natty dread wrote:Religion is the #1 cause of cognitive dissonance
and the burden of proof is on us to prove otherwise
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natty dread wrote:Religion is the #1 cause of cognitive dissonance
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"
comic boy wrote:To conlude ;
1) There is no evidence of a ' God ' being anything other than wishful thinking.
comic boy wrote:2) Player has huge conflict because she likes to think she has a logical mind so has to resort to inner denial of uncomfortable facts , this has led to statements both bizarre and clearly untrue , shame isn't it
PLAYER57832 wrote:No, Woodruff claimed that atheism was a logical position, while belief in God was not.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff, others have repeatedly claimed that Atheism is the most likley choice.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:
This is a load of self-serving horseshit. I don't have a problem with people of faith. In fact, I greatly respect a good number of people of faith. But the idea that believing in God is somehow logical is farcical nonsense. [ It requires faith, not logic.
Yes, but no more than atheism, which was the comparison.
Uh...what? "No more than atheism"? What are you talking about? I was stating that your attempt to compare atheism to religion is where the load of self-serving horseshit entered. So are you unable to follow the thread?
{sigh} someone disagrees, so you resort to insults? Thought you were above that.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Atheism IS religion, is very much based on belief.
PLAYER57832 wrote:There is no more evidence to show lack of God than God
Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:No, Woodruff claimed that atheism was a logical position, while belief in God was not.
I made no such claim at all. Quote me.
Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:comic boy wrote:Religious faith depends , amongst other things , on social, physchological and emotional factors that have little or nothing to do with probabilities,evidence or logic.
Yes, exactly like atheism and any other belief, including many that have nothing at all to do with religion.
There are absolutely probabilities, evidence and logic that poses atheism as the most reasonable.
Woodruff wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff, others have repeatedly claimed that Atheism is the most likley choice.
Do you believe that it is more likely that unicorns exist or do not exist? Support your answer.
pmchugh wrote:Player there is a fundamental difference between laying parameters on whether God exists and on whether Christianity is correct. Although I would still argue that God is not a likely possibility, Christianity is far less likely.
Has the Church claimed things to be true that have been proven wrong? Have they claimed things to be absolute morals which we now find repulsive? Can the Church use religion to control the masses?
The great irony of Christianity is it claims to have access to absolute truths, yet it has to constantly adapt to stay in touch with reality.
Symmetry wrote:pmchugh wrote:Player there is a fundamental difference between laying parameters on whether God exists and on whether Christianity is correct. Although I would still argue that God is not a likely possibility, Christianity is far less likely.
Has the Church claimed things to be true that have been proven wrong? Have they claimed things to be absolute morals which we now find repulsive? Can the Church use religion to control the masses?
The great irony of Christianity is it claims to have access to absolute truths, yet it has to constantly adapt to stay in touch with reality.
That last sentence could equally apply to science. It's worth, and I say this an atheist, listening to what religious folks actually say and accepting that there are areas where it comes down to faith.
everywhere116 wrote:Symmetry wrote:pmchugh wrote:Player there is a fundamental difference between laying parameters on whether God exists and on whether Christianity is correct. Although I would still argue that God is not a likely possibility, Christianity is far less likely.
Has the Church claimed things to be true that have been proven wrong? Have they claimed things to be absolute morals which we now find repulsive? Can the Church use religion to control the masses?
The great irony of Christianity is it claims to have access to absolute truths, yet it has to constantly adapt to stay in touch with reality.
That last sentence could equally apply to science. It's worth, and I say this an atheist, listening to what religious folks actually say and accepting that there are areas where it comes down to faith.
No scientist says they hold the absolute truth. That's contradictory to science.
Symmetry wrote:everywhere116 wrote:Symmetry wrote:pmchugh wrote:Player there is a fundamental difference between laying parameters on whether God exists and on whether Christianity is correct. Although I would still argue that God is not a likely possibility, Christianity is far less likely.
Has the Church claimed things to be true that have been proven wrong? Have they claimed things to be absolute morals which we now find repulsive? Can the Church use religion to control the masses?
The great irony of Christianity is it claims to have access to absolute truths, yet it has to constantly adapt to stay in touch with reality.
That last sentence could equally apply to science. It's worth, and I say this an atheist, listening to what religious folks actually say and accepting that there are areas where it comes down to faith.
No scientist says they hold the absolute truth. That's contradictory to science.
But having access to it via scientific method is at the heart of science. Contrariwise, most religious folk accept doubt as part of their religious belief.
pmchugh wrote:Symmetry wrote:everywhere116 wrote:Symmetry wrote:pmchugh wrote:Player there is a fundamental difference between laying parameters on whether God exists and on whether Christianity is correct. Although I would still argue that God is not a likely possibility, Christianity is far less likely.
Has the Church claimed things to be true that have been proven wrong? Have they claimed things to be absolute morals which we now find repulsive? Can the Church use religion to control the masses?
The great irony of Christianity is it claims to have access to absolute truths, yet it has to constantly adapt to stay in touch with reality.
That last sentence could equally apply to science. It's worth, and I say this an atheist, listening to what religious folks actually say and accepting that there are areas where it comes down to faith.
No scientist says they hold the absolute truth. That's contradictory to science.
But having access to it via scientific method is at the heart of science. Contrariwise, most religious folk accept doubt as part of their religious belief.
Lol fail. Science makes no claim to absolute truth ever. Even the most basic facts are defined within a frame of reference. Everything in science is questioned, religion actively prevents some things being questioned. They are in fact polar opposites.
Symmetry wrote:pmchugh wrote:Lol fail. Science makes no claim to absolute truth ever. Even the most basic facts are defined within a frame of reference. Everything in science is questioned, religion actively prevents some things being questioned. They are in fact polar opposites.
I really don't see that as being true at all. Let's take for example mathematics. Godel showed that within any system of arithmetic, there have to be certain articles taken on faith as being true for the system to rest on.
Link
pmchugh wrote:Lol fail. Science makes no claim to absolute truth ever. Even the most basic facts are defined within a frame of reference. Everything in science is questioned, religion actively prevents some things being questioned. They are in fact polar opposites.
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:pmchugh wrote:Lol fail. Science makes no claim to absolute truth ever. Even the most basic facts are defined within a frame of reference. Everything in science is questioned, religion actively prevents some things being questioned. They are in fact polar opposites.
the ironic backside of this is that religious people often cite the fact that their faith in god is a belief (which cuts short any attempts at disproving it), whereas scientists don't realize that their beliefs are just beliefs and not facts (until their "facts" are disproved).
stupidity is everywhere regardless of your worldview or beliefs.
Frigidus wrote:A distinction should be made between beliefs and theories, though. Beliefs can be completely unfounded, whereas theories rely heavily on evidence. While an individual scientist might cling to certain biases, the scientific community as a whole is interested in correctly analyzing the universe's workings. The most celebrated scientists are ones that challenged the accepted worldview.
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:Frigidus wrote:A distinction should be made between beliefs and theories, though. Beliefs can be completely unfounded, whereas theories rely heavily on evidence. While an individual scientist might cling to certain biases, the scientific community as a whole is interested in correctly analyzing the universe's workings. The most celebrated scientists are ones that challenged the accepted worldview.
i disagree; theories are beliefs because they have not been proven to any reasonable degree. they are reasonable beliefs, but beliefs nonetheless.
pmchugh wrote:Symmetry wrote:pmchugh wrote:Lol fail. Science makes no claim to absolute truth ever. Even the most basic facts are defined within a frame of reference. Everything in science is questioned, religion actively prevents some things being questioned. They are in fact polar opposites.
I really don't see that as being true at all. Let's take for example mathematics. Godel showed that within any system of arithmetic, there have to be certain articles taken on faith as being true for the system to rest on.
Link
That proves my point and is in fact what I was saying. I even considered bringing up mathematical axioms in my post.
Mathematics (the most fundamental science) admits it cannot have absolute truths and therefore creates a frame of reference to define things in.
You proved yourself almost as adept at arguing with yourself as player.
Frigidus wrote:john9blue wrote:
i disagree; theories are beliefs because they have not been proven to any reasonable degree. they are reasonable beliefs, but beliefs nonetheless.
Nothing can be proven, though. For all any of us know, our senses are not correctly registering reality. This doesn't mean that every imaginable world view is equally valid due to each one having a slim possibility of being correct.
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:Frigidus wrote:A distinction should be made between beliefs and theories, though. Beliefs can be completely unfounded, whereas theories rely heavily on evidence. While an individual scientist might cling to certain biases, the scientific community as a whole is interested in correctly analyzing the universe's workings. The most celebrated scientists are ones that challenged the accepted worldview.
i disagree; theories are beliefs because they have not been proven to any reasonable degree. they are reasonable beliefs, but beliefs nonetheless.
Symmetry wrote:pmchugh wrote:That proves my point and is in fact what I was saying. I even considered bringing up mathematical axioms in my post.
Mathematics (the most fundamental science) admits it cannot have absolute truths and therefore creates a frame of reference to define things in.
You proved yourself almost as adept at arguing with yourself as player.
Ah, I sort of wish I was back in the stages of atheism that you find yourself in. Everything seems so certain. You can pick up a book of logic based on Cicero's rhetoric and be appalled that others don't see your argument for all its worth. After all, how could they not? You pointed out the problem that thousands of years worth of theology couldn't. It's here now! The argument that destroys religion.
But still they believe. We will ignore them- that is for the best.
Or anyway, perhaps, and I'm just saying this as a suggestion, take a look at some theologians, have a look at some books about faith and doubt. Augustine is a classic. but I've really enjoyed a few books about the Desert Fathers recently- The Solace of Fierce Landscapes is great.
pmchugh wrote:Theory isn't a great word because of the double meaning, but I think frig means "a verified hypothesis". Which means it must rely on evidence and it has been proven to a reasonable degree. Scientific theory and fact are almost synonymous in this context. Even between unverified hypothesis and beliefs there is a difference and that difference is reasoning.
I would call atheism an unverifiable hypothesis and I would call Christianity a fairy tale belief.
Well done, you nicely dodged my entire post because it proves you wrong![]()
Also don't patronise me, your "sympathetic atheist" views aren't any more valid than my slightly stronger ones. Every post of yours in this thread (and others) is pro-religion, if I didn't know any better I would say you were scared of offending our precious wittle chwistians.
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"
pmchugh wrote:john9blue wrote:Frigidus wrote:A distinction should be made between beliefs and theories, though. Beliefs can be completely unfounded, whereas theories rely heavily on evidence. While an individual scientist might cling to certain biases, the scientific community as a whole is interested in correctly analyzing the universe's workings. The most celebrated scientists are ones that challenged the accepted worldview.
i disagree; theories are beliefs because they have not been proven to any reasonable degree. they are reasonable beliefs, but beliefs nonetheless.
Theory isn't a great word because of the double meaning, but I think frig means "a verified hypothesis". Which means it must rely on evidence and it has been proven to a reasonable degree. Scientific theory and fact are almost synonymous in this context. Even between unverified hypothesis and beliefs there is a difference and that difference is reasoning.
I would call atheism an unverifiable hypothesis and I would call Christianity a fairy tale belief.Symmetry wrote:pmchugh wrote:That proves my point and is in fact what I was saying. I even considered bringing up mathematical axioms in my post.
Mathematics (the most fundamental science) admits it cannot have absolute truths and therefore creates a frame of reference to define things in.
You proved yourself almost as adept at arguing with yourself as player.
Ah, I sort of wish I was back in the stages of atheism that you find yourself in. Everything seems so certain. You can pick up a book of logic based on Cicero's rhetoric and be appalled that others don't see your argument for all its worth. After all, how could they not? You pointed out the problem that thousands of years worth of theology couldn't. It's here now! The argument that destroys religion.
But still they believe. We will ignore them- that is for the best.
Or anyway, perhaps, and I'm just saying this as a suggestion, take a look at some theologians, have a look at some books about faith and doubt. Augustine is a classic. but I've really enjoyed a few books about the Desert Fathers recently- The Solace of Fierce Landscapes is great.
Well done, you nicely dodged my entire post because it proves you wrong![]()
Also don't patronise me, your "sympathetic atheist" views aren't any more valid than my slightly stronger ones. Every post of yours in this thread (and others) is pro-religion, if I didn't know any better I would say you were scared of offending our precious wittle chwistians.
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