite of religion, which is why I suppose you have obvious difficulty understanding it.

As for DNA, there is no link from animal to man. According to DNA evidence, we are closer to a dolphin than a chimp and Darwin said we were closer to a chimp than a dolphin.

That's not true. It's false. Should you continue to repeat it, you will be a liar. I suggest doing a little research before you claim such things in the future. Chimpanzee's have more similar DNA to humans than any other animal on the planet. This is because they are our closest relatives, having broken away from us most recently in the evolutionary timeline. You can disagree with that last part, but it really doesn't matter at all.

Carbon Dating has been proven to be inaccurate.

Carbon dating, while not perfectly accurate, is accurate enough to still confirm everything you don't want confirmed. In other words, it's close enough to still provide a perfectly acceptable foundation of argument when the argument is the Bible vs Science.

Each of these three topics can be dealt with in length.
Science has long been thought the search for truth.
When a person has a predetermined idea, and finds evidence to
support that idea, yet rejects any evidence that contradicts
is predetermined truth, that is not science.

I dealt with this above. But I'll stress again: What you're saying might make sense, if when a scientist claimed to make a discovery everyone blindly accepted it and moved on. But no one does that in science. There is no "faith" in science. This is why there are constantly debates in science. And when 0.01% of the "scientific community" make some collective claim that Darwin was wrong you guys like to quote it a billion times. All the while ignoring that 99.99% that says he wasn't. Well, I tend to listen to the vast majority of experts who have come to a logical agreement. Should there be convincing proof tomorrow that says the Earth was created in seven days and we aren't related to chimps, I'll believe that. Let me know when that happens.

I have studied all evidence

No you haven't. Maybe your problem is that you think you have.

I was just like you, yet I wanted to know why things that were
taught to me in high school didn't jive when scrutinized.

Right. So you accepted the Bible.

God, why didn't I think of that.

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Re: Peasant Guild

Science has proved religion as much as it has disproved it.

I don't question my sexuality, my sexuality questions me.
Self Gratification is God's greatest gift to man.

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I'm obviously not going to let you make a claim like that without asking you to elaborate (not that it seems relevant at all?).

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Also- you can't prove or disprove "religion". That doesn't even make sense.

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Rofl... oh man. I knew I shouldnt have commented on that, now we HAVE gotten entangled in a debate on religion.

Anyhow, have to agree with most (if not all) of what mold said.

I love how people trying to keep to the premise that the earth is indeed 5-6 thousand years old keep bringing up Carbon-dating (C14 is the term I do believe) because it is so 'inreliable'. Well then, it is somewhat inreliable and can miss the mark by a couple of thousand years every now and then. (Which considering the scale on which carbon dating works is actually quite a relevant error in the measurement.) I guess this is to be expected since the atmosphere does change over time, and trees ARE living organisms after all. Anyhow, it does not change the fact that whilst there is a relatively large margin of error, the theory in general is still consistent, even IF individual measurements are at times, unreliable. (And even this is highly dependent on the care exercised whilst measuring, and the equipment used. If done right, Carbon-14 can give pretty accurate results)

Another thing brought up A LOT by those who would argue such a thing, are tree-rings. I don't really care about those too much myself, since they do seem to indeed have quite some inaccuracy in practice. Besides, the technique is really not too useful beyond 4000 years, so it is not even relevant anyway. It is rather as if person A says: Look, I can show through method A and B that with a likelihood of 99.99% this object has property X. And person B replies: Yes... but with this (quite different) method C it is impossible to get a reliable result on whether or not this object has property X. (As you can see, this is all nice and well, but it does nothing to negate the validity of person A's claim.)

Now, let's just say that miraculously (religion acknowledges miracles after all) ALL the C14 measurements are systematically wrong and need to be adjusted in the same direction to such a degree that none contradicts a 5000 year old earth anymore. (Not even going to bother going into the statistic improbability, but the only non-negligible factor would be that the theory is wrong, which is highly improbable, but still infinitely more probable than all the seperate measurements having an error towards high age)

You'd still have plenty of other problems...
Let's continue with radiometric dating. smile Did you know that Carbon-dating isnt the only form of this dating method? It is considered interesting because it works on a timescale relevant to human civilizations (and because wood was and is used A LOT by civilizations), so we can do stuff like date Tutankhamun's coffin and derive from that the period in which he lived. But we have far more reliable dating methods, methods that have smaller statistical errors and do not rely on living organisms. Uranium-thorium dating should be named, which is useful until approximately 500,000 years. But even more worrying, uranium-lead dating is one of the oldest and an extremely accurate method (even has a built-in cross-check) with a margin of error of about 0.1% on a timescale of several billion years. (I believe it has confirmed rock samples of up to somewhere around 4 billion years old.)

Also, there are plenty of other problems... what about the universe? Weren't the heavens too, created by God? So how come we can see stars that are so far away, light must have been travelling voor millions of years to reach us. (Could even go to scales stretching beyond the age of the earth I guess, but sticking to stars a few million lightyears away since these measurements are very reliable.)

Anyhow, none of this disproves the existence of Christendom's God I suppose... but it does at least show that those who take the words of the bible too literally as absolute truth are not supported by reproducable observations.

Science has long been thought the search for truth.

When a person has a predetermined idea, and finds evidence to
support that idea, yet rejects any evidence that contradicts
is predetermined truth, that is not science.

Implying a relationship between 2 things doesn't mean anything really. Also, I find the second part highly ironic since it applies perfectly to the American breed of scientist (though they really aren't worthy of that title) that attempts to argue theories that were born, not from observation or flaws in an existing theory, but from a (pre)determination to construct something that does not disagree with the word of the bible. They are incidentally also rarely featured in magazines with proper peer-review since their theories do indeed tend to reject a lot of evidence (the cost paid for NOT rejecting the literal words of the bible).

I have studied all evidence and I had no preconceived notion.
I was just like you, yet I wanted to know why things that were
taught to me in high school didn't jive when scrutinized.

Well, I'm glad you are so humble, since obviously the last thing you want to be is conceited. *sweatdrops*

"We must face the fact that the preservation of individual freedom is incompatible with a full satisfaction of our views of distributive justice."

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Re: Peasant Guild

<3 for Crov

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Re: Peasant Guild

No,

<3 for Fireborn!

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Re: Peasant Guild

First of all the bible has changed, and has been edited. A lot of what the dead sea scrolls contained were neither in the old testament or the new testament. Don't believe me watch "Banned from the Bible" on the History Channel, you can get a preview here:http://store.aetv.com/html/product/inde … ;subcatid=

Science has not "proven" religion or evolution. If anything were proven either way, we wouldn't be having this idealogical discussion. Science is theories based on the study of evidence.

I've had this discussion with a few biblical scholars, and by the end of the discussion they all go from saying "I know god exists" to "well religion is based on faith".

let us study the word for a minute:

Faith: belief or trust: belief in, devotion to, or trust in somebody or something, especially without logical proof

The only thing the bible is proof of is that mankind can learn a language and communicate through text. There is no way to prove that those prophets weren't just a bureaucracy trying to put the fear of god into society as a means to control them. You can believe in the bible all you want, but do not mistake belief for knowledge. You can't prove the bible is the legitimate word of god, only god could prove it, if god existed.

You want to talk about not jiving, how about going back to my earlier post for a bit. "God created MEN to have a relationship with Him" (wow God has a gender, wonder why god needs a gender?), so why does he use handful of prophets to tell us that? If god is all knowing and all powerful, wouldn't god be able to instill his bidding into our very being?

Science has inaccuracies sure, but the bible has contradictions. Inaccuracies can be improved through scientific and technological advancements, and well, a contradiction is a contradiction.

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Re: Peasant Guild

IMO Science is Fact, Evidence, Calculated theories.

Religion is Faith. Myths and Stories.

Seeing as Religion has no Physical evidence to back it up i will stick to the sense god apparently gave me which is to believe it with my own eyes.

When i see proof god exists other than just hearsay i will be all for it.

I'm opening up a shop that sells 13" rulers just so Fireborn stops complaining.

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Re: Peasant Guild

Charles Darwin had once said after his theory of Darwinism became wide spread. "Why then is not every geological formation and every stratum full of such intermediate links?  Geology assuredly does not reveal any such finely graduated organic chain, and this, perhaps, is the most obvious and gravest objection which can be urged against my theory"

Darwin's theory I hope most of you know... had said that geological records would have to be full of species that had slowly changed over time, since evolution requires time, a lot of time. It also requires baby steps into the change process, which is not what Darwin or any other Scientist that has studied evolution has found. Sudden leaps as it was put are not possible, therefor it completely contradicts the theory of Evolution.

Fact: The New and Old Testaments have contradictions.

I wouldn't say that entirely. Back in the day on the other board you guys posted a site with bible contradictions.. I am wondering if you still know the site or have it? The funny thing about the bible is that many times it can be fairly vague. The vagueness of it will have people interpret different things and then claim contradictions. It is well known that English was not the language the Bible was written in. The bible has seen many translations from one language to the next, making it impossible to know exactly what the real bible had said. You might find vague contradictions in the bible, but only because they were misinterpreted, or a bad translation. I agree that the Bible has been changed and edited Mold. Direct translations are impossible, and it was translated by man. Who, as you can tell by looking at the world today, are far from perfect. My beliefs in the bible don't lie in the words of the bible, it lies in the message of the bible.

Also- you can't prove or disprove "religion". That doesn't even make sense.

You can very easily actually. Science has said that you can't create something out of nothing. That in my eyes and many other Christian’s eyes can prove there is a God. The dating of the earth as Crov talks about numerous times, disproves religion, as most religious people claim the Earth to be only 6 thousand years old rather than billions of years old. Though, for Crov to argue this fact with someone who is religious it would be a lost cause. I hate to tell you this Crov, but it just doesn't fly, seeing as God is all powerful and could make you think the earth is older than it is.

The hard thing about helping to argue about religion with someone else is that worshiploud's religious beliefs are so much different then mine so I feel more comfortable arguing on principles than on my full beliefs =p
Don't get me wrong, I am not ignorant enough to say that Science and Religion can't or don't coexist. I also question the fact that the Church claims only those who believe fully will go to heaven. If that were the case, a shred of doubt would send anyone to hell. Browen on the other hand.. Eternal Damnation awaits him. You never know though man, Ryan Seacrest and a bar that only serves Sea Breezes could be your thing.

1  cup orange juice 
1  cup cranberry juice 
1/2-1  cup vodka
Ice(Might be hard to find in hell)

After we are done debating Religion and such.. We should sooo move over to the Trash Heap and debate Truman's decision on dropping the Bomb on Japan =p because I know Crov likes to argue about that one big_smile Hopefully if we start full out Debates again they don't get as heated as some of the political debates we use to have had gotten. viva la lameboard!

I don't question my sexuality, my sexuality questions me.
Self Gratification is God's greatest gift to man.

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Re: Peasant Guild

Talk about ignorance. To dismiss scientific findings and discoveries, well accepted as truth by the scientific community

Evidence? The scientific community embraced the following and were proven false.

Piltdown man: Found in a gravel pit in Sussex England in 1912, this fossil was considered by some sources to be the second most important fossil proving the evolution of man—until it was found to be a complete forgery 41 years later. The skull was found to be of modern age. The fragments had been chemically stained to give the appearance of age, and the teeth had been filed down!


Nebraska man: A single tooth, discovered in Nebraska in 1922 grew an entire evolutionary link between man and monkey, until another identical tooth was found which was protruding from the jawbone of a wild pig.


Java man: Initially discovered by Dutchman Eugene Dubois in 1891, all that was found of this claimed originator of humans was a skullcap, three teeth and a femur. The femur was found 50 feet away from the original skullcap a full year later. For almost 30 years Dubois downplayed the Wadjak skulls (two undoubtedly human skulls found very close to his "missing link"). (source: Hank Hanegraaff, The Face That Demonstrates The Farce Of Evolution, [Word Publishing, Nashville, 1998], pp.50-52)


Orce man: Found in the southern Spanish town of Orce in 1982, and hailed as the oldest fossilized human remains ever found in Europe. One year later officials admitted the skull fragment was not human but probably came from a 4 month old donkey. Scientists had said the skull belonged to a 17 year old man who lived 900,000 to 1.6 million years ago, and even had very detail drawings done to represent what he would have looked like. (source: "Skull fragment may not be human", Knoxville News-Sentinel, 1983)


Neanderthal: Still synonymous with brutishness, the first Neanderthal remains were found in France in 1908. Considered to be ignorant, ape-like, stooped and knuckle-dragging, much of the evidence now suggests that Neanderthal was just as human as us, and his stooped appearance was because of arthritis and rickets. Neanderthals are now recognized as skilled hunters, believers in an after-life, and even skilled surgeons, as seen in one skeleton whose withered right arm had been amputated above the elbow. (source: "Upgrading Neanderthal Man", Time Magazine, May 17, 1971, Vol. 97, No. 20)

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Also- you can't prove or disprove "religion". That doesn't even make sense.

You can very easily actually. Science has said that you can't create something out of nothing. That in my eyes and many other Christian’s eyes can prove there is a God. The dating of the earth as Crov talks about numerous times, disproves religion, as most religious people claim the Earth to be only 6 thousand years old rather than billions of years old. Though, for Crov to argue this fact with someone who is religious it would be a lost cause. I hate to tell you this Crov, but it just doesn't fly, seeing as God is all powerful and could make you think the earth is older than it is.

Most religious people claim the Earth to be only 6 thousand years old? I have a bunch of friends IRL who are Christian, hell one of them is a preacher, but none of them take the notion of a 6 thousand year old earth seriously.

Anyhow, back to what you said... what you are describing is basically a variant on the philosophical pavlov dogs example (thingy). There is however no superfluous reason for God being so deceptive as to trick and fool us into concluding the earth is much older. One would have to resort to contrived and (dare I say) even far'fetched explanations for this (such as God doing this to test our faith) which have no possible physical proof (and afaik, correct me if Im wrong, no explicit mention in the bible either). Wouldn't it be just as plausible to say (looking at it open-minded and believing in God) that God is testing whether or not we let our believes blind us to what is in plain sight? (Personally I think that in the event a 'Christian' God exists it is far more likely that he didnt intend for the bible to read into literally as an accurate account of history and source of all knowledge. As Fireborn put it, its not about the words but about the message.)

Anyhow Fireborn, I never intended to disprove anything. Just show why I find it unlikely to the degree that I choose to believe in something else. As for whether or not religion can be disproved, I refer back to my earlier post where I discussed disproving the existence of a God. As I see it, it is very definition-dependent and can only be done based on analytical logic arguments. (Though synthetic logic can surely play a role, it must be supported by the analytical component.) Basically what I'm saying is it cant be done unless you find some contradiction in the definition. (Though the contradiction could follow from actual observations in reality.)

Proving religion (the existence of God) might indeed be possible if the definition of God does not prohibit it, but as far as I am aware it has never been done empirically. That still leaves things such as the ontological argument for the existence of God (which, between you and me, I find seriously lacking/faulty) and the cosmological argument (which I find interesting, though I am somewhat skeptical of it, besides it doesnt say anything at all about the 'first cause' aka 'god'). Besides, neither of these can validate any specific God, the ontological argument only says god is 'perfect'/'the greatest'/'maximum in all aspects' (depends on what flavour you pick) whilst the cosmological argument says nothing at all other than that 'he/it' must have caused everything else.

Anyhow, I am getting somewhat tired of arguing all this, perhaps I should accept FB's invitation to discuss the A-bombs dropped on Japan, it's funny since I happened to be discussing that with someone earlier today.

"We must face the fact that the preservation of individual freedom is incompatible with a full satisfaction of our views of distributive justice."

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Re: Peasant Guild

That's not true. It's false. Should you continue to repeat it, you will be a liar. I suggest doing a little research before you claim such things in the future. Chimpanzee's have more similar DNA to humans than any other animal on the planet.

Roy Britten wrote, October 15, 2002 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

It has long been held that we share 98.5 per cent of our genetic material with our closest relatives. That now appears to be wrong. In fact, we share less than 95 per cent of our genetic material, a three-fold increase in the variation between us and chimps.
The new value came to light when Roy Britten of the California Institute of Technology became suspicious about the 98.5 per cent figure. Ironically, that number was originally derived from a technique that Britten himself developed decades ago at Caltech with colleague Dave Kohne. By measuring the temperature at which matching DNA of two species comes apart, you can work out how different they are.

But the technique only picks up a particular type of variation, called a single base substitution. These occur whenever a single “letter” differs in corresponding strands of DNA from the two species.

But there are two other major types of variation that the previous analyses ignored. “Insertions” occur whenever a whole section of DNA appears in one species but not in the corresponding strand of the other. Likewise, “deletions” mean that a piece of DNA is missing from one species.

Together, they are termed “indels,” and Britten seized his chance to evaluate the true variation between the two species when stretches of chimp DNA were recently published on the internet by teams from the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, and from the University of Oklahoma.

When Britten compared five stretches of chimp DNA with the corresponding pieces of human DNA, he found that single base substitutions accounted for a difference of 1.4 per cent, very close to the expected figure.

But he also found that the DNA of both species was littered with indels. His comparisons revealed that they add around another 4.0 per cent to the genetic differences (see Coghlan, 2002, emp. added).

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Re: Peasant Guild

It is funny that during a discussion about science, someone else has interjected Christianity, God and the Bible.

I have been able to produce evidence to suggest that.

A) Carbon dateting is flawed.
B) DNA is not a definative case for evolution.
C) Bones and/or bone fragments have been made into a complete skelaton of creature that have never existed.

Attack me all you want. At least I have stuck with the topic at hand.

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Re: Peasant Guild

It is funny that during a discussion about science, someone else has interjected Christianity, God and the Bible.

Look, the post that lead up to this discussion:

fishies are devil spawn

This guy seems to try to invoke a dispute or argument
with the intent to have a person curse God.

Good try.

Thta's funny, you don't look anything like God.
I see Him often and you don't look like Him.
In fact you don't even sound like Him.

roll

Now why exactly do you call this a discussion about science when from the start it was about (as you said) "Christianity, God and the Bible" and later on discussed science in the context of these things?

At least I have stuck with the topic at hand.

Fair enough, but the implication that others have not is hard to defend when put explicitly.


Anyhow...

I have been able to produce evidence to suggest that.

A) Carbon dateting is flawed.
B) DNA is not a definative case for evolution.
C) Bones and/or bone fragments have been made into a complete skelaton of creature that have never existed.

A) If you are saying it is flawed as in not being perfect, I will happily agree. When applied properly however, it yields good results. You say you produced evidence, but the only 'evidence' you did indeed produce is saying that Willard Libby said that is in inaccurate. What he said more precisely, is that it cannot be used to date back further than recorded history. Basically you need something else to cross-check with. This was true when he developed the method in the 1950s but from what I gather calibration has been improved a lot since then and carbon dating can in fact be pushed back beyond recorded history. I am no expert in this field though, and I presume you are neither, so I'm not too sure whether it is wise/prudent to go into it in too much detail. I'm not sure what one would prove by debunking C14 dating anyway.

B) Evolution is certainly far from definite, complete or proven. There has however been no model/theory suggested that is better (i.e. more likely judging purely by evidence).

C) There will always be fraud even among scientists, and there is always a degree of speculation when dealing with very limited evidence/materials from the past. This doesn't really mean anything other than that scientists arent correct 'a priori' but then again, we knew that already didn't we? That's why there are things such as peer review and why scientists are critical of each others' work. It has to be added that with these things there is very limited, if any, reproducability of observations and as such it is harder to apply these principles. Some would even argue that for this reason it does not qualify as pure science. But regardless there is no good reason to assume the incidents quoted are representative for the branch as a whole.

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