
Moderator: Community Team
It is really not that bad. My wife is having the biggest issue. She just can't get much sleep. Plus she has been tired a lot during the last several months anyway.Neoteny wrote:Congrats on the new little one, if you're into that kind of thing. You're a bigger person than I if you can handle one kid, much less two.
It is truley great. I love to see the joy in Riley's eye when we interact and play.jonesthecurl wrote:Yeh, widow - two kids. Beaut.
I spent most of my life not knowing what I wanted to be when I grew up ( and not wanting to grow up). The perfect career for me turned out to be "Parent". It's a lovely thing to be.
Try these.comic boy wrote:Yes believing that Adam lived 930 years is perfectly reasonable
WidowMakers wrote:Try these.comic boy wrote:Yes believing that Adam lived 930 years is perfectly reasonable
http://www.godandscience.org/apologetics/longlife.html
http://www.users.bigpond.com/rdoolan/adamsage.html
If you go into a discussion "knowing the answer", regardless of what you see, you will ignore anything else that contradicts what you believe.
WM
WidowMakers wrote:It is really not that bad. My wife is having the biggest issue. She just can't get much sleep. Plus she has been tired a lot during the last several months anyway.Neoteny wrote:Congrats on the new little one, if you're into that kind of thing. You're a bigger person than I if you can handle one kid, much less two.
But onto the kids thing. If you don't have kids who will carry one your disgust and disagreement with Christians and their beliefs after you are gone?
I read an interesting article a while back that said liberal people (pro choice, pro gay marriage, pro evolution) are having less babies and thus having less people to pass along their ideals and beliefs. But I guess that is another thread.
joecoolfrog wrote:WidowMakers wrote:Try these.comic boy wrote:Yes believing that Adam lived 930 years is perfectly reasonable
http://www.godandscience.org/apologetics/longlife.html
http://www.users.bigpond.com/rdoolan/adamsage.html
If you go into a discussion "knowing the answer", regardless of what you see, you will ignore anything else that contradicts what you believe.
WM
Oh the irony of you saying that![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
WidowMakers wrote:It is really not that bad. My wife is having the biggest issue. She just can't get much sleep. Plus she has been tired a lot during the last several months anyway.Neoteny wrote:Congrats on the new little one, if you're into that kind of thing. You're a bigger person than I if you can handle one kid, much less two.
But onto the kids thing. If you don't have kids who will carry one your disgust and disagreement with Christians and their beliefs after you are gone?
I read an interesting article a while back that said liberal people (pro choice, pro gay marriage, pro evolution) are having less babies and thus having less people to pass along their ideals and beliefs. But I guess that is another thread.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Yes that was my point. I have looked at the things the atheists have said in these forums. Many of them have made me question things I believe. I have then looked over everything again. Not just looking at one little specific area of science, but the whole thing. How everything relates back to each other. And again I have come back to my beliefs.daddy1gringo wrote:joecoolfrog wrote:WidowMakers wrote:Try these.comic boy wrote:Yes believing that Adam lived 930 years is perfectly reasonable
http://www.godandscience.org/apologetics/longlife.html
http://www.users.bigpond.com/rdoolan/adamsage.html
If you go into a discussion "knowing the answer", regardless of what you see, you will ignore anything else that contradicts what you believe.
WM
Oh the irony of you saying that![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Well, I think that was his point. The stereotype is the religious people making up their minds before the facts and then looking at everything through a filter, but I think if you are honest, you have to admit that those who choose the opposite belief are not immune to this fault either.
daddy1gringo wrote:For many years, as a Christian who believes that the Bible is the revealed word of God, I believed in evolution and a figurative interpretation of Genesis. I became convinced of creationism and a literal interpretation of Genesis by the fossil record, which I believe is much more consistent with Genesis than with evolutionary theory.
joecoolfrog wrote:The truth is that most Atheists/Agnostics were brought up by parents with religious views, we have come to our conclusions about the bible from a neutral position at best,
WidowMakers wrote:Yes that was my point. I have looked at the things the atheists have said in these forums. Many of them have made me question things I believe. I have then looked over everything again. Not just looking at one little specific area of science, but the whole thing. How everything relates back to each other. And again I have come back to my beliefs.daddy1gringo wrote:joecoolfrog wrote:WidowMakers wrote:Try these.comic boy wrote:Yes believing that Adam lived 930 years is perfectly reasonable
http://www.godandscience.org/apologetics/longlife.html
http://www.users.bigpond.com/rdoolan/adamsage.html
If you go into a discussion "knowing the answer", regardless of what you see, you will ignore anything else that contradicts what you believe.
WM
Oh the irony of you saying that![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Well, I think that was his point. The stereotype is the religious people making up their minds before the facts and then looking at everything through a filter, but I think if you are honest, you have to admit that those who choose the opposite belief are not immune to this fault either.
So please don't tell me I have not looked at the other side. I have. But the "facts" of evolution are not facts at all. They do not all come together. They change to fit the needs of the time. New theories and new "facts" all the time. The bend and break all the time to "solve" the mystery of the universe.
My beliefs have not changed. They remain the same all the time. They do not change with the times. They do not need to be adjusted to fit the current culture or thoughts of man.
WM
jonesthecurl wrote:Hubble can see galaxies whose light has taken millions of years to reach us.
Discuss.
daddy1gringo wrote:As for my position on the thread subject, I spoke about it in another thread, but will say it again.
For many years, as a Christian who believes that the Bible is the revealed word of God, I believed in evolution and a figurative interpretation of Genesis. I became convinced of creationism and a literal interpretation of Genesis by the fossil record, which I believe is much more consistent with Genesis than with evolutionary theory.
I think I refute the claim, frequently and mockingly made, that creationists ignore scientific fact because it would destroy their faith. If evolution were proven, it would not trouble my faith; I would just re-adjust my opinion on the subject and return to my former belief in "theistic evolution." My faith was just fine before and would be just fine after.
Snorri1234 wrote:jonesthecurl wrote:Hubble can see galaxies whose light has taken millions of years to reach us.
Discuss.
The speed of light is a conspiracy.
jonesthecurl wrote:Hubble can see galaxies whose light has taken millions of years to reach us.
Discuss.
tzor wrote:I look forward to this discussion but before I do I just want to point out a little fact, God can neither deceive nor be deceived
tzor wrote:jonesthecurl wrote:Hubble can see galaxies whose light has taken millions of years to reach us.
Discuss.
There was a young lady so bright
She could travel much faster than light.
She left us, they say, in a relative way,
And came back on the previous night!
But in one sense we can't tell how long that the light travelled. A photon is not like a tree where you can count all the rings to see how old it is. Indeed to the point of view of the photon the universe is actually a point.
PLAYER57832 wrote:It is neither point nor wave ... but that is old science.
tzor wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:It is neither point nor wave ... but that is old science.
I wasn't talking about the photon itself. I was talking about space time dialation as one approaches the speed of light itself. When you reach c either space or time (your choice on how you want to dialate ... it's all relative) approaches and becomes 0. Twins paradox stretched ad nauseum.
Here is an interesting question: Why is the "Twins paradox" an paradox?
Users browsing this forum: ConfederateSS