a.sub wrote:even though im pro evolution
Kinda like Pro Evolution Soccer?
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a.sub wrote:even though im pro evolution
InkL0sed wrote:a.sub wrote:even though im pro evolution
Kinda like Pro Evolution Soccer?
nietzsche wrote:To those who complained:
Who made you the authority to say which are the holes or the weak and strong points in the theories?
"If apples are red then you can say that the earth is not the center of the universe, but since there have been seen apples in other colours such as green and yellow, then it might be possible for the earth to be the center of the universe"
That is an exaggeration of what you guys say, but believe me, to someone who understands the matter it's kind of how it sounds.
The reason nobody has come here and tell you with patience and explained you why is it that Creationism makes no rival for Evolution is that you will treat any argument with the same insolence, no matter if it's an educated one or just plain rubbish. Insolence was fine when Copernicus had to fight against the book burners but today with the so many people arguing matters they just really don't understand, now insolence is not the best option.
If I tell you that even though Evolution doesn't explain what happened before the Bug Bang, and that the current state of the law of physics cannot explain it either, you go ahead and claim that that "hole" add strength to Creationism.
I could stay here in this forum trying to take you step by step, trying to help you learn to thing and not only repeat what teachers or preachers or authors tells you but in some moment an attack from a preacher will make me loose my patience.
I am by no means an expert, but I've read a lot in matters of philosophy, religion, science. (Someone will come trying to test me in some obscure detail trying to disprove me I anticipe).
If you used half the time you spent in this thread to actually read a good book on the matter, then you'd learn much more. (But please don't select a book by a preacher or those that appear on Oprah and such). Why don't read the most respected authors first? Hawkins, Dennet, Dawkins, perhaps W. James to understand a little about psychology and don't make of any feeling a revelation?, maybe some of Sartre to know a little about existentialism and absurdism? Maybe even some study of meaning?
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
Thanks fro your input but I am not just speaking of what has happened before teh "Big Bang". Evolution does not work anywhere when you look at the big picture. As I have stated before here are teh areas of evolution (in general there is some overlapping) and teh first needs to happen before the second and so on.nietzsche wrote:If I tell you that even though Evolution doesn't explain what happened before the Bug Bang, and that the current state of the law of physics cannot explain it either, you go ahead and claim that that "hole" add strength to Creationism.
nietzsche wrote:If you used half the time you spent in this thread to actually read a good book on the matter, then you'd learn much more. (But please don't select a book by a preacher or those that appear on Oprah and such). Why don't read the most respected authors first? Hawkins, Dennet, Dawkins, perhaps W. James to understand a little about psychology and don't make of any feeling a revelation?, maybe some of Sartre to know a little about existentialism and absurdism? Maybe even some study of meaning?
Backglass wrote:I find it sad that people can be so quick to pass of Leprechauns without studying them. Why haven't you? Do you deny their existence? Why wont you open your heart and let them in? All they want is to give you pots-o-gold! Many people have come to me with "proof" that Leprechauns don't exist and make outrageous scientific claims. They simply cannot believe in what they cannot see. Sadly blinded of such riches.
If you would only study them in depth you would come to love and worship our little friends as well.
Desoulman wrote:Backglass wrote:If you would only study them in depth you would come to love and worship our little friends as well.
By all means, give me some sort of text to study that claims for leprachauns to be real.
Desoulman wrote:Backglass wrote:If you would only study them in depth you would come to love and worship our little friends as well.
By all means, give me some sort of text to study that claims for leprachauns to be real.
AlgyTaylor wrote:]Desoulman wrote:Backglass wrote:If you would only study them in depth you would come to love and worship our little friends as well.
By all means, give me some sort of text to study that claims for leprachauns to be real.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leprechaun
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Leinster
Tuatha Dé Danann
Study away.
Desoulman wrote:nietzsche wrote:If you used half the time you spent in this thread to actually read a good book on the matter, then you'd learn much more. (But please don't select a book by a preacher or those that appear on Oprah and such). Why don't read the most respected authors first? Hawkins, Dennet, Dawkins, perhaps W. James to understand a little about psychology and don't make of any feeling a revelation?, maybe some of Sartre to know a little about existentialism and absurdism? Maybe even some study of meaning?
This is an interesting list. Unless I am mistaken, you are listing scientists all on one side of the argument. Why not read up on some creation scientists, such as Dr Chuck Missler, or Dr Ken Ham (and actually consider what they say, and not say "Oh, they are creationists, so they must not know anything about science). Consider both sides, and come to your own conclusion.
Desoulman wrote:Well, your first link makes no claim the leprechauns exist. Its just about the mythology behind them.
I did a search through The Book of Leinster, and did not find any mention of leprechauns. Perhaps you could clarify for me where in this book it is claimed they exist?
Backglass wrote:Desoulman wrote:Well, your first link makes no claim the leprechauns exist. Its just about the mythology behind them.
I did a search through The Book of Leinster, and did not find any mention of leprechauns. Perhaps you could clarify for me where in this book it is claimed they exist?
Mythology?! How dare you Sir! Leprechauns are real...I have felt their presence on many occasions and see their blessings daily!
What, you expect them to just pop up and say "HI"? Well Leprechauns don't work that way. "Seek and ye shall find", they will not come to you! You only need FAITH to be welcomed into their wondrous world. You can see their hand everywhere you look, you only have to open your eyes to see the beauty they bring to the world. Thousands of books and stories have been told of Leprechauns for centuries. This can ONLY mean that they are real! Surely you realize that what you blaspheme as myth MUST be rooted in truth!
For example. HOW ELSE can you explain the amount of Gold in the world? You think it just accidentally appeared IN THE GROUND by random chance? Surely you cant be serious! Gold CANNOT come from non-gold, this is BASIC SCIENCE...not psycho-babble mumbo-jumbo alchemy! It was our wondrous friends the Leprechauns who placed this gold, where we would find it. Why else would this incredible metal be revered and cherished for millennia? SOME COSMIC ACCIDENT? HA! The truly enlightened know why. I pray you will too some day.
Desoulman wrote:I never said it was a myth, I said your sources made no claim of the existence of leprechauns.
Desoulman wrote:You are not very good at this game are you
Neoteny wrote:I would hope not. It's much more interesting without a god.
Evidence
Creationists and evolutionists, Christians and non-Christians all have the same evidence—the same facts. Think about it: we all have the same earth, the same fossil layers, the same animals and plants, the same stars—the facts are all the same.
The difference is in the way we all interpret the facts. And why do we interpret facts differently? Because we start with different presuppositions. These are things that are assumed to be true, without being able to prove them. These then become the basis for other conclusions. All reasoning is based on presuppositions (also called axioms). This becomes especially relevant when dealing with past events.
Past and present
We all exist in the present—and the facts all exist in the present. When one is trying to understand how the evidence came about (Where did the animals come from? How did the fossil layers form? etc.), what we are actually trying to do is to connect the past to the present.
However, if we weren’t there in the past to observe events, how can we know what happened so we can explain the present? It would be great to have a time machine so we could know for sure about past events.
Christians of course claim they do, in a sense, have a ‘time machine’. They have a book called the Bible which claims to be the Word of God who has always been there, and has revealed to us the major events of the past about which we need to know.
On the basis of these events (Creation, Fall, Flood, Babel, etc.), we have a set of presuppositions to build a way of thinking which enables us to interpret the evidence of the present.
Evolutionists have certain beliefs about the past/present that they presuppose, e.g. no God (or at least none who performed acts of special creation), so they build a different way of thinking to interpret the evidence of the present.
Thus, when Christians and non-Christians argue about the evidence, in reality they are arguing about their interpretations based on their presuppositions.
That’s why the argument often turns into something like:
‘Can’t you see what I’m talking about?’
‘No, I can’t. Don’t you see how wrong you are?’
‘No, I’m not wrong. It’s obvious that I’m right.’
‘No, it’s not obvious.’ And so on.
These two people are arguing about the same evidence, but they are looking at the evidence through different glasses.
It’s not until these two people recognize the argument is really about the presuppositions they have to start with, that they will begin to deal with the foundational reasons for their different beliefs. A person will not interpret the evidence differently until they put on a different set of glasses—which means to change one’s presuppositions.
I’ve found that a Christian who understands these things can actually put on the evolutionist’s glasses (without accepting the presuppositions as true) and understand how they look at evidence. However, for a number of reasons, including spiritual ones, a non-Christian usually can’t put on the Christian’s glasses—unless they recognize the presuppositional nature of the battle and are thus beginning to question their own presuppositions.
It is of course sometimes possible that just by presenting ‘evidence’, you can convince a person that a particular scientific argument for creation makes sense ‘on the facts’. But usually, if that person then hears a different interpretation of the same evidence that seems better than yours, that person will swing away from your argument, thinking they have found ‘stronger facts’.
However, if you had helped the person to understand this issue of presuppositions, then they will be better able to recognize this for what it is—a different interpretation based on differing presuppositions—i.e. starting beliefs.
As a teacher, I found that whenever I taught the students what I thought were the ‘facts’ for creation, then their other teacher would just re-interpret the facts. The students would then come back to me saying, ‘Well sir, you need to try again.’
However, when I learned to teach my students how we interpret facts, and how interpretations are based on our presuppositions, then when the other teacher tried to reinterpret the facts, the students would challenge the teacher’s basic assumptions. Then it wasn’t the students who came back to me, but the other teacher! This teacher was upset with me because the students wouldn’t accept her interpretation of the evidence and challenged the very basis of her thinking.
What was happening was that I had learned to teach the students how to think rather than just what to think. What a difference that made to my class! I have been overjoyed to find, sometimes decades later, some of those students telling me how they became active, solid Christians as a result.
Desoulman wrote:AlgyTaylor wrote:]Desoulman wrote:Backglass wrote:If you would only study them in depth you would come to love and worship our little friends as well.
By all means, give me some sort of text to study that claims for leprachauns to be real.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leprechaun
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Leinster
Tuatha Dé Danann
Study away.
Well, your first link makes no claim the leprechauns exist. Its just about the mythology behind them.
I did a search through The Book of Leinster, and did not find any mention of leprechauns. Perhaps you could clarify for me where in this book it is claimed they exist?
Samuel Lover, writing in the 1831 describes the leprechaun as,
... quite a beau in his dress, notwithstanding, for he wears a red square-cut coat, richly laced with gold, and inexpressible of the same, cocked hat, shoes and buckles.[9]
InkL0sed wrote:a.sub wrote:even though im pro evolution
Kinda like Pro Evolution Soccer?
Desoulman wrote:nietzsche wrote:If you used half the time you spent in this thread to actually read a good book on the matter, then you'd learn much more. (But please don't select a book by a preacher or those that appear on Oprah and such). Why don't read the most respected authors first? Hawkins, Dennet, Dawkins, perhaps W. James to understand a little about psychology and don't make of any feeling a revelation?, maybe some of Sartre to know a little about existentialism and absurdism? Maybe even some study of meaning?
This is an interesting list. Unless I am mistaken, you are listing scientists all on one side of the argument. Why not read up on some creation scientists, such as Dr Chuck Missler, or Dr Ken Ham (and actually consider what they say, and not say "Oh, they are creationists, so they must not know anything about science). Consider both sides, and come to your own conclusion.
Desoulman wrote:This is an interesting list. Unless I am mistaken, you are listing scientists all on one side of the argument. Why not read up on some creation scientists, such as Dr Chuck Missler, or Dr Ken Ham (and actually consider what they say, and not say "Oh, they are creationists, so they must not know anything about science).
joecoolfrog wrote:Why oh why do you imagine that the great majority of the Scientific community are taking sides, they are simply looking for answers and thats it
Because the creationists are united with a single belief, they assume that "the other side" (Science) must also be like this. What they don't realize is that Scientists delight in disproving other Scientists. It's a built-in self-check mechanism that creationism does not have.
Bavarian Raven wrote:Because the creationists are united with a single belief, they assume that "the other side" (Science) must also be like this. What they don't realize is that Scientists delight in disproving other Scientists. It's a built-in self-check mechanism that creationism does not have.
well said...
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