Quoting Haunted from 11:45, 16th Aug 2007
[...] for example if you are born in september you are more likely to be a sporting person. [...] That is not astrology.
It is not astrology as either the astrologers nor the social scientists would think of it, but it does have parallels. Things don't spring from nowhere: these oddities often have some truth in them, and this little kernel
could be where the concept of astrology came from, in an attempt to understand why people born in September were better at goat herding, or whatever.
There will always be errors associated with facts (dates in the above case).
Ok, we can agree on this.
Bearing in mind that all divinity disagrees with all other divinity, proof of islam is surely disproof of judaism (and vice versa)?
Not necessarily. To draw parallels, recall the historical argument over the Hubble constant. One group said it was 50 +/- 20, the other said it was 100 +/- 20. The two are mutually exclusive (at least at the 1-sigma level), and "proof" of one
would disprove the other, yet at the same time we can say that the value is unlikely to be of order 150000. There are enough parallels between Islam and Judaism that they can be likened to the "50" and "100", whereas atheism takes a completely different viewpoint, so is more akin to the "150000".
I don't think you can apply a term such as non-neglible here. Yes it's hard to quantify, but the sum of all data we have gathered shows no god(s) nor need for them. That's alot of data. We can discount 'revealed' testimonies because the evidence against them being legitimate is overwhelming.
You cannot say that the sum of all data shows no god(s). You can say that most of the relevant data shows that god(s) needs not exist, and by implication there are no god(s), but this is not the same thing. It comes back down to the weights one applies.
To take an example from astrophysics again, the age of some globular clusters has been consistently estimated to be greater than the age of the Universe. This can be counted as evidence against the Big Bang model and, by implication, evidence for the "God model". Realistically it most likely comes down to our errors in the cosmological parameters and stellar evolutionary theory, but you cannot say it is evidence against god(s).
You should email the author of the paper and point it out. That's what we did.
It's hard when they're dead - we're working on a note. My point is that our knowledge today is not absolute and is generally less certain than it is proported to be. (e.g. MOND theories are undermining dark matter with some limited success).
This is true. But my views are falsiable (as should everyones). For example, find me a rabbit fossil that dates to incontravertably to the pre-cambrian era and I'll throw my hands and say "we've got it wrong" (about evolution). I'm open to new evidence, and will change according to the new (better) theory, which is how it should be.
As are we all, I hope. Here, though, you presume that God(s) and evolution are incompatible. Many people believe in both. As long as you are not being hard-line about one particular religion, it's not hard to envisage a scenario where a god kickstarts the whole process and lets it run.
You will undoubtedly look on this as a "God of the gaps" problem, but that is only based on the evidence you have and the preconceptions that go along with both that and your own upbringing. We all suffer from this, hence why we are having this debate.
Again, I find myself looking for the kernel of truth in the God argument. It's comparable in some ways to the 19th Century "Ether" that permeated space, which was conceived on the basis that light must have a medium to travel in, based on the theoreticians' incomplete knowledge and preconceptions (the kernel in this argument being that it has been revived as a "fifth dimension" - see Michio Kaku's
Hyperspace for a good read).
Now you can look at this two ways: either God was created by man in his own image, based on man's incomplete knowledge and preconceptions; alternatively, man was created by God and we don't see the evidence, again based on man's incomplete knowledge and preconceptions. Either way, (a) (wo)man cannot have an objective view. And either way, there may be some truth in the argument: even pathological liars construct their lies around base truths.
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...then again, that is only my opinion.
...then again, that is only my opinion.