Anonymous wrote:Tossica wrote:a complete and total farce and anyone that buys in to it is a fucking moron.
Agree 100%
Yeah, EZboard logged me out again, that was me.
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Anonymous wrote:Tossica wrote:a complete and total farce and anyone that buys in to it is a fucking moron.
Agree 100%
Ok, I get that you don't believe in a creator, not because you can disprove it (you can't), but because it is an extremely difficult concept to grasp. If you think really really hard about our existence (almost to the point of getting freaked out about it) and where the universe came from... I'm talking deep, intense thought, it's also a very difficult concept to grasp. I often gaze out at the stars, sitting on a loungechair in the backyard, trying to decipher what I'm seeing. To think that this was all started by some super cataclysmic event or explosion, is just beyond comprehension. Where did that big empty void in the sky come from? Why are there so many stars and planets? Yes, you can get into how a star is formed from a supernova, and all that, but what about even before that? How did the exact perfect formulas occur to foster life on only one planet? Are there other inhabited planets beyond the capabilities of the Hubble telescope?
But look at the basic tenets of Christianity. Don't you think they are good moral standards to live by? They teach us to be good people, despite the extremist wackos that harbor those same beliefs and take them to convoluted extremes. Why not have a leader whose sole beliefs originate in Christianity? What is so wrong with teaching those principles to our children, be it in the home, or at school? Why not set some guidelines to live by which garner decency and taking the "high moral ground?" That's the problem I have with atheists... is that they deny teaching their children about religion, and Christianity or Judaism, then the children grow up to be non believers and choose to believe in scientific paths only.
Narrock wrote:
I've said it before, and I'll say it again. Some of the world's *top* scientists and physicists believe in God. Stephen Hawking believes it, and so did Albert Einstein. There are lot more who believe in God. Why do they believe in God? Because there is no theory, mathematical equation or formula that can explain some of what is going on in the universe. And it's not because we just don't know yet, it's because those things will never be explained through science.
There is a cap, a ceiling, as to our comprehension. I think that was part of God's design. Only when we die, will the "veil be lifted."
Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind.
Albert Einstein, "Science, Philosophy and Religion: a Symposium", 1941
If the facts don't fit the theory, change the facts.
Albert Einstein, (attributed)
Zanchief wrote:Harrison wrote:I'm not dead
Fucker never listens to me. That's it, I'm an atheist.
Narrock wrote: In that respect, I think religion (Christianity) is a good thing. If more people believed in, and feared God, then I really believe there would be less atrocities committed, because people will think about what they are about to do before they actually do it. That's why I think very highly of Christians who go on evangelism trips and missions, to spread the good news of the gospel to people who don't know it. Somebody can say, "well what about the God-fearing people who commit travesties on other people?"
Yamori wrote:I've never understood the notion of fearing god. Fear is the emotional response to something dangerous - to something that is inherently wrong and destructive to you. Not really the attitude I'd want to hold toward the divine. If one's highest goal is to have an afterlife either in god's realm, with god, becoming one with god, or whatever (depending on view), fear really isn't the appropriate feeling to have towards god: who is your ultimate purpose in life - no?
The only context in which fear of god makes sense is the model of acting in Christian virtue to avoid hell as the primary motivation of one's actions - rather than to reach/obtain heaven. Considering this to be the case, it becomes problematic in another way: is a soul really worthy of heaven if it's prime motive is fear of pain, rather than love of the good and the divine?
Zanchief wrote:Harrison wrote:I'm not dead
Fucker never listens to me. That's it, I'm an atheist.
The Kizzy wrote:Arlos, you said "I feel that people of Christian faith should feel no threat from Evolution; that both science and faith can co-exist quite happily, with 1 increasing the appreciation for the other. "
How is that different from what I said? Just worded differently.
Thanks for the refresher on DNA, it is what my specialty is in (genetics, if I ever graduate) its more complex than that, but still, a very good explanation for a beginner to grasp.
arlos wrote:Mindia, I'm honestly curious to hear your reply to the rest of that post, if you're willing to give it.
-Arlos
Lyion wrote:Unfortunately, Arabs are notorious cowards and these are people who are easily knuckled under.
Well, remember, Gorillas didn't exist back then any more than humans did. There was a completely different animal to which we can both trace our ancestry. What could easily have happened (I don't know or guarantee that this IS how it happened mind you, just that it's plausible), is that 1 animal in one location had a mutation that would lead toward Hominid-ism, it had offspring that shared that change, and eventually one of its descendants had another mutation that would lead towards hominidism, etc. Somewhere else on the planet where that same species lived, some animal had a very different mutation, one that would lead toward Gorilla-ism. It had offspring that shared that change, etc. etc. etc.
Humans in no way descended from modern Gorillas; what happened is that we started from the same point (the same ancestor species which is long-since extinct), and diverged further and further from each other as time went on. Also, try and keep in mind, that evolution is something that takes literally thousands of generations to show a transition from one species to another. Homo Sapiens are long-lived enough that they simply have not been around anywhere near long enough to show significant levels of species drift. That would take millions and millions of years; we've been around for well less than 100,000 years.
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