Quoting novium from 22:47, 11th Aug 2007
Except your perceptions of the universe are completely shaped by your innate (and yes, societal) biases. So it's a bit of a circle, isn't it? What you can detect and attempt to explain is limited to a)those things we are capable of detecting (directly or indirectly) and b)those things our minds are capable of conceiving.
Science does not seek to answer "what does it all mean"... it's foolish to pretend that it does. Gravity may be a fact, but that does not make it a Truth. It's an observable phenomenon, granted. It exists, it can be measured...but it has no meaning, in and of itself.
history (etc) cannot be a science:
(imagine a physicist who did not seek out the law of falling bodies but talked about falls and their "causes”)
Quoting novium from 22:47, 11th Aug 2007
"History does not repeat itself, and is only the history of variations; men will tell of the 1914 war, but not of the war as a phenomenon. (imagine a physicist who did not seek out the law of falling bodies but talked about falls and their "causes”)".
Quoting munchingfoo from 12:15, 12th Aug 2007
I know its a cliche, but most have some basis in fact: "It appears that history is repeating itself".
Some things that tend to repeat:
Fashion
Rise and Fall of Empires(or super-powers today)
If War then increased rate of learning/innovation.
I was always told at school that the main reason to study history was to learn from our mistakes/successes. If history never repeats itself why would we want to learn from our mistakes?
So the first half of the quote is pretty much rubbish.
The second half, again so.
Consider how the scientist comes to the conclusion of the law of falling bodies. He first considers individual falls and their causes and somewhere along the line he has a eureka moment.
Someone somewhere had first to make the connection that falling bodies were related. (but also the fact that on earth they are sometimes also unrelated due to friction)
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Tired Freudian references aside - your mother played my mighty skin flute like a surf crowned sea nymph trying to rouse Poseidon from his watery slumber!
Quoting campbell from 14:32, 12th Aug 2007
see? i told you atheists were arrogant!
christian view - look at the world, god is obvious
atheist view - look at the findings of science, lack of god is obvious.
i think it is the assumption that human beings can ever actually access the truth about anything that makes these stances so flawed. this happens in everything but agnosticism, and probably most so in atheism. atheism is such an easy way out, easy to defend but ultimately just a knee-jerk reaction against religion.
the actual reaction should be to oppose religion by countering its dogma and reluctance to adapt, not just re-enacting these qualities as some high and mighty arsehole.
also, like a lot of feminists, many atheists tend to assume that their stance is somehow global, a developed truth, rather than just another product of sheltered westernism and a lack of understanding about how human beings actually function.
ps, to whoever mentioned occam's razor... it is absolute, complete shite, surely? the simplest explanation is clearly not always right. If it is, then the moon landings were faked, quantum physics would not exist, etc etc
Quoting Haunted from 11:42, 12th Aug 2007
A)The self is only capable of using the detecting equipment it has been endowed with. You and I can't see muons nor can we hear a black hole. Which is why we build devices which can.
Something is only incapable of being detected if it has no effect on nor interacts with anything. Such can thing's can be said to 'not exist'. I realise this opens to hole to "ah but what if they did? science wouldn't tell you if they did!', yes and neither would poetry. It's the same issue as that of god, people cling to it because there is no absolute disproof. If something cannot detected then it is not part of the physical universe and can quite easily dismissed as non-existant.
Perception is a difficult issue. No one is capable of picturing what an atom looks like, nor how an electron travels through spacetime. But we can still understand their behaviour and how they interact with the universe. Such understanding led to the invention of semi-conductors. So I'm not claiming to 'know what the universe looks like, simply that the only thing capable of such a thing is, and always has been, physics.Science does not seek to answer "what does it all mean"... it's foolish to pretend that it does. Gravity may be a fact, but that does not make it a Truth. It's an observable phenomenon, granted. It exists, it can be measured...but it has no meaning, in and of itself.
2)Why must gravity have a meaning? Why must anything have a meaning? Such illogical thinking quickly leads to purpose, intent and creator. Nonsense. I am defining truth as that which is true. Gravity is the effect of bent spacetime, true. There's nothing personal about truth in this sense.history (etc) cannot be a science:
You'll get no arguement from me here.(imagine a physicist who did not seek out the law of falling bodies but talked about falls and their "causes”)
So the physiscist couldn't tell you why those people got killed? Is that what your meaning?
Fair enough I would say.
Though the brain and how it works is slowly unfolding before us. Technologies exist which can read thoughts to a limited degree. All your thoughts and feelings are physical manifestations in the brain, and they can be detected.
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Now with 100% more corn
Quoting Alistair from 16:05, 11th Aug 2007
Secondly, evidence for God: Big Bang, constants of physics, sound, light, matter, life... I realise they don't require a god in one sense. But on the other hand they must have come from somewhere.
...This doesn't explain where that four dimensional space comes from.
...where did the laws of nature come from?...
Quoting gealle from 23:24, 11th Aug 2007
Novium. They're scientists. Don't waste your breath, my dear. Give your time to people with souls.
Quoting campbell from 14:32, 12th Aug 2007
ps, to whoever mentioned occam's razor... it is absolute, complete shite, surely? the simplest explanation is clearly not always right. If it is, then the moon landings were faked, quantum physics would not exist, etc etc
Quoting Senethro from 15:49, 12th Aug 2007 False equivalency surely.
If you can show some evidence for... oh, I'll give you a nice easy broad target. Anything supernatural. Otherwise, the christians are believing without evidence. How can that be less or equally arrogant as atheists?
Why are you trying to trivialise atheism? In what sense does being knee-jerk (assuming this to be true, detract from it? In what sense is atheism easy?
If you don't believe in theology, why debate using it?
Are you arguing again'st atheism by saying it isn't multicultural enough?
Way to state the obvious. I'm sure we're all well aware of the limitations of occams. Now demonstrate how this limitation means we shouldn't use it at all.
the actual reaction should be to oppose religion by countering its dogma and reluctance to adapt, not just re-enacting these qualities as some high and mighty arsehole.
Quoting Haunted from 22:13, 11th Aug 2007Belief in the nature of god can change, just as views of atheists on the world also change. It is not because God doesn't exist, it is merely through science that my definition had to change, as do definitions used by atheists.
How can the nature of something omnipotent change? Did that mean he was previously not perfect? Or do you mean something like, we no longer believe god causes the lightning because science and observation have told us better? Is that an instance of his nature changing?
Quoting Alistair from 17:55, 12th Aug 2007Quoting Haunted from 22:13, 11th Aug 2007Belief in the nature of god can change, just as views of atheists on the world also change. It is not because God doesn't exist, it is merely through science that my definition had to change, as do definitions used by atheists.
How can the nature of something omnipotent change? Did that mean he was previously not perfect? Or do you mean something like, we no longer believe god causes the lightning because science and observation have told us better? Is that an instance of his nature changing?
What I am saying is that an idea of what God is has changed, not God Himself. It is the same with atheists. Many atheists struggled with the idea that the world is so beneficial to life, so they came up with the idea there are infinitely many universes and we just live on one that works well for us. Not all atheists believe this, but it is an example of an atheist changing their mind on the nature of the universe.
Quoting Haunted from 22:22, 11th Aug 2007
What? Gravity is the result of bent spacetime, that is a fact, it is also the truth. Poetry will tell you nothing about the truths of the universe.
Quoting Senethro from 19:25, 12th Aug 2007
If I ever said that in those words, I'm sure I was fakeposting. Assuming that you yourself are being serious (I can't tell anymore [img]littleicons/yellowsadface.gif[/img] ) it is apparent why you find atheists so threatening as a rival "belief" system.
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