you don't need to talk about the universe to understand the concept of a higher power.
Then the power you speak of is not high at all
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you don't need to talk about the universe to understand the concept of a higher power.




























Haggis_McMutton wrote:zimmah wrote:Haggis_McMutton wrote:zimmah wrote:there's no way to 'prove' god exists, nor is there a way to 'prove' he doesn't. but there's just so much that science and evolution can not explain, while the bible can explain it, that to me the only logical explanation is that there is a god.
Here's the two options on approaching unexplainable fact X.
1. We don't yet know how X happens, maybe we'll figure it out in the future, maybe not.
2. God did X. I can't explain God though, I just know he did X.
Why are you so afraid of saying "I don't know" that you must invent an omnipotent being just to avoid admitting your lack of knowledge?
why are you so afraid of believing there is a god, does it hurt you or anyone to believe in our creator?
1. Nice deflection of my question.
2. I don't belive in god for the same reason I don't believe in Allah, in black cats causing bad luck and in The Loch Ness Monster. Do you think I'm afraid of believing in all of those things?
3. Yes it does. Irrationality breeds all sorts of problems. Can you really not think of instances where belief in gods has led to suffering?


































natty_dread wrote:But what is it that science can't explain?
People always tell me "there are things that science can't explain", I just wonder what those things are, specifically...




















natty_dread wrote:But what is it that science can't explain?
People always tell me "there are things that science can't explain", I just wonder what those things are, specifically...






zimmah wrote:you could call me irrational but i could call you irrational for the same reasons.
this whole discussion is pointless though so i don't even know why i should even try to answer, you're all ignorant anyway.
might as well rename the tread "bash on religious people #45"












zimmah wrote:the creation of life, the purpose of life, what life is in the first place,
zimmah wrote:in fact science can only explain some laws of the universe and things we can observe. nothing more.
Ray Rider wrote:There are many things that cannot be scientifically proven but which we are rational to accept:
1. Logical and mathematical proofs cannot be proven by science; science presupposes logic and math so to try to prove them by science would be arguing in a circle.
Ray Rider wrote:2. Metaphysical truths such as "There are other minds besides my own" or that the external world is real, etc.
Ray Rider wrote:3. Ethical beliefs about statements of value are not accessible by the scientific method. You can't show by science whether the Nazi scientists in the death camps did anything evil as opposed to the scientists in Western democracies.
Ray Rider wrote:4. Aesthetic judgments cannot be accessed by the scientific method because the beautiful--like the good--cannot be proven.
Ray Rider wrote:5. Science itself cannot be justified by the scientific method; science is permeated with unproveable assumptions e.g. in the special theory of relativity, the whole theory hinges on the assumption that the speed of light is constant in a one-way direction between any two points but that strictly cannot be proven, we simply have to assume that in order to hold to the theory.














Lootifer wrote:Why did we start a new thread, couldnt we have bumped one of the old ones?!

















j9b wrote:which is why religion falls under the umbrella of science





zimmah wrote:DJ Teflon wrote:by the time the bible was written there were no english dictionaries yet. the interpretation of the word immortal, among many other words that are used in the bible can only be known by comparing it to how the bible describes those words and the context the words are in.
And herein lies humanity's problem with understanding the divine, if there is such a thing.
Words are designed to describe human concepts. They are pretty bad at doing that.
Words aren't going to describe the universe when the people speaking cannot understand the universe.
And here endeth the non-lesson of ignorance.
you don't need to talk about the universe to understand the concept of a higher power.
there's no way to 'prove' god exists, nor is there a way to 'prove' he doesn't. but there's just so much that science and evolution can not explain, while the bible can explain it, that to me the only logical explanation is that there is a god.










zimmah wrote:Haggis_McMutton wrote:zimmah wrote:there's no way to 'prove' god exists, nor is there a way to 'prove' he doesn't. but there's just so much that science and evolution can not explain, while the bible can explain it, that to me the only logical explanation is that there is a god.
Here's the two options on approaching unexplainable fact X.
1. We don't yet know how X happens, maybe we'll figure it out in the future, maybe not.
2. God did X. I can't explain God though, I just know he did X.
Why are you so afraid of saying "I don't know" that you must invent an omnipotent being just to avoid admitting your lack of knowledge?
why are you so afraid of believing there is a god, does it hurt you or anyone to believe in our creator?
zimmah wrote:natty_dread wrote:But what is it that science can't explain?
People always tell me "there are things that science can't explain", I just wonder what those things are, specifically...
a lot of things, and you know it.
the creation of life, the purpose of life, what life is in the first place, in fact science can only explain some laws of the universe and things we can observe. nothing more. and even then the theories are often incomplete and not fully understood.
you'd be faster if you tried to make a list of things science can explain.










john9blue wrote:zimmah, there is a difference between "can not explain" and "has not yet explained"
science theoretically can explain just about everything. religion can explain some of the same things that science can, which is why religion falls under the umbrella of science










natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"








john9blue wrote:religion: using information to draw conclusions about the universe
science: using information to draw conclusions about the universe












zimmah wrote:Haggis_McMutton wrote:zimmah wrote:there's no way to 'prove' god exists, nor is there a way to 'prove' he doesn't. but there's just so much that science and evolution can not explain, while the bible can explain it, that to me the only logical explanation is that there is a god.
Here's the two options on approaching unexplainable fact X.
1. We don't yet know how X happens, maybe we'll figure it out in the future, maybe not.
2. God did X. I can't explain God though, I just know he did X.
Why are you so afraid of saying "I don't know" that you must invent an omnipotent being just to avoid admitting your lack of knowledge?
why are you so afraid of believing there is a god, does it hurt you or anyone to believe in our creator?












Haggis_McMutton wrote:zimmah wrote:you could call me irrational but i could call you irrational for the same reasons.
this whole discussion is pointless though so i don't even know why i should even try to answer, you're all ignorant anyway.
might as well rename the tread "bash on religious people #45"
I provided reasoning for why I believe you're being irrational, you didn't.
Why is it that engaging in debate is "bashing on religious people"?
Are their beliefs so fragile that we need to tiptoe around them?
If you can't justify or explain one of your beliefs, maybe it's time to re-examine it.




















natty_dread wrote:zimmah wrote:the creation of life, the purpose of life, what life is in the first place,
The "creation" of life has been explained by science, it's called abiogenesis.
The "purpose" of life is a debatable concept in the first place - who says life has a "purpose"?
As for what life is - this is just a matter of definition, life is what we decide it is.zimmah wrote:in fact science can only explain some laws of the universe and things we can observe. nothing more.
What else is there? If there are things we cannot observe, how do we know those things... are?Ray Rider wrote:There are many things that cannot be scientifically proven but which we are rational to accept:
1. Logical and mathematical proofs cannot be proven by science; science presupposes logic and math so to try to prove them by science would be arguing in a circle.
Incorrect: logic and mathematics are both sciences.Ray Rider wrote:2. Metaphysical truths such as "There are other minds besides my own" or that the external world is real, etc.
I'll concede that, nothing can really answer those kinds of questions though.Ray Rider wrote:3. Ethical beliefs about statements of value are not accessible by the scientific method. You can't show by science whether the Nazi scientists in the death camps did anything evil as opposed to the scientists in Western democracies.
Well, since the concept of what is "wrong" or "evil" is entirely subjective, I think this is another thing that cannot be objectively explained.Ray Rider wrote:4. Aesthetic judgments cannot be accessed by the scientific method because the beautiful--like the good--cannot be proven.
Same as above - subjective.Ray Rider wrote:5. Science itself cannot be justified by the scientific method; science is permeated with unproveable assumptions e.g. in the special theory of relativity, the whole theory hinges on the assumption that the speed of light is constant in a one-way direction between any two points but that strictly cannot be proven, we simply have to assume that in order to hold to the theory.
I really have no idea where you're going with this one.
To be termed scientific, a method of inquiry must be based on gathering empirical and measurable evidence subject to specific principles of reasoning. The Oxford English Dictionary says that scientific method is: "a method or procedure that has characterized natural science since the 17th century, consisting in systematic observation, measurement, and experiment, and the formulation, testing, and modification of hypotheses.




















Woodruff wrote:zimmah wrote:DJ Teflon wrote:by the time the bible was written there were no english dictionaries yet. the interpretation of the word immortal, among many other words that are used in the bible can only be known by comparing it to how the bible describes those words and the context the words are in.
And herein lies humanity's problem with understanding the divine, if there is such a thing.
Words are designed to describe human concepts. They are pretty bad at doing that.
Words aren't going to describe the universe when the people speaking cannot understand the universe.
And here endeth the non-lesson of ignorance.
you don't need to talk about the universe to understand the concept of a higher power.
there's no way to 'prove' god exists, nor is there a way to 'prove' he doesn't. but there's just so much that science and evolution can not explain, while the bible can explain it, that to me the only logical explanation is that there is a god.
That doesn't seem like a sound justification for believing, in my view. I'm pretty darn sure that thegreekdog, BigBallinStalin, pimpdave and myself could get together and write a hell of a book that explains the existence of everything (42, by the way).




















Woodruff wrote:zimmah wrote:Haggis_McMutton wrote:zimmah wrote:there's no way to 'prove' god exists, nor is there a way to 'prove' he doesn't. but there's just so much that science and evolution can not explain, while the bible can explain it, that to me the only logical explanation is that there is a god.
Here's the two options on approaching unexplainable fact X.
1. We don't yet know how X happens, maybe we'll figure it out in the future, maybe not.
2. God did X. I can't explain God though, I just know he did X.
Why are you so afraid of saying "I don't know" that you must invent an omnipotent being just to avoid admitting your lack of knowledge?
why are you so afraid of believing there is a god, does it hurt you or anyone to believe in our creator?
What's the point? I don't mean that in a smart-ass way...I mean it as a serious question.zimmah wrote:natty_dread wrote:But what is it that science can't explain?
People always tell me "there are things that science can't explain", I just wonder what those things are, specifically...
a lot of things, and you know it.
the creation of life, the purpose of life, what life is in the first place, in fact science can only explain some laws of the universe and things we can observe. nothing more. and even then the theories are often incomplete and not fully understood.
you'd be faster if you tried to make a list of things science can explain.
Science is VERY CLOSE to creating life, you realize...right?
Science is VERY CLOSE to creating life, you realize...right?




















chang50 wrote:zimmah wrote:Haggis_McMutton wrote:zimmah wrote:there's no way to 'prove' god exists, nor is there a way to 'prove' he doesn't. but there's just so much that science and evolution can not explain, while the bible can explain it, that to me the only logical explanation is that there is a god.
Here's the two options on approaching unexplainable fact X.
1. We don't yet know how X happens, maybe we'll figure it out in the future, maybe not.
2. God did X. I can't explain God though, I just know he did X.
Why are you so afraid of saying "I don't know" that you must invent an omnipotent being just to avoid admitting your lack of knowledge?
why are you so afraid of believing there is a god, does it hurt you or anyone to believe in our creator?
It's when people act on their beliefs that the hurting starts,if theists truly think they have possession of some wonderful truth denied to people like me why can't they just be happy with that.Why is it you can't be happy until I believe too?




















john9blue wrote:religion: using information to draw conclusions about the universe
science: using information to draw conclusions about the universe










zimmah wrote:Woodruff wrote:zimmah wrote:DJ Teflon wrote:by the time the bible was written there were no english dictionaries yet. the interpretation of the word immortal, among many other words that are used in the bible can only be known by comparing it to how the bible describes those words and the context the words are in.
And herein lies humanity's problem with understanding the divine, if there is such a thing.
Words are designed to describe human concepts. They are pretty bad at doing that.
Words aren't going to describe the universe when the people speaking cannot understand the universe.
And here endeth the non-lesson of ignorance.
you don't need to talk about the universe to understand the concept of a higher power.
there's no way to 'prove' god exists, nor is there a way to 'prove' he doesn't. but there's just so much that science and evolution can not explain, while the bible can explain it, that to me the only logical explanation is that there is a god.
That doesn't seem like a sound justification for believing, in my view. I'm pretty darn sure that thegreekdog, BigBallinStalin, pimpdave and myself could get together and write a hell of a book that explains the existence of everything (42, by the way).
writing a book is not science.










natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"








zimmah wrote:abiogenesis is just a theory
zimmah wrote:just a theory
zimmah wrote:and it makes just about as much sense as believing in a god. or probably even less. i mean, life created out of nothing? really? in fact, untill now, science has only proven that abiogenesis is IMPOSSABLE.
zimmah wrote:why is that?
zimmah wrote:all experiments thusfar have proven that life can not be created from inanimate objects, so why do you keep insisting that science proved otherwise?
zimmah wrote:and even IF for some reason scienteists can create life from nothing (which i highly doubt in the first place) then what does the scientist represent in the experiment?














natty_dread wrote:zimmah wrote:abiogenesis is just a theoryzimmah wrote:just a theory
Just a framework that explains observed phenomenon, you say?




















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