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mrswdk wrote:Maybe he's incompetent.
Metsfanmax wrote:_sabotage_ wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:_sabotage_ wrote:The laws support intelligent design 100%, they support random design 0.000000000000000000000000000000001%.
The problem with this statement is that you can construct any unfalsifiable scenario and then claim that the evidence supports it 100%. If my theory is that the planets orbit the Sun because of invisible fairies that push them in slightly elliptical orbits, and I posit a set of fairies that perfectly explains the observed orbits, then I can say "the laws support fairy design 100%." Yes, it's true -- but you haven't actually explained anything.
Its not a scenario, unless you believe you don't exist. Unfortunately you are saying this to someone who does believe he exists and can observe why this is so.
You are right, science is a story until a better one comes along, and explaining the fact that the laws coincide to create our existence is random isn't a good story based on observable facts, so back to the drawing board with you lot. Don't worry, I'm sure you are smearing God to people regardless of the poor quality story you tell, but if you want some of the sounder souls, then you have your work cut out for you. I would try to work with observable and provable facts, going against the scientific method is a bit hypocritical.
You can't speak of statistics with a sample size of one. Your argument is, essentially, that if certain physical parameters had been slightly different (say, the fine structure constant), then life would not be supported. This is true. What is not true is to say that anyone is attributing this to random chance. No one is really arguing that there's some random number generator in the sky, and in the one universe that exists it just happened to land on the right parameters for a universe that supports life. A better way to think about our existence might be the anthropic principle. There are potentially a very large -- or infinite -- number of universes out there, and we are in the one that supports life because it's the one that supports life.
_sabotage_ wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:_sabotage_ wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:_sabotage_ wrote:The laws support intelligent design 100%, they support random design 0.000000000000000000000000000000001%.
The problem with this statement is that you can construct any unfalsifiable scenario and then claim that the evidence supports it 100%. If my theory is that the planets orbit the Sun because of invisible fairies that push them in slightly elliptical orbits, and I posit a set of fairies that perfectly explains the observed orbits, then I can say "the laws support fairy design 100%." Yes, it's true -- but you haven't actually explained anything.
Its not a scenario, unless you believe you don't exist. Unfortunately you are saying this to someone who does believe he exists and can observe why this is so.
You are right, science is a story until a better one comes along, and explaining the fact that the laws coincide to create our existence is random isn't a good story based on observable facts, so back to the drawing board with you lot. Don't worry, I'm sure you are smearing God to people regardless of the poor quality story you tell, but if you want some of the sounder souls, then you have your work cut out for you. I would try to work with observable and provable facts, going against the scientific method is a bit hypocritical.
You can't speak of statistics with a sample size of one. Your argument is, essentially, that if certain physical parameters had been slightly different (say, the fine structure constant), then life would not be supported. This is true. What is not true is to say that anyone is attributing this to random chance. No one is really arguing that there's some random number generator in the sky, and in the one universe that exists it just happened to land on the right parameters for a universe that supports life. A better way to think about our existence might be the anthropic principle. There are potentially a very large -- or infinite -- number of universes out there, and we are in the one that supports life because it's the one that supports life.
You can't talk about multiple universes if you can not observe them. You are actually directly suggesting a random number generator in the sky. And this is your theories only basis to support the unlikely chance at life. It's an unobserved, imagined premise. It is not scientific.
_sabotage_ wrote:That with my unobserved imagined God I am to respect life and not harm it; with your big bangs, it is necessary to struggle to survive and ensure your survival at the expense of others.
_sabotage_ wrote:No my argument is that it's better because it only relies on scientifically verified proof, it provides a better story than yours does, allows for a better society and has a happy ending.
If God exists as an omnipresent reality, then he is the vessel of your soul regardless of how your soul feels. In harming you physically, I am doing nothing to your soul but merely harming the vessel. I am harming God. On the other hand, if I am deceiving you to the harm of your soul, then I am harming you, a creation of God. God created us all equally and I have no right to claim myself beyond his judgement on the equality of all.
You inviting me to a BBQ?
universalchiro wrote:universalchiro wrote:The mouths of all rivers from around the globe, only have approximately 4,500 years worth of deposits. If the Continents were formed 120 million years ago as evolutionist believe, then why aren't there a sufficient amount of sediment deposits flowing from the mouths of rivers into the oceans/gulfs/seas to support this very old age. Why is there only about 4,500 years worth of sediment deposits?
In addition, as the continents broke apart and South America broke apart from Africa, why doesn't the amazon leave a trail of deposit? And like wise the Mississippi river as well?
I hear ya'll saying that I'm wrong and your evidence authenticating I'm wrong ranges from I'm crazy, just avoid this thread, or just because, and with some attempt at logic with ocean currents eroding the proof of millions of years of sediment deposit , to dynamic rivers such that the mouth of the river changed locations.
??universalchiro wrote:But if you look at a picture of the continents with the water removed, you will see a continental shelf. They are smooth,
???universalchiro wrote:But if you look at a picture of the continents with the water removed, you will see a continental shelf.so if the mouth changed location , NASA would detect that. But the delta fan deposits of all the rivers in all the world flowing into all the oceans/gulf/seas only has enough sediment deposits for roughly 4,500 years worth of deposits.
I would have to look at the Geological records, but I don't think that either of those rivers existed at that time. I believe they came about later. I definitely might be wrong on that, but since this comes only after the above questions, I am not going to get into it. First things first.universalchiro wrote: I believe in Pangea that the continents at one time fit together, but as they slowly drifted apart wouldn't the Congo liver leave some residual trail on the ocean floor, wouldn't the Amazon leave some deposit trail on the ocean floor? Ocean currents or not, there would be a deposit trail. Unless the continent separation happened quickly.
universalchiro wrote:Do you think its possible that the continental drift had an early acceleration and now a slow drift? Wouldn't this be a more plausible explanation of why the lack of sediment deposits?
universalchiro wrote:betiko wrote:universalchiro wrote:hotfire wrote:perhaps u failed to read that land for the state of mississippi is actually old river deposit from the river of mississippi...is that part of the 4500 year old sample or does the 4500 year old sample not contain that portion of deposit?
Valid question: I hear you, it's understood that the banks of the Mississippi has portions of increase from the Mississippi River sediment deposits, and it is plausible that the Mississippi exited out of Mississippi in the past, but the satellite images show there is still not enough sediment to establish an old age in geological terms.
The estimated age with the amount of deposit and rate of deposit is approximately 4,500 years. Indicating the continents formed not so long ago. Hope that helps.
Let s assume you are right and rivers like the mississippi, the nile or the rhein are approximately 4500. How do you jump from this to "continents formed not so long ago"? If those rivers weren t there then the continents never existed?? How far back can can we go regarding egyptian artefacts found around the nile? And we are just talking about the egyptians.
Prior to the continents being formed, Pangea existed. So my contention is that mankind lived during Pangea, why is it a problem to find human artifacts older than earth's oldest river? It's not.
betiko wrote:universalchiro wrote:betiko wrote:universalchiro wrote:hotfire wrote:perhaps u failed to read that land for the state of mississippi is actually old river deposit from the river of mississippi...is that part of the 4500 year old sample or does the 4500 year old sample not contain that portion of deposit?
Valid question: I hear you, it's understood that the banks of the Mississippi has portions of increase from the Mississippi River sediment deposits, and it is plausible that the Mississippi exited out of Mississippi in the past, but the satellite images show there is still not enough sediment to establish an old age in geological terms.
The estimated age with the amount of deposit and rate of deposit is approximately 4,500 years. Indicating the continents formed not so long ago. Hope that helps.
Let s assume you are right and rivers like the mississippi, the nile or the rhein are approximately 4500. How do you jump from this to "continents formed not so long ago"? If those rivers weren t there then the continents never existed?? How far back can can we go regarding egyptian artefacts found around the nile? And we are just talking about the egyptians.
Prior to the continents being formed, Pangea existed. So my contention is that mankind lived during Pangea, why is it a problem to find human artifacts older than earth's oldest river? It's not.
Prior to the Continents being formed, Pangea existed. So since the land that separated from Pangea existed already, why is it a problem for the land of the Continents to be older than the oldest river? It's not.
I agree, that if the Continents aren't there, then the rivers aren't there. The rivers have to come after the land is there. This seems too obvious to miss, but you gave it a double question mark, as though you interpret that's what I think. But you've missed the intent of the thread.
Evolutionist believe that the continents are 120 million years old, but ask yourself, why wouldn't there be rivers that have deposited sediment into the deltas, that exceed approximately 4,500 years?
As the Continents broke apart from Pangea 120million years ago (allegedly), then as they slowly moved away, the rivers that deposited sediment on the ocean floor, would have left a trail indicating where they were and origin. There should be a trail from the Amazon river to the Mid-Atlantic ridge. And a trail from the Congo River to the Mid-Atlantic ridge. It's not there. But what is there are multiple scars on the Atlantic ocean floor of what looks like stretch marks indicating violent and sudden movement.
My contention is that since the deltas of all rivers on earth do not have enough sediment to exceed roughly 4,500 years, and no river left it's trail of sediment deposit as Pangea broke apart, then the logical conclusion is that Pangea broke apart quickly. As in potentially 1 year, rather than the estimated 120 million years that evolutionist purport.
This is observable and testable evidence that any layman can search out for themselves.
Ask yourself, if the Continents really are 120 million years old, why isn't there enough delta sediment to support this hypothesis anywhere on the planet.
you aren't making any sense here. Where do rivers come from? hum? so when you had pangea you think those rivers existed? rivers come mainly from melting snow in mountains. where do mountains come from? tectonic plates derivation and crash between themselves.
You start with asteroids and other floating elements after the big bang that start adding up together due to gravitation, creating lots of heat and forces. this eventually evolves into a sphere with a very hot core, being itself under the influence of the sun's gravitation. At some point, an ice comet hits it with a huge impact. this makes a lot of debris that add up togeter and become the moon. Meanwhile, the surface of the earth globe find itself under the water, with just 20% or so out of it. the crust is then subject to several forces due to the core and mantle geothermic activity. Eventually, an athmosphere is created, and the earth generates enough gravity to hold it. Lots of luck for everything of course, but as already said; sometimes impossible rolls happen on CC everyone complains about it!
_sabotage_ wrote:Mets,
The sun is absorbed by the plant, which is eaten by the animal, which other animals eat.
God is in all these things and this is how he transfers energy to sustain life. In all things, He is the teacher. If we observe him closely, then we will excel, but that is the stumbling block because the profits are in control of scarcity and man has his own desires.
You are supposed to be an environmentalist(?), whose environment are you saving, the playground for the rich or the home of mankind?
_sabotage_ wrote:Mets,
The sun is absorbed by the plant, which is eaten by the animal, which other animals eat. God is in all these things and this is how he transfers energy to sustain life. In all things, He is the teacher. If we observe him closely, then we will excel, but that is the stumbling block because the profits are in control of scarcity and man has his own desires.
You are supposed to be an environmentalist(?), whose environment are you saving, the playground for the rich or the home of mankind?
_sabotage_ wrote:Mets,
The sun is absorbed by the plant, which is eaten by the animal, which other animals eat. God is in all these things and this is how he transfers energy to sustain life. In all things, He is the teacher. If we observe him closely, then we will excel, but that is the stumbling block because the profits are in control of scarcity and man has his own desires.
You are supposed to be an environmentalist(?), whose environment are you saving, the playground for the rich or the home of mankind?
_sabotage_ wrote:Mets,
Respecting life is recognizing something's function and making the best use of it in all the things we can consider.
Letting Monsanto cover the world in roundup and then monopolizing our seeds does not appear to "observe God closely" as we would see we are messing with his natural balance. Observing how God enables plants to excel allows us to green the deserts, live in comfort from the land and energy he provides us, to make suitable habitats for our animals and us with minimum labor to ourselves, so that life may flourish and we may enjoy its abundance. So that all may flourish and enjoy its abundance for abundance was the gift of God and scarcity a tool of deceit.
BigBallinStalin wrote:_sabotage_ wrote:Mets,
The sun is absorbed by the plant, which is eaten by the animal, which other animals eat. God is in all these things and this is how he transfers energy to sustain life. In all things, He is the teacher. If we observe him closely, then we will excel, but that is the stumbling block because the profits are in control of scarcity and man has his own desires.
You are supposed to be an environmentalist(?), whose environment are you saving, the playground for the rich or the home of mankind?
So, definition of God:
He is in the sun, plants, herbivores, and carnivores.
He transfers life-sustaining energy.
He is a teacher (certificate unknown).
What about the "supreme being" of Hinduism? That's pretty much everywhere as well.
1. How can you tell if you're praising a Hindu concept or a Judeo-Christian/sabotagian concept?
2. I transferred life-sustaining potential energy to the plants outside (compost). Am I God? or am I one-third God?
2b. I forget my random lecture on how the human body breaks down food in order to create energy, (I think ATP is involved--hory shit, it is: http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hb ... y/atp.html).
Therefore, ATP is God, or two-thirds God, right?
3. Being a teacher doesn't really make one God--unless you want to apply that to all teachers, or specify how exactly GOd, the teacher, is different from the other teachers.
Then there's: "is God teaching, or are you imposing your beliefs on a process, which you then label as, "ah, God is teaching me." Aren't you just teaching yourself, or learning from everyday happenings?
For example, reading about ATP has taught me much. ATP is a teacher; therefore, ATP is God--except in the Sun. That's the ATP-God off-limits zone.
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