jaxom1957
No one can own just one
Are you sure they used the past tense, as in an act already accomplished? :grin01:Rich in KY said:Some people believe I evolved from a jackass!
Are you sure they used the past tense, as in an act already accomplished? :grin01:Rich in KY said:Some people believe I evolved from a jackass!
"Prey" is what most churches do.snakewispera snr said:Read and prey is what god said
jaxom1957 said:Are you sure they used the past tense, as in an act already accomplished? :grin01:
Snakespeare said:Yes, this is the key point, isn't it? At what point is science so successful that one needs to side with it rather than superstition? Again, not for reasons of faith, but because it can be tested and analyzed, and because its proofs can be reproduced and scrutinized. Just as astrology has given way to astronomy, perhaps it's time for theology to give way to philosophy and reason and science.
Well said.Cflaguy said:Religion is for people who are afraid of hell; spiritualism is for people who have been there.
Wow, Some ones a little too up tight! :sobstory:tyflier said:Ridiculous...thrity-some pages of peaceful, respectful, and delightful debate, insight, and exchange of ideas.
And then this nonsense. If you can't state your opinion without implying that all others are "laughable"...you should probably avoid religous discussions...
...especially when the religion you are practicing is the youngest religion known to modern man, and has no historical background beyond North America...??should I add my "roflmao" emoticon here, or simply let it sink in??
dizzl said:Wow, Some ones a little too up tight! :sobstory:
tyflier said:...especially when the religion you are practicing is the youngest religion known to modern man?
A friend of mine actually said that to me some number of years ago. But I'll take full credit. :grin01:jazzgeek said:Well said.
(So, you've been to Tulsa too, eh?)
regards,
jazz
Nova_C said:Here's the way I look at it.
Science is about facts. It is data. Science is the observation of the universe around us. Religion is about truth. It is a belief in an ultimate authority. For example - lets say we all lived in the Matrix. You know, Neo's running around trying to find some dude named Morpheus and everything we see, touch and taste is a simulation. The science, the accumulation of facts that we have about our universe is still valid. That's the thing about science - it makes no claim as to the truth of our universe - only how it works. Whereas the belief that we exist in a simulation and there is another world beyond, that is the realm of spirituality and religion because it is about truth.
I don't know if it makes sense, but I know what you mean.Checkerbelly said:I'm so not religious, I'm not even athiest. Does that make sense?![]()
I'd say that both statements are true. Most of the non-Americans on this site are European, and Europe is definitely more secular than the U.S. in general.tom e said:Hmm.. I was looking at the poll results here, either snake people tend to lean more atheist/agnostic than the rest of the country, or our friends from other countries are less religious than Americans.
I'm not uptight. I simply don't like to see a GREAT and respectful debate go downhill after 34 pages because ONE individual decides that his opinion is more important than someone else's...and somehow less ridiculous.dizzl said:Wow, Some ones a little too up tight! :sobstory:
Nova_C said:Does it really need to, though? I consider religion and science to be two completely separate things. Existence of a deity is something that cannot be dis proven and so it is not in the realm of science.
Snakespeare said:I really don't see how religion has any claims to "truth," as it depends on faith rather than "facts," reason, analysis, and experimentation. I just don't agree with how you're using these terms. I'm going to bypass the Matrix example (which is problematic in a variety of ways, I think) and offer a counter-example of Copernicus that I think sufficiently refutes that example (though I'd be happy to follow up if folks aren't satisfied). If you go outside before dawn with a notebook with the assignment of determining whether the sun revolves around the earth or the earth around the sun, and record your observations in a notebook, you're likely to determine (incorrectly) the former. The genius of Copernicus (and science) is that he tapped into an accumulation of additional (and less obvious) data that offered a better, though more complicated explanation of the state of the universe. My point is that if you reduce everything to a question of what one can see vs. what one cannot see you're missing a really big, and profound gray area in between in which really smart people can find truths that subvert prevailing conventional views.
As to the question of a deity not being disproven: You also cannot disprove that the Flying Spaghetti Monster, or a teapot orbiting Jupiter, or the great JuJu at the bottom of the sea has not created the universe.
Science is not about disproving things--it's about probabilities. The probability that a supernatural entity created the universe is tremendously low, though even Richard Dawkins, good scientist (and atheist) that is is, would say that we need to deal with probabilities here rather than absolutes.
Let me try to get at this in another way. In what other aspect of your life, exclusive of questions about the origins of the universe, is it acceptable to abdicate reason and declare that you simply have "faith" in something as a demonstration of proof? If my car doesn't start in the morning, do I blame it on my neighbor, who is obviously a witch who has put a spell on my Honda? Hopefully not. If you get sick, do you pray for God to cure you, or do you find a smart person with antibiotics? One could get away with this sort of nonsense in the fourteenth century, when we knew much less than we know now. It amazes me that people persist in thinking that religion is somehow special and different and exalted in some way. It also amazes me that horoscopes still appear in most major newspapers.