zimmah wrote:natty_dread wrote:The fallacy is assuming that since we can't know anything for 100% sure, then everything is equally possible. This isn't so. Even though anything we know today may be refuted in the future, and current theories will be made more accurate, it is not a reason to discount current knowledge, because it's still the best knowledge we have. And if we discard the current knowledge, there's no way to get to those future discoveries.
but if you're anxious holding onto a belief just because that's the current knowledge and the most accurate you have, without looking beyond that point, you end up being wrong all the time. That's why it's important to keep looking forward, and actually inspect if other statements are true. instead of just assuming you're right all the time.
How does religion "not look beyond that point"? How does religion "keep looking forward, actually inspecting if other statements are true"? How does religion avoid "just assuming you're right all the time"? Because I gotta tell you, science makes religion look foolish in all three of those domains.
zimmah wrote:@Haggis if you ask the question like that everyone would choose 2. however judging by your previous posts and the posts of everyone else in this topic i would say you actually believe:
3) I know there s no god and somehow everything just appeared out of thin air and everything worked perfectly fine and balanced, and even though it's an universal law that when something is not maintained it will decay, we still believe the universe and the laws of the universe just randomly appeared.
Then you're not paying very close attention, because I have explicitly stated that I do not believe that.
zimmah wrote:now THAT would that a lot of faith to believe. yet, it seems a lot of people actually believe that.
I don't know a single individual that believes that. Not a single individual.




























































































