Question for the atheist?

sean69

1) learn somethin new everyday:cool:

2)When a baby's nervous system has been fully formed in the womb, it has no experince to fall back on to perceive reality. When it is born and opens its eyes for the very first time, it has no experience of this world to fall back on either sight wise. Yes, the hypothetical person may be completely fucked as far as memory, speech, etc goes, and they will probably be a newborn like you said for the rest of their life, but even if everytime they blink its like seeing the world anew, how would that change them being unable to see the full spectrum of light or unable to hear certain frequencies?

3) Becuz humans are social animals, who need co-operation to survive. Even though our brains are unable to perveive the 'full' reality, there has to be some sort of collective consensus on what we can perceive, other wise co-operation would've been a wee bit difficult, and we probably wouldn't have made it out of the plains of africa. Not saying that personal experience should be tossed to the side, but in most cases it can argued that it shouldn't be ranked above 'collective experience' mainly for the same reason i mentioned in the last sentence. As for why it has to be this way? :dunno:
 
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I saw a beautiful Mansion, it had the highest ceilings you could ever see. It had beautiful artwork all around, and the color scheme was something out a magazine. There were marble pillars that stood as tall as trees in the mansion, and at night the lights from the lamps lit up the room, it looked magnificent. One strange thing about this Mansion! It created itself, they say a big bang happened and it just appeared piece by piece. Although my mind tell me someone had to build such a magnificent creation, the consensus say it built itself. Go figure that!




yoda.jpg


SHIT UPON A MOUNTAIN YOUR PREMISE RESTS...

HMMMMMMMMMMM
 
Except the big bang has been so muddled in public discourse, that I figure that you would be hard pressed to find a layman who 'religiously' accepts it in the same vein as a christian would interprets the first chapters of genesis as being literally true without having a single clue about the science behind it. At best you find that people who have little clue about it would give it wary acceptance.

I disagree 400%. This YOUR personal value judgment. I'm willing to bet that lay folks are just as clueless about the physics of Big Bang cosmology as are Christian bigots that take the Bible literally. Shit, on this board there are mad experts who can't tell the difference between evolution and abiogenesis or proof in math and falsification in science and swear they're Stephen Hawking III. Are you kidding me? Science and logical positivism are the Popeye's Spinach of a majority of atheists.



As the vid shows, the evidence birthed the theory, not vice versa. As a principle also, even if the theory is wrong, the replacement theory would have to account for the same evidence:dunno: Also remember, the theory is not even 100yrs old, so who knows where it'll go in time.
Theory precedes experimental verification in science a lot of times. I'll be a broken record, fuck it. Read Thomas Kuhn's book or even a breakdown, shit you don't have to read the whole book. Look up Coherence Theory of Truth, Consensus Theory of Truth. Popper's falsificationism. Be skeptical. Get the WHOLE picture.
Again, the whole "give it time to, science will figure it out..." is barely and argument. More of a statement of faith. What if a Buddhist told you, "give Buddhism time, it's gonna figure out the real truth..." ?




Even if there is/are a god(s) it's existence would pose more questions than answers. If the universe is too complex and needs an intelligent consciousness to create it, then where did this intelligent consciousness come from? If you're gonna say i don't know, then why can't that just apply to the universe (for nobody can answer where did this singularity come from)? If you're gonna say that this intelligent consciousness always existed, then why not just say, that the universe always existed in some form? They're both mind bending concepts, but at least you can be pretty damn sure (unless you're a solipsist) that the universe exists. The 'god' idea, while still 'possible' (since anything is possible but not equally probable) does not deserve the weight that it has thrown around for centuries.
I don't believe in intelligent design by a creator.

And how can you be sure the universe exists? Because 5.99 billion other people on the planets think so too? Obviously not because you can observe the whole universe I know that. So how can you say that you're pretty damn sure?

Again, i'm not even trying to compare science and religion as having even close to equal dogmatic foundations.

Black holes. Does that deserve the weight that has been thrown around it for decades? A phenomenon that is, in practice and in principle, impossible to directly observe? Gravitational perturbations in its believed vicinity, Hawking Radiation, motion of stars ... ALL inferential evidence. Go to a Black hole cosmology conference and get up on the podium and tell those astrophysicist, all 11 of them muhfuckas, "WTF is a black hole? That shit doesn't exists. Fuckouttahere! Have you seen one?"

3 of them will start throwing a whole bunch of hypothetical theoretical jargon at you conjecturing and explaining all kinds of nebulous shit and how Hawking is God. The other 8 will throw you da fuck out of the room with half a bagel.

 
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sean69

1) learn somethin new everyday:cool:

2)When a baby's nervous system has been fully formed in the womb, it has no experince to fall back on to perceive reality. When it is born and opens its eyes for the very first time, it has no experience of this world to fall back on either sight wise. Yes, the hypothetical person may be completely fucked as far as memory, speech, etc goes, and they will probably be a newborn like you said for the rest of their life, but even if everytime they blink its like seeing the world anew, how would that change them being unable to see the full spectrum of light or unable to hear certain frequencies?

But i never said it would.



3) Becuz humans are social animals, who need co-operation to survive. Even though our brains are unable to perveive the 'full' reality, there has to be some sort of collective consensus on what we can perceive, other wise co-operation would've been a wee bit difficult, and we probably wouldn't have made it out of the plains of africa. Not saying that personal experience should be tossed to the side, but in most cases it can argued that it shouldn't be ranked above 'collective experience' mainly for the same reason i mentioned in the last sentence. As for why it has to be this way? :dunno:

Oh, I completely agree with you. Our sentient nature drives our social (consensus) behavior. This is what lead us to develop formal systems like logic and philosophy and science as well as religions. But that's a truism though. :dunno:
I'm not saying collective experience has no value. Far from it. I'm scientist. I'm just not in the default enterprise of ridiculing the expression of someones personal 'religious' experience. Especially on the flimsy grounds of hardcore materialism.

Read the history of science and the scientific revolution. It's littered with accounts of practitioner's experimental interpretations (personal experience) being ranked below consensus experience and status quo. The shit STILL happens. A lot.
...
 
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^^^^was waitin for u to stop beatin around the bush:yes:

Real talk. read ALL my posts from starting from page 3. I've been reiterating this over and over and over and over ... and over ...

Language, another man-made formal system supervenes on our whole system of syllogistic logic. Take bertrand Russell's Paradox. Its consequences ether Logical Positivism and all other like philosophies.
Russell's paradox.

Look up Stephen J Gould's Non-Overlapping Magisteria ("NOMA"). Notice how it incorporates age old concepts like fractal symmetry and self-reference in describing the relationship between science and religion.
Fortunately there's still some people thinking outside the box ...
 
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are u seriously comparing a mansion to the universe ?? :smh: :smh:

just cuz we cant explain it right now doesnt mean a Cloud guy did it give the scientist more time. just imagine what we would of accomplished thru out the dark ages wed prolly be space traveling right now. dam shame :smh:

i can believe more in a space alien that our ancestors looked at as gods, then a guy that made himself, the devil, air, and a talking snake that flooded the earth, from some dam book that everybody thru out the years added , edited left out and manipulated shit to keep order , balance and power
NO ONE REALLY EVER EXPLAINS THE "CLOUD GUY"!!! :lol:
JG

It was an analogy. :smh:
The "give science time and it will figure it out" line is one of the weakest arguments ever. The typical buzz-phrase of recourse for folks usually have no mothafucking clue what the science is about and just go on religious faith. Completely oblivious to the history and evolution of the scientific enterprise.

Shelve your emotions for a minute and actually rationally examine the whole picture. How hard is that? Shit, there's documentaries and shit if reading is an issue.
Religion evolves just like science and every other institutional and form of human expression of knowledge. What a novel concept.
Then the crying starts. But,...but...
Religion if full of dogmas and immutable claims. So is science. The speed of light in a vacuum, the natural laws, etc
Religion enslaved and killed a bunch of people. man, fuck religion! So did the atom bomb and guns. Cry me a fucking river.
Religion claims can't be verified and are untestable. So is String Theory (Leonard Susskind is the "cloud guy"? :rolleyes:) and the simplest possible mathematical arithmetic. Even logical Positivism, the philosophical foundation of science, is bullshit.

Since you guys are such big fans of proof and binary logic and shit, how about this. Assign a truth value to this:

"This sentence is false"

Take all the time you need. :sleep:
 
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It was an analogy. :smh:
The "give science time and it will figure it out" line is one of the weakest arguments ever. The typical buzz-phrase of recourse for folks usually have no mothafucking clue what the science is about and just go on religious faith. Completely oblivious to the history and evolution of the scientific enterprise.

I don't have a problem saying that given enough time, science may figure certain things out because that's the best tool we have right now for that purpose. I do agree with you though that changing the 'may' In the last sentence to 'will' is just plain presumptuous, cuz there are just some things that we may never figure out.

Shelve your emotions for a minute and actually rationally examine the whole picture. How hard is that? Shit, there's documentaries and shit if reading is an issue.
Religion evolves just like science and every other institutional and form of human expression of knowledge. What a novel concept.
Then the crying starts. But,...but...
Religion if full of dogmas and immutable claims. So is science. The speed of light in a vacuum, the natural laws, etc
Religion enslaved and killed a bunch of people. man, fuck religion! So did the atom bomb and guns. Cry me a fucking river.
Religion claims can't be verified and are untestable. So is String Theory (Leonard Susskind is the "cloud guy"? :eek:) and the simplest possible mathematical arithmetic. Even logical Positivism, the philosophical foundation of science, is bullshit.

So you're against dogma in all stripes? Fine I have no problem with that. However let me ask you, do you see science in principle as being a self correcting system? Yes I know that scientists are human, who as humans, have a penchent for holding on to old ideas out of ego, and especially due to emotional attachments. Didn't tesla have to learn that the hard way? I already told you earlier that I don't believe or trust things 100%. I don't worship scientists since genius is no barrier to being wrong. If the big bang turns out to be wrong, it would be interesting but I would not lose any sleep. However one of the main reason why I respect science is (as a principle) it allows for scientists like you to challenge even the most highly held beliefs, keeping it on it's toes. Some of the cherished theories of science today went against the norm at the beginning of the 20th century:dunno: You drew parallells to religion and science and make alotta good and interesting points, however you left out one thing; religion (at the very least the two most dominant ones on the planet) in principle is not a self correcting system. People are not taught to challenge the most cherished and highly held beliefs in their religion for the sake of higher knowledge, the idea is unthinkable.
Since you guys are such big fans of proof and binary logic and shit, how about this. Assign a truth value to this:

"This sentence is false"

Take all the time you need. :sleep:

Of course if you think that I'm full of shit and science in principle (even if not always in practice) is not a self correcting system in the way I described, the you're welcome to explain why. I'll try to get to your other posts later:cool:
 
So you're against dogma in all stripes? Fine I have no problem with that. However let me ask you, do you see science in principle as being a self correcting system? Yes I know that scientists are human, who as humans, have a penchent for holding on to old ideas out of ego, and especially due to emotional attachments. Didn't tesla have to learn that the hard way? I already told you earlier that I don't believe or trust things 100%. I don't worship scientists since genius is no barrier to being wrong. If the big bang turns out to be wrong, it would be interesting but I would not lose any sleep. However one of the main reason why I respect science is (as a principle) it allows for scientists like you to challenge even the most highly held beliefs, keeping it on it's toes. Some of the cherished theories of science today went against the norm at the beginning of the 20th century You drew parallells to religion and science and make alotta good and interesting points, however you left out one thing; religion (at the very least the two most dominant ones on the planet) in principle is not a self correcting system. People are not taught to challenge the most cherished and highly held beliefs in their religion for the sake of higher knowledge, the idea is unthinkable.
A self-correcting system? I guess you can look at it like that. But you can look at religion as a self-correcting system to. You're just correcting different things. Y'all are gonna keep arriving at this conflict between science and religion as long as you keep comparing apples to oranges.

But even still, this notion presumes that the system is correcting towards some ultimate truth. Using binary apparati like shit like Bayesian Inference and Boolean logic, science, in its very own methodology just can't do achieve this. Comparing science to religion in this context is meaningless IMO. This isn't even the goal of science. It doesn't matter how much anyone wants it to be. It doesn't matter how religiously devoted someone is to physical data and proof or whatever. The fact remains that the scientific method is not just limited to empirical inquiry. The first step in science is observation which in and of itself requires rational judgement based on axiomatic systems. Inductive reasoning. I'm sorry, there is no way around this.

But let's he practical, honest and fair here. For the sake of higher knowledge, how many of you have been taught in school (or by whatever means you use to learn) to challenged the second law of thermodynamics? Or the speed of light? Or the mass of an electron? Or Avogrado's number? How hard does the institution go in on this? Ask 20 random people if they believe in Black holes. Then ask them if they believe in God. Then ask them why?
 
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There must be a god.

and

God must be white..

There is no other explanation how those simple minded evil mofokrs control the world.

Damn sure couldn't do it by themselves with no divine intervention.
 
It was an analogy. :smh:

And a VERY poorly thought out one at that. That's one of the main problems. . . weak analogies that muddle and obscure the arguments before they even start. Then valuable time getS wasted on crap that was untenable to begin with. And not to mention, that an argument for or against IS NOT equivalent to an explanation.



The "give science time and it will figure it out" line is one of the weakest arguments ever.

Perhaps, but you haven't proven how. And I don't fall into that category either. I take the position that science either will or it won't. I thought that was clear, since I said that "Tyson might be right" on the point of humans possibly being too "stupid" to figure it out. So I don't know where you're going with this. But I don't know how this precludes the scientific community from attempting to do so in the future . . .as it has done so many times in the past.


Shelve your emotions for a minute and actually rationally examine the whole picture.

There're no deeply impassioned, expletive laden statements dripping with any level of emotion . . . at least not written by me. But you might want to look at your own post. You could be said to exhibit frustration. But that can't be empirically determined. :D
And if you understood my posts, the evidence is there. And the bolded part indicates the primacy logic plays in making determinations about things . . .whether you fully trust them or not.





How hard is that? Shit, there's documentaries and shit if reading is an issue.
Religion evolves just like science and every other institutional and form of human expression of knowledge. What a novel concept.


Science is fundamentally based on knowledge, and Religion is based on faith, correct? Unless you're saying they're one and the same.

So I'm not getting the comparison here. If you believe that "science is descriptive and religion is prescriptive" and that it is unfair to compare them. Then why are you? Science is held to a standard of scrutiny, verifiability or falsifiability that religion and metaphysics simply cannot and do not stand up to; in terms of rendering an accurate model of reality using an array of tools of discernment and understanding, i.e. direct observation, indirect observation, boolean logic, inductive and deductive reasoning, mathematical modeling, etc. All aimed at advancing our knowledge base. And that word, KNOWLEDGE, has a very particular meaning, as you well know, especially when it comes to understanding things, distinguishing facts from non-fact. Which logically can't be applied beyond an objective reality context. So again, where's the meaningful (read: actionable utility being compared) equivalence here, and what is your aim with that?




Then the crying starts. But,...but...
Religion if full of dogmas and immutable claims. So is science. The speed of light in a vacuum, the natural laws, etc
Religion enslaved and killed a bunch of people. man, fuck religion! So did the atom bomb and guns. Cry me a fucking river.
Religion claims can't be verified and are untestable. So is String Theory (Leonard Susskind is the "cloud guy"? :rolleyes:) and the simplest possible mathematical arithmetic.


More false comparisons. The premise of both perspectives couldn't be more different. Further, religion makes it's claims AS ABSOLUTES, period. Yes, the same absolutes you've been railing against all thread. While scientific understanding (perhaps not all within the community) evolves with new information.

This effort to place science on parity with religion, simultaneously claiming they're incomparable confuses your points . . . but here we are again. Because the MAJORITY of scientific advancements, as a matter of fact can and HAVE been tested. That's how we escaped antiquity. This doesn't infer absolute knowledge, but it is a distinguishing mark between science and OTHER institutions.


And String theory, not only is it unproven thus far, NO ONE from the scientific community has made such a claim, not even Kaku. And UNTIL it meets the standards of proof demanded by the scientific method, it won't be accepted. No problem. As a scientist, you know scientists pontificate and develop theories all the time. You also know there're standards to verify the veracity of the claims made by said scientists. Exercises in experimentation, grounded by regimented inquiry, based cogent examination of information, are the cornerstones of scientific progress. Not subjective personal experience. Unless scientific peer review is a joke or an illusion.

But you and no one else has answered my question: What OTHER method outside the scientific methodology of inquiry PRODUCES RESULTS? Because I'm not aware of any. And as I intimated previously, I don't see it as science vs. religion. I see it as science vs. ANYTHING, until someone shares something different than that, AND which produces the same or better results.





Even logical Positivism, the philosophical foundation of science, is bullshit.


Logical positivism is only one aspect of scientific inquiry. Which, despite it's theoretical limitations has PRODUCED a wealth of real understanding and has served to add to, not obliterate, our body of objective knowledge. So "Bullshit", hardly. If anything, Russell's paradox did science a favor. It revealed a limitation in classical logic (read: challenge, which is a good thing in my book), and DESTROYED GOD in one fell swoop, with his drawn conclusions on set theory. But had to draw upon that very same classical logic to arrive at the paradox!

So here I think you're being disingenuous and unfair. And an attempt at 'fairness' is a claim you made earlier, did you not? And again, I make no bones about the 'current' state of scientific limitations. Advancements beyond our current understandings demand that we put effort toward eliminating those boundaries. So far science has proven resilient in that regard. Serious scientists within that community know what they don't know, and at the point where limitations to previous impediments to empirical inquiry are overcome, scientists have consistently exhibited a desire to do so. Large Hadron Collider anyone, Hubble anyone?


Since you guys are such big fans of proof and binary logic and shit, how about this. Assign a truth value to this:

"This sentence is false"


Take all the time you need. :sleep:


Answer: True, you've already initialized the sentence with a value of 'false' in the sentences declaration. Boolean conditional logic. However the actual value is NULL. The sentence utilizes no comparative data, with any value for the inputs, and can therefore produce no outputs, resulting in a null value.


JG
 
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A self-correcting system? I guess you can look at it like that. But you can look at religion as a self-correcting system to. You're just correcting different things. Y'all are gonna keep arriving at this conflict between science and religion as long as you keep comparing apples to oranges.

Religion is self correcting? You mean like saying to the effect of "maybe what we hold to be the pillars of our faith in our holy books is not correct..." That kind of self correction? While you keep bringing up apples and oranges you must also remember that they are still fruits. I'm sorry, but when religion claims that plants existed before the sun, the earth was created (in 6 days) before the rest of the universe (in a blink of an eye) and does not even bring up the idea that the sun is a star, as literal truth, then the comparison with science is inevitable. As long as dogmatic religion proclaims to have absolute knowledge, of things that science has explanations for, without even trying to justify those answers, and stays attacking science for contradicting their scriptures, then this debate will never stop. I also don't understand your (seeming) implication that the onus is on science to stop bringing up religion, when it ought to be the other way around.

But even still, this notion presumes that the system is correcting towards some ultimate truth. Using binary apparati like shit like Bayesian Inference and Boolean logic, science, in its very own methodology just can't do achieve this. Comparing science to religion in this context is meaningless IMO. This isn't even the goal of science. It doesn't matter how much anyone wants it to be. It doesn't matter how religiously devoted someone is to physical data and proof or whatever. The fact remains that the scientific method is not just limited to empirical inquiry. The first step in science is observation which in and of itself requires rational judgement based on axiomatic systems. Inductive reasoning. I'm sorry, there is no way around this.

Again it is mostly a religious idea to try to perpetuate this idea of ultimate truth, as if science is moving in on 'god's' territory.

But let's he practical, honest and fair here. For the sake of higher knowledge, how many of you have been taught in school (or by whatever means you use to learn) to challenged the second law of thermodynamics? Or the speed of light? Or the mass of an electron? Or Avogrado's number? How hard does the institution go in on this? Ask 20 random people if they believe in Black holes. Then ask them if they believe in God. Then ask them why?

I don't know where you're from bruh, but around here, for the most part, students are taught via rote learning across the board. Mostly fact memorization as opposed to understanding the concept. So those challenges would just be met with a blank stare for the most part. Besides, teaching children to challenge preconceived notions is an uncomfortable idea for those in power, since that would inevitably lead them to questioning religion and the political leaders. And :lol: at the asking 20 random people black holes/god question. I live in a country where the vast majority (about 90%) or so "proudly" proclaim themselves to be christian. Ask them why? They'd just say that god has always been in their life, the end. Besides, I would stake $100 that more than half of the random people would not have a basic idea on what a black hole is, outside of probably hearing about about it on a sci-fi movie. Shit around here for the most part, if you say around random people that you believe that evolution is a real biological construct, they'd more than likely look at you like you just arrived from mars, and the first thing they'd say is "So you think we came from monkeys?" Which would mean that the chances finding someone to have a meaningful convo like we just did about reality perception via our brains is pretty slim, since such a convo would have to be presupposed by the idea that our brains were shaped by natural selection.

....
 
Real talk. read ALL my posts from starting from page 3. I've been reiterating this over and over and over and over ... and over ...

Language, another man-made formal system supervenes on our whole system of syllogistic logical. Take bertrand Russell's Paradox. Its consequences ether Logical Positivism and all other like philosophies.
Russell's paradox.

Look up Stephen J Gould's Non-Overlapping Magisteria ("NOMA"). Notice how it incorporates age old concepts like fractal symmetry and self-reference in describing the relationship between science and religion.
Fortunately there's still some people thinking outside the box ...


:yes:
but u forgot 2 things
everybody makes a yes or no, good or bad judgement on everything like a quarter sec before they consciously decide anything. So this topic gettin as far as it has is actually sayin alot

And u didnt make a clear enough distinction between organized religion and personal religion. Me an a few others knew exactly what u meant but for somebody on the "outside lookin in" u were kinda vague. seemed like u started to draw the line in that regard but u changed ur mind and edited the post.
 
And a VERY poorly thought out one at that. That's one of the main problems. . . weak analogies that muddle and obscure the arguments before they even start. Then valuable time getS wasted on crap that was untenable to begin with. And not to mention, that an argument for or against IS NOT equivalent to an explanation.[/COLOR][/B]
OK. I'm gonna leave that alone.



Perhaps, but you haven't proven how. And I don't fall into that category either. I take the position that science either will or it won't. I thought that was clear, since I said that "Tyson might be right" on the point of humans possibly being too "stupid" to figure it out. So I don't know where you're going with this. But I don't know how this precludes the scientific community from attempting to do so in the future . . .as it has done so many times in the past.
I wasn't necessarily addressing you. I never said it precludes science from doing what it does. All i'm saying is that it's a statement of faith. If that's ok with you.


There're no deeply impassioned, expletive laden statements dripping with any level of emotion . . . at least not written by me. But you might want to look at your own post. You could be said to exhibit frustration. But that can't be empirically determined. :D
And if you understood my posts, the evidence is there. And the bolded part indicates the primacy logic plays in making determinations about things . . .whether you fully trust them or not.[/COLOR][/B]
:lol: You're right. I did get a little frustrated there for a minute. Eh. And I was making a general statement. We've had a pretty civil convo so far.

What evidence is where?

And I disagree. Binary/bivalent logic is but one means of acquiring knowledge about "things". For the strict materialist, sure. And what are these "things" you're referring to??? (i'm sure you know why i'm asking ...). There are other forms of logic with practical real world applications. Look them up. For instance, Quantum Computation, you want a sexy example. Even in language/linguistics. The Bolivian language Aymara uses ternary as opposed to binary logic in it's grammatical syntax. So yeah, no primacy here.
Plus "rational" examination isn't only limited to empirical testing. One can even say Rationalism is antithetical to Empiricism. Perhaps the better phrase would be "pragmatically examine". yea. Pragmatism. The interface between Rationalism and Empiricism. That's about right.



Science is fundamentally based on knowledge, and Religion is based on faith, correct? Unless you're saying they're one and the same.
I don't know quite what you mean by this sweeping statement. Science works towards acquiring knowledge of natural phenomena within a formal system. So does religion. And no, this isn't a distortion of nomenclature or syntax or whatever. Saying science is based on knowledge is like saying a shovel is based on dirt. So is a hoe. (no pun intended).
And I've already made my argument, in several posts, of how there's also faith in science.



So I'm not getting the comparison here. If you believe that "science is descriptive and religion is prescriptive" and that it is unfair to compare them. Then why are you?
Not so fast there with the flip the script shit. I'm not comparing them at least not based on the same requirements that all the other atheists in this thread are. Notice where I said; "...just like science and every other institutional and form of human expression of knowledge." Did you miss that?


Science is held to a standard of scrutiny, verifiability or falsifiability that religion and metaphysics simply cannot and do not stand up to; in terms of rendering an accurate model of reality using an array of tools of discernment and understanding, i.e. direct observation, indirect observation, boolean logic, inductive and deductive reasoning, mathematical modeling, etc. All aimed at advancing our knowledge base. And that word, KNOWLEDGE, has a very particular meaning, as you well know, especially when it comes to understanding things, distinguishing facts from non-fact. Which logically can't be applied beyond an objective reality context.[/COLOR][/B]
You're basically stating my part of my argument here but in a backhanded way.

In ref. to the red highlighted above in order:



1) Anyone advocating this, religious, secular, layperson or scientist has got it all wrong. I'm actually shamed of scientists that do.

2) What does it mean?

3) I've already had this argument about the objective and subjective nature of reality. Not gonna start on that cycle again. So, pass.

So again, where's the meaningful (read: actionable utility being compared) equivalence here, and what is your aim with that?
Are you asking a rhetorical question? I never said science and religion were equivalent wrt utility. That's what's been implied by all the shit that's been posted in here. I'm just exposing the myth of the popular held beliefs about what science is ... or isn't.


More false comparisons. The premise of both perspectives couldn't be more different. Further, religion makes it's claims AS ABSOLUTES, period. Yes, the same absolutes you've been railing against all thread. While scientific understanding (perhaps not all within the community) evolves with new information.
Maybe I was railing against absolutes because of the absolute statemenst that were made earlier in the thread? :dunno:
And science does lay claims to absolutes. One could even argue that absolutes are it's very foundation.

So you tell me, what are axiomatic statements/systems? And when you get to the "self-evident" part, I want you to tell me how person A know that person B is conscious?



This effort to place science on parity with religion, simultaneously claiming they're incomparable . . . but here we are again. Because the MAJORITY of scientific advancements, as a matter of fact can and HAVE been tested. That's how we escaped antiquity.
JG, you're completely misreading me here. Things can be comparable in SOME respects and not the same in a contextual framework. Haven't I been saying all along that religion attends to a different kind of knowledge and human experience? What other language do I have to type this in? I'm just simply showing how popular arguments against religion aren't much different from similar arguments that can be made against science. That's all.


This doesn't infer absolute knowledge, but it is a distinguishing mark between science and OTHER institutions.
I couldn't agree more.


And String theory, not only is it unproven thus far, NO ONE from the scientific community has made such a claim, not even Kaku. And UNTIL it meets the standards of proof demanded by the scientific method, it won't be accepted. No problem. As a scientist, you know scientists pontificate and develop theories all the time.
Made what claim? That it's a theory??? I know what it's not though.
It's not "String Conjecture" or "String Hypothesis" or "String Really Cool Idea". And it's far from a mere pontification. Thousands of scientific peer reviewed papers have been published, hundreds of conferences, meeting and symposia, advanced astrophysics courses, books, Wikipedia pages, peoples entire scientific careers a whole damn enterprise. And not one. NOT ONE ounce of observable testable evidence. Not once. Ever. And, hypothetically, even if it were to be testable the super high energy required would STILL preclude lower energy particle physics testing AND predictions. Not to mention that passing the requirement of falsifiability would amount to saying "fuck Quantum Theory" And then everything is fucked all the way down to Newtonian physics by correspondence. So much for coherence. But it's still String THEORY. Because the right people at the right time hawked it.
I'm not saying that string theories are not interesting, just that the main use for which they are being sold, as a unified theory of particle physics and gravity ... FAIL. But then again the search for a Theory of Everything and a GUT is has been an academic as well as commercial enterprise. As far as i'm concerned it's more or less a religion.



You also know there're standards to verify the veracity of the claims made by said scientists. Exercises in experimentation, grounded by regimented inquiry, based cogent examination of information, are the cornerstones of scientific progress. Not subjective personal experience. Unless scientific peer review is a joke or an illusion.
No. String Theory is an illusion. Based on subjective personal experiences.



But you and no one else has answered my question: What OTHER method outside the scientific methodology of inquiry PRODUCES RESULTS? Because I'm not aware of any. And as I intimated previously, I don't see it as science vs. religion. I see it as science vs. ANYTHING, until someone shares something different than that, AND which produces the same or better results.
Oh. That's easy.
But i'll only answer your question when you answer mine. :D




Logical positivism is only one aspect of scientific inquiry.
The scientific method:
1) Ask a question about nature
2) Collect/record data (observation)
3) Inductive inference (experience)
4) Formulate conjecture/hypothesis (from 2 and 3)
5) Deduction (prediction from 4)
6) Experiment (test of 4)
7) Analyze (If 6 fails, go back to 4. If it passes go to 8)
8) Publish/communicate.

Logical positivism directly influences 1, 3, 4, 5. And indirectly biases 6 and 7. That's 6 out of 8 = 75%



Which, despite it's theoretical limitations has PRODUCED a wealth of real understanding and has served to add to, not obliterate, our body of objective knowledge. So "Bullshit", hardly.
And practical limitations. Not saying science doesn't contribute towards knowledge but it's epistemologically limited to propositional knowledge/descriptive knowledge.

I'mtoo lazy to draw the right Venn diagram but this is fine:
220px-Classical-Definition-of-Kno.svg.png

And there should be other circles or spheres of beliefs that intersect the other two, or individually, or not.

Plus there are many ways of getting knowledge. There are many fields in which scientific method of acquiring knowledge doesn't apply. Like teleological questions, history, behavioral sciences and several social sciences where there's just subjective valuation of human relations. You wana chalk up all these forms of knowledge as worthless. Fine. I think they're very important to humanity. But hey, I guess it's your prerogative to accept ...no, wait ... rather, to appreciate this or not. :dunno:
I will leave it at that.



If anything, Russell's paradox did science a favor. It revealed a limitation in classical logic (read: challenge, which is a good thing in my book), and DESTROYED GOD in one fell swoop, with his drawn conclusions on set theory. But had to draw upon that very same classical logic to arrive at the paradox!
I think I know what you're getting at here but I'm not sure. Please explain. Thanks.


So here I think you're being disingenuous and unfair. And an attempt at 'fairness' is a claim you made earlier, did you not? And again, I make no bones about the 'current' state of scientific limitations. Advancements beyond our current understandings demand that we put effort toward eliminating those boundaries. So far science has proven resilient in that regard. Serious scientists within that community know what they don't know, and at the point where limitations to previous impediments to empirical inquiry are overcome, scientists have consistently exhibited a desire to do so. Large Hadron Collider anyone, Hubble anyone?

OK, you're right. Perhaps "bullshit" was a strong word. My bad. But you have to admit that Logical Positivism has some major logical inconsistency issues (admittedly inherited from language). And concomitantly, the Natural Laws, which are expressible in a 'language' of mathematics and as a result inherit the mathematical baggage from set theory, geometry, calculus, functional analysis, statistics, etc.



Answer: True, you've already initialized the sentence with a value of 'false' in the sentences declaration. Boolean conditional logic. However the actual value is NULL. The sentence utilizes no comparative data, with any value for the inputs, and can therefore produce no outputs, resulting in a null value.
Yo, there's nothing wrong with the sentence man. The syntax and logical structure is sound.
The sentence requires no comparative data.
Input = Words/elements used to construct the sentence (logic statement)
Output = meaning of the sentence (truth value as a logical construct)
The grammar is also sound.
(ref: Categorical Grammar)
Like I said, language supervenes on logical systems. It's inevitable.

Any linguist in this thread that wana verify this? Be my guest.



JG

Thanks for your responses.
 
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:yes:
but u forgot 2 things
everybody makes a yes or no, good or bad judgement on everything like a quarter sec before they consciously decide anything. So this topic gettin as far as it has is actually sayin alot

And u didnt make a clear enough distinction between organized religion and personal religion. Me an a few others knew exactly what u meant but for somebody on the "outside lookin in" u were kinda vague. seemed like u started to draw the line in that regard but u changed ur mind and edited the post.

I didn't make it clear enough? Oh really?

My definition of religion:
http://www.bgol.us/board/showpost.php?p=8356750&postcount=186


"I'm not arguing the politics of religious INSTITUTION."
http://www.bgol.us/board/showpost.php?p=8355951&postcount=153

"...i'm not in here arguing sociopolitical implication of religious institution or defending crazy Christian fundamentalists."
http://www.bgol.us/board/showpost.php?p=8358722&postcount=196

"Like i've been saying THROUGH OUT THIS ENTIRE THREAD, i'm not arguing in support of religious institution."
http://www.bgol.us/board/showpost.php?p=8367768&postcount=227

"They address themselves to different issues and since both INSTITUTIONS are formulated under two very distinct conceptual frameworks..."
http://www.bgol.us/board/showpost.php?p=8376031&postcount=267

"And i'm not arguing FOR religious INSTITUTION."
http://www.bgol.us/board/showpost.php?p=8352397&postcount=115

"I guess my main point is this: Religious INSTITUTION is often confabulated with religious EXPERIENCE."
http://www.bgol.us/board/showpost.php?p=8356330&postcount=168


Clear enough?:confused:
 
I didn't make it clear enough? Oh really?



Clear enough?:confused:



:lol:i guess since i knew what u meant i just ignored all of that

still seems like they think ur defending the pope or something:dunno:


politics, personal ambition, and the ego play a much bigger and negative role in science then people realize or want to admit
 
:lol:i guess since i knew what u meant i just ignored all of that

still seems like they think ur defending the pope or something:dunno:


politics, personal ambition, and the ego play a much bigger and negative role in science then people realize or want to admit

Yep. And they'll continue to think i'm defending the Moses. It's human behavior. Nothing ground breaking.
I think the psychological term is "Splitting". In this case it's mostly a "defense mechanism" to maintaining self-image.
What we should be having = Bohm Dialogue
But my guess is that it wont be happening anytime soon.
 
Yep. And they'll continue to think i'm defending the Moses. It's human behavior. Nothing ground breaking.
I think the psychological term is "Splitting". In this case it's mostly a "defense mechanism" to maintaining self-image.
What we should be having = Bohm Dialogue
But my guess is that it wont be happening anytime soon.


u scared off all the theist but the some of the Atheist stuck around so its a start

Egos and attachments to labels and ideas are getting in the way

how do u get someone to the point were they're able to accept anything as a potentially legitimate source of knowledge while at the same time questioning everything, even stimuli our senses provide us.....
 
I didn't make it clear enough? Oh really?

My definition of religion:
http://www.bgol.us/board/showpost.php?p=8356750&postcount=186


"I'm not arguing the politics of religious INSTITUTION."
http://www.bgol.us/board/showpost.php?p=8355951&postcount=153

"...i'm not in here arguing sociopolitical implication of religious institution or defending crazy Christian fundamentalists."
http://www.bgol.us/board/showpost.php?p=8358722&postcount=196

"Like i've been saying THROUGH OUT THIS ENTIRE THREAD, i'm not arguing in support of religious institution."
http://www.bgol.us/board/showpost.php?p=8367768&postcount=227

"They address themselves to different issues and since both INSTITUTIONS are formulated under two very distinct conceptual frameworks..."
http://www.bgol.us/board/showpost.php?p=8376031&postcount=267

"And i'm not arguing FOR religious INSTITUTION."
http://www.bgol.us/board/showpost.php?p=8352397&postcount=115

"I guess my main point is this: Religious INSTITUTION is often confabulated with religious EXPERIENCE."
http://www.bgol.us/board/showpost.php?p=8356330&postcount=168


Clear enough?:confused:

:lol:I just re-read your posts, and the shit finally sunk in. It's just that when the science vs. religion discussion comes up, it's almost always understood that religious dogma is being discussed, so that's where the confusion comes from.
 
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u scared off all the theist but the some of the Atheist stuck around so its a start

Egos and attachments to labels and ideas are getting in the way

how do u get someone to the point were they're able to accept anything as a potentially legitimate source of knowledge while at the same time questioning everything, even stimuli our senses provide us.....
Suspended prejudice, informed skepticism and a little bit of empathy never hurts.
Did you read that Bohm Dialogue article? That's a good start.




:lol:I just re-read your posts, and the shit finally sunk in. It's just that when the science vs. religion discussion comes up, it's almost always understood that religious dogma is being discussed, so that's where the confusion comes from.
Dude, I understand. Both sides of the argument are guilty of taking it to superlative arguments. Read that article on psychological "Splitting" I cited. I think it makes sense. My challenge has always been to isolate pathos and emotions from arguments. I admit sometimes I let it get in the way.
 
Suspended prejudice, informed skepticism and a little bit of empathy never hurts.
Did you read that Bohm Dialogue article? That's a good start.





Dude, I understand. Both sides of the argument are guilty of taking it to superlative arguments. Read that article on psychological "Splitting" I cited. I think it makes sense. My challenge has always been to isolate pathos and emotions from arguments. I admit sometimes I let it get in the way.


sometimes??? :lol:

you act like your middle name is joan of arc or something.

most atheists do not waste time believing because of a simple fact....there's more evidence to disprove all notions of religion/spiritual entities then there is to prove (which there is none)


we can listen to the "what ifs" forever but, the debating is pointless until something comes along to verify an existence of such.
 
Damn y'all negroes are too tense up in this bitch.

Some shit to lighten the mood...



You a fool Ons!! Classic scene. Nah man, it ain't like that with me. All is cool, no e-beef here. I'm actually engaged and enjoying the exchange. Sean stay postin' cerebral shit to ponder.

The discussion is really thin as far as informed # of participants go. But it'd be nice if some of the other cerebral heads were to chime in. But so far, :cool:

JG
 
sometimes??? :lol:

you act like your middle name is joan of arc or something.

most atheists do not waste time believing because of a simple fact....there's more evidence to disprove all notions of religion/spiritual entities then there is to prove (which there is none)


we can listen to the "what ifs" forever but, the debating is pointless until something comes along to verify an existence of such.

exactly close thread next topic , so will John Wall help my wizards out ???
 
sometimes??? :lol:

you act like your middle name is joan of arc or something.

most atheists do not waste time believing because of a simple fact....there's more evidence to disprove all notions of religion/spiritual entities then there is to prove (which there is none)


we can listen to the "what ifs" forever but, the debating is pointless until something comes along to verify an existence of such.


Oh what a suprise. :rolleyes: Decided to come out of lurking during the intermission huh? :lol:

"Sufficiently advanced cluelessness is indistinguishable from malice."
 
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I can't speak for anyone else, but you've made some incredible LEAPS with the your presumptions as to what an atheist 'knows' or understands(as opposed to believes) to begin with.

But peep it. If you REMOVE your assumptions about what MUST be the source of existence, and consider that 'GOD' is a concept created by man. And that existence itself, the concept of being alive, is so mind boggling complex, to think or believe that YOU or ANY being can grasp ANY insight, significant enough to describe and know ANYTHING that is so BEYOND anyones capacity to understand completely enough to point toward a single anthropomorphized entity as the source 'of it all' provokes incredulity.

The truth is we DON'T KNOW FUCK ALL ABOUT THE NATURE OR SUBSTANCE OF EXISTENCE . . . let alone a supposed single source of existence's existence, or non-existence for that matter.

So contrary to your supposition, for myself, I don't even understand the concept of GOD. Really, what IS THAT? It has EVERYTHING to do with what I DON'T KNOW more than what I THINK I KNOW. And THUS far, there's no evidence that existence requires a 'god'.


Folks get awestruck at reality, and forget that we are born into societies ALREADY culturally couched in systems of faith. THEN obliviously point at concepts born of that inculcation, not realizing that you're perception has already been shaped by the time you have the skills and level of inquiry to ponder the 'purpose and origin of existence/life' question.


Think about it.

JG

Very, very well said.
 
ur a fool onslaught:lol:

Suspended prejudice, informed skepticism and a little bit of empathy never hurts.
Did you read that Bohm Dialogue article? That's a good start.


i checked out the Bohm link
hard to believe a human though that up and figured other humans would be able to use it
the thing may read like an instruction manual for how to catch unicorns but we're gettin there:yes:
Skepticism is the easy part but the other 2 may prove to be a bit more illusive.

But like JG said we're gonna need more people

Dude, I understand. Both sides of the argument are guilty of taking it to superlative arguments. Read that article on psychological "Splitting" I cited. I think it makes sense. My challenge has always been to isolate pathos and emotions from arguments. I admit sometimes I let it get in the way.

had a feeling u 2 werent having the same conversation
but to say splitting was being used solely as a defense mechanisms may be a bit hasty. Splitting in many cases seems to be a product of being human and having our particular biology. Many of the choices humans have had to make to survive for thousands of years up to this point have been good or bad, yes or no kinds of choices. Maybes and kindas could have gotten u killed for most of our history and now people just think u weird or crazy if u say i dont know orboth sides are wrong ( might be why our minds make choices the way they do and before we know about it:duuno:). We even force this prespective on ourselves when our environment doesnt do it for us ( politics, most sports, etc, ).
 
ur a fool onslaught:lol:
i checked out the Bohm link
hard to believe a human though that up and figured other humans would be able to use it
the thing may read like an instruction manual for how to catch unicorns but we're gettin there:yes:
Skepticism is the easy part but the other 2 may prove to be a bit more illusive.

Many corporations use Bohm Dialogue as a tool in developing new technologies and ideas. I know this from personal experience. So nah, it aint wishful thinking. It's very practical. IMO, skepticism without follow-through is just ignorance. Hanlon's Razor.

But like JG said we're gonna need more people
had a feeling u 2 werent having the same conversation

Nah. If for anything the only coherent dialog i've had in this thread has been with JG and Count23. And then there's been lost of dodging too. lol.:smh:

but to say splitting was being used solely as a defense mechanisms may be a bit hasty. Splitting in many cases seems to be a product of being human and having our particular biology. Many of the choices humans have had to make to survive for thousands of years up to this point have been good or bad, yes or no kinds of choices. Maybes and kindas could have gotten u killed for most of our history and now people just think u weird or crazy if u say i dont know orboth sides are wrong ( might be why our minds make choices the way they do and before we know about it:duuno:). We even force this prespective on ourselves when our environment doesnt do it for us ( politics, most sports, etc, ).

Well I was thinking defense mechanism to give the benefit of the doubt. Didn't wana assume it was a developmental stage tool but, hey...
And maybe's and kinda's are also the beginning of the scientific method of discovery...which stops where splitting begins. The beginning of all forms of cognitive bias including induction bias.
It's not an immutable part of human nature. There are ways around it.
 
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Many corporations use Bohm Dialogue as a tool in developing new technologies and ideas. I know this from personal experience. So nah, it aint wishful thinking. It's very practical. IMO, skepticism without follow-through is just ignorance. Hanlon's Razor.



Nah. If for anything the only coherent dialog i've had in this thread has been with JG and Count23. And then there's been lost of dodging too. lol.:smh:



Well I was thinking defense mechanism to give the benefit of the doubt. Didn't wana assume it was a developmental stage tool but, hey...
And maybe's and kinda's are also the beginning of the scientific method of discovery...which stops where splitting begins. The beginning of all forms of cognitive bias including induction bias.
It's not an immutable part of human nature. There are ways around it.


Damn Sean, I guess I'm going to have to go back and read some of this dialogue because you just said that my interactions in this thread counted for shit...:confused:

So to say one doesn't know until more evidence is given is not correct? I'm not saying that you said it wasn't but it seems that there is a better way? :dunno:

The best thought experiment in my opinion would be to have two infants, raise them by having one with the influences of religion, the metaphysical and the spiritual and philosophical but try to exclude the influence of science even though the metaphysical and philosophical have LEAD toward the developments of modern science.

Have the other child only raised with mathematical and scientific influences with no religious or spiritual connotations introduced into its life.

Of course you would have to control each environment so no outside influence can tinker with the outcome of each child's ideology.

What do you think the outcome would be if you introduced the opposite ideology to the child once it is an adult, say 30 yrs old?
 
Many corporations use Bohm Dialogue as a tool in developing new technologies and ideas. I know this from personal experience. So nah, it aint wishful thinking. It's very practical. IMO, skepticism without follow-through is just ignorance. Hanlon's Razor.

never said it wasnt totally impractical or impossible
More like it doesnt seem natural for people to have discourses of that nature, regardless of the good that may come from it. Seems like somthing that take a bit of organizing before hand:dunno:. But footage of company like google or apple pulling one off could probably make a ted conference look like a science segment on the local news:yes:


Nah. If for anything the only coherent dialog i've had in this thread has been with JG and Count23. And then there's been lost of dodging too. lol.:smh:

theres still a few posters who could add to this on both sides who havent made an appearance yet but it could be cause we kinda jacked this thread and the first pages sent them packin


Well I was thinking defense mechanism to give the benefit of the doubt. Didn't wana assume it was a developmental stage tool but, hey...
And maybe's and kinda's are also the beginning of the scientific method of discovery...which stops where splitting begins. The beginning of all forms of cognitive bias including induction bias.
It's not an immutable part of human nature. There are ways around it.


cant disagree with any of this
its a habit thats probably older than primates and and like most bad habits if u dont know what ur doing or its negative effects it can get real close to immutable
 
There has been some pretty good back and forth in here. All I'll add is this:

Truth/Objectivity can be pretty damn elusive at times. But the elusive nature of the truth is not a license to be dishonest. And that what equivalence between science and religion is, dishonest. Empiricism and Revelation are not even comparable methodologies for uncovering truth, unless one redefines truth to the point of solipsism (in which case just pretend I'm your figment). Dressed up in quantum esotericism, at its core its same nonsense folks have used since the pre-history: "I don't know everything and you don't everything, so lets just make some shit up." To have a conversation we must presuppose some relatively objective realm in which our minds can meet. To even pose the proposition that objectivity is indistinguishable from subjectivity (that science is just another religion) means one should rationally be having this conversation by himself to himself.
 
Ay sean what are your thoughts on

ghosts

Don't know. Haven't seen one before. Wait. You can't see them right? Oh. Never mind.


reincarnation

Don't know much about it. That's like after dying then the soul coming back into another body, over and over until you reach perfection? Don't see the point really. :dunno: And then what?

multiverse theory?

Don't think it's worthy of being a theory. Think it's an idea used to explain QM so that it can make sense when it's not supposed to make sense. Plus it balances right on the sharp end of Occam's Razor.
...
 
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