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07-04-2012, 04:34 PM
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#16 |
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XO
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Well, now it (whatever IT is) has been confirmed to exist, maybe people can finally drop the increasingly inappropriate 'God particle' tag.
Bloomin' media and their sound byte nonsense.
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Gadewais fy beic nghadwyno i'r rhai a rheiliau, pan wnes i ddychwelyd, yno mae'n roedd... Wedi mynd. |
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07-06-2012, 09:44 PM
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#17 | |
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Born to Run Silent
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"god" particle found. When was it lost?
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07-07-2012, 04:39 AM
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#18 |
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One Who Soars
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Sciences asks and analyses, tests and re-tests. It'S statements are formulated on the basis of probabilities, not total certainties, it's results are temporary, some live long,. some not.
The question of whether there is a god, is a scientific one. First, because relgions claiming there is a god have done their best to hamper and persecute and supress science, and second, science by its very nature collects data that also allow us to make well-founded probability-assumptions on how likely it is that there is a god. To me it seems that probability goes towards almost nill. Plus if there were a god, this would again raise questions: where is he, where did he come, what was before. If you call the existence of something, you immediately also define a state of that something not excisting - not yet existing, or no more existing. The unavoidable duality of our intellectual mind. It makes no sense of thinking "high", when there is no "low". No "left" without a "right". So, assuming there is a god leads us to the same state where we are today with modern cosmological theories: Big Bang, fluctuating universe, and others. They all - unsuccessfully - try to avoid that asking for the "before" and the "why" by pushing the decisive time criterion when things started almost eternally far away on the time scale. But that does not solve the structural question, it only increases the year-scale. Fluctuating Universe does not give answers to the Why? and the Before?, and God does not give answer to the Why? and the Before? Thus, the explanatory of the god speculation is not one inch bigger than that of Big Bang and Fluctuating Universe. However, the phenomenons and processes and events since the beginning, which took place, we can exmaine, we can perceive, we can reconstruct, we can explain. We even can make predictions of high probability. But God: we do not nor ever have seen him, we do not analyse him, do not check and test him, do not explain him, and have no evidence whatever that he even exiosts, his phenomenological existence is totally in doubt. Science and god are not incompatible, said Tak. Well, that does not mean they are on same eye level. God is an object of science. For seeing it the other way around, the existence of God is needed to get proven first. Let me know, anybody, when the first positive results gets published, preferrably not in Grimm's Fairy Tales or the Bible, but a proofread science magazine. P.S. No hard feelings, Tak, you know I cannot act against my nature.
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Individual rights are the means of subordinating society to moral law. - Ayn Rand Last edited by Skybird; 07-07-2012 at 04:49 AM. |
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07-07-2012, 04:48 AM
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#19 | |
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One Who Soars
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Some guy wrote a book entitled "The god-damn particle", since it was so hard to be observed. The publisher did not liek that title, and deleted the "-damn" in it. What remains was "The god particle." Since the theory of it seem to give it a decisive importance for structural formation of all matter (I'm not sure I understood the basic concept of the theory), the phrase nevertheless highlights that unique importance in a symbolical or methaphorical way.
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Individual rights are the means of subordinating society to moral law. - Ayn Rand |
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07-07-2012, 06:59 AM
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#20 | |
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Ocean Warrior
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Universe governs its self from the moment of creation or big bang according to physical laws but there may be philosophical need for god as a spark at the beginning. It is far cry from believing in zombie or jealous guy in the sky but never less "God and science are incompatible" is false statement. As the since changes our philosophical take on god may moves along the way....that is if we chose so. You can believe that or you can believe in Dawkins and his maniac lectures lol. ........... |
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07-07-2012, 07:09 AM
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#21 |
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Samurai Navy
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We're just living in a black hole among other black holes.
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07-07-2012, 07:10 AM
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#22 |
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Ocean Warrior
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07-07-2012, 07:13 AM
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#23 |
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Navy Seal
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Who cares, the world ends Dec. of this year anyway...
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07-07-2012, 07:26 AM
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#24 | |
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One Who Soars
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Read again, and this time try to stick to what I actually wrote, not what you imagine to perceive as being written in invisible ink between the lines. Many scientists consider metaphysics, but it is a very typical attempt by religious people to claim that these scientist then mea that there is the theistic God from the desert dogmas. Most famous example is Albert Einstein who time and again is referred to as having been in support of a belief in a god, or that he converted to that belief near his death, whereas the - demonstrated - truth is that there is plenty of literaric evidence - writings by his own, letters - that show that he felt almost contempt for that conception, and did not want to have anything to do with it. Scientists, if they are serious, indeed ask the same question that I ask: "Why are we here, what was before,, why is there anythign at all?". Their work necessarily lead to these questions and confronts them with that. But to state that this necessarily leads them to believing in deities, is not only absurd - it is wrong, and even an insult of their minds. Science, and spirituality - asking for the existential questions and reflecting over them -, is no contradiction at all. But spirituality and believing some religious dogma set up by a cult or an ideology - that is a contradiction. The spiritual mind is the searching mind. The religious mind is the mind that seriously believes it knows. The doubt, and not making total claims on absolutes and not postulating eternal truths - that is what sprituality and science have in common. Religions on the other side just do right that: making absolute claims on absolute truths as if their truth were proven fact where in reality it is just hear-say at best, and as if there were no need at all to check and examine these claims. And the more doubt they are confronted with and the more substantial argument they face that they cannot counter, the more they declare the just blindly believing, the just take-it-for-real-even-without-a-good-reason as a moral virtue that glorifies the blind believer over the sceptic. The more blind you are, the more virtuous you are. Well, that'S a good one! That is a massive waste of human potential and mental resource. Or in a religious man's words: that is refusing the gift of a brain that God has given him, thinking that without accepting that gift and using it to its purpose, brainless as he then is he would know it better than God. If I were God, I would turn silent on such a poor fellow and let him suffer the tides of life, too.
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Individual rights are the means of subordinating society to moral law. - Ayn Rand |
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07-07-2012, 08:29 AM
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#25 |
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Ocean Warrior
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Its not about necessity it is about lack of sufficient prove of otherwise.
Scientist don't necessarily have to believe or disabled but in methodological manner can not claim either since there is no absolute prove of either....that is if they bother to consider it...and some do. The "desert dogma" is ancient human take on god and thing change and will change...the notion of deity in the sky poking his finger has become irrelevant but not the concept of universal god/creator.I don't think that general belief is anyhow waste of resources. I can not see how it does interfere with the search for the truth unless you are a mullah or ultra orthodox. Weather one want/should believe or not it can be easily matter of fashion nowadays and how you want to be perceived by others. In some places its very much matter of social pressure it seems....you don't want to be the resident moron after all. Some wise people think that calling anyone with some sort of belief idiot will solve all problems of humanity. Actually.. idiots will be idiots anyway but maybe more manageable. .............
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07-07-2012, 09:08 AM
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#26 | ||||
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One Who Soars
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Just to pick any wild speculation without any hint to it out of the sky and then say that it is not poroven that it could be true gives it a status worthwhiule to be exmained, is absurd. You cannot prove bthe non-existence of something. Nor is it a valdia ergument that everything that is not proven wrong must be given the status of a valid theory or hypothesis. Go to menal asylum and listen to what the people tell you, the paranoids, the maniacs, the insane, the halucinating, the drugged! They all have things to tell about realities that you then would need to take as serious options as long as you have not proven that they do not exist. Pink elephants on the dark side of Pluto. Invisible tiny man sitting on their shoulder. Zeus and Hera sitting in Mount Olymp which just got translocated. Did you know I am a magican? I just never show it. That is the trick to make people believe that I am not. I do not want to disturb their precious illusions that magic does not exist. Let'S hear it by Bertrand Russell: "Many orthodox people speak as though it were the business of sceptics to disprove received dogmas rather than of dogmatists to prove them. This is, of course, a mistake. If I were to suggest that between the Earth and Mars there is a china teapot revolving about the sun in an elliptical orbit, nobody would be able to disprove my assertion provided I were careful to add that the teapot is too small to be revealed even by our most powerful telescopes. But if I were to go on to say that, since my assertion cannot be disproved, it is intolerable presumption on the part of human reason to doubt it, I should rightly be thought to be talking nonsense. If, however, the existence of such a teapot were affirmed in ancient books, taught as the sacred truth every Sunday, and instilled into the minds of children at school, hesitation to believe in its existence would become a mark of eccentricity and entitle the doubter to the attentions of the psychiatrist in an enlightened age or of the Inquisitor in an earlier time." Quote:
You just do not read what I said, in this thread as well as in earlier threads. To me, like to Dawkins since you mentioned him all by yourself, it is a question of likelihood, of probability. I do not parrot Dawkins here, I just found that he just thinks and says the same like I think. The probability of the God "thesis" being true has constantly shrunk the more knowedge we gained and the more we have explained life and universe ourselves. We are no longer the unedcuated shapard in the desert being scared by a thunder and thinking it was the voice of an angry god yelling at us because we slept with the wife of the neighbour. It is highly unlikely that God exists - that is what I say, because I see the probability for it being true in the range of 0.000000001% or so. Some scientists like Hawkins speak with total authority - or are posing as if having that - when saying that God does not exist. They express an absolute. That is not so much idiotic, or megalomaniac - the worse criticism to be raised is that it is a statement based on flawed use or flawed understanding of scientific methods. Science simply does not produce or postulate absolute truths. It is not in that business - religions are in that business - claiming absolute truths. Science never does, it produces theories. Any scientist taking the nature of his profession serious and being aware of the consequences of this methodology, will not claim something like absolute truths and final, total, absolute revelations. I think I have explained that often enough, haven'T i, here, and in other threads.
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Individual rights are the means of subordinating society to moral law. - Ayn Rand |
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07-07-2012, 09:58 AM
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..almost human
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From a purely scientific view, yes.
But what if, and I know it's a big if, God cannot be known by purely scientific means. Because of the very nature that God claims for Himself, creator and sustainer of all things, is it possible that He is outside the very system He has created? If this is true then any and all information from one system to the other is controlled by Him. This means that science, at it's very best, can only explain the creation, not the Creator. And by the way, science is doing this very well. If you begin with the assumption that God is exactly who He says He is, proving or disproving His existence is a bold venture for humans to undertake. I'm not saying they should not attempt to, but I simply question our ability to do it. What if and again I know it's a big if, God is not molecules and atoms but something beyond our ability to comprehend on a scientific or even rational level? What if the only way we can know Him is on His terms? Quote:
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I can think of a couple of reasons for this. One, there is no God to prove or disprove. Or humans do not have the ability to prove or disprove His existence. If to say that this is not a possibility is the best argument that humans can use in regards to that possibility it is a poor argument. In this case a scientific explanation is not valid. Quote:
As I have said Sky, all this is purely theoretical, perhaps even whimsical. I am in no way insistent about it, I simply offer it as a possibility. You know, what if?
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Last night I dreamed that I was sailing Out on the Sea of Galilee.... |
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07-07-2012, 10:43 AM
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One Who Soars
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of man's fiction. When you have an evidence for the existence of god that a judge at a court would allow as evidence, not as hint or opinion piece or rumour or hearsay or witness report, then there is a basis to form a hypothesis on God existing, and testing it. What there is in the bible, is a mixture of superstitious fiction, and witness "confessions" like at court: witness A saw the car from the left side and says it was green. Witness B saw it from the right side and say no, it was red. And witness C says No, the whole story was completely different , and cars were not involved. That'S why witness' reports are not taken as evidence at court. They are opinion pieces. Quote:
Science examines and then explains How things fuction, not Why the universe is there (if it is indeed...). Religions do not explain either the one, nor the other. They explain nothing. They just make claism and then expect that they are believed, blindly, against all odds. Quote:
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There once was a fraudster with a known criminal record, that'S why he was chased away and his existence pretty much was in ruins. Then he came back to the town and told another of his storie. He claimed to have dug in the dirt and found the book Mormon by help of a fella named Moronis, and that book is devine and Hallelujah and he was the king'S finest messenger and so on and so on, and soince then the Mormons are being treated as somebody who deserve special respect, shall have the right to evade tax for community property, and must be seen as something "holy" (=special). Well. Since then there is golden-plated briefs for the gentlemen. The ladies - sorry, they come away empty-handed once again. So tell me, why are you so eager to start with the assumption God exists? And why not Re? Isis? Wotan? Thor? Quetzalcoatl? Worm Uruboros? The holy Bimbam? The divine Ballaballa? I personally confess to the flying spaghetti monster. Quote:
Chances are greater that I win the record jackpot in lottery with my first ticket ever bought. I can think of a couple of reasons for this. One, there is no God to prove or disprove. Quote:
Until then I think most astronomers prefer coffee and Rum. Quote:
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Individual rights are the means of subordinating society to moral law. - Ayn Rand |
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07-07-2012, 01:48 PM
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#29 | |
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Ocean Warrior
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Multiverse theory may look much more insane but the different background may cause it to be more acceptable and worth the brain power? |
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07-07-2012, 02:17 PM
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#30 |
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Just A Kid At Heart
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No. Theory requires evidence. Theory is built from observed phenomena. Science builds only upon what is there to be seen. Scientists also look for evidence that might prove their theories false. If there is no evidence then there can be no theory, just faith. They are not the same thing.
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"Realism is in how you play, not in the game settings." -Rockin Robbins, Subsim member
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