Quoting Haunted from 10:28, 5th Sep 2007
Current understanding of human psyche suggests that religion is inevitable. People apparently need something of that ilk. Probably evolved as a way of making sure everyone behaved as they were supposed to (god is watching, sinners will be punished etc). Plus theres the obvious social consequences of being the only one in the village who skips church.
Under the assumption the entire thing is fiction, I find the development of religion an intriguing concept. Why did people decide there was/were god(s)? How did all the various practices and rituals of religions form? What part of it has uses outside of religion?
Why is the flood any less likely?
Yes it is intuitively so but we have the same against the flood as we have against microscopic entropy adjustments, there is no proof. In order to accept the flood you must produce significant evidence that cannot be explained by any other mechanism, exactly as you would do with the entropy thing.
The flood is less likely as we have actively ruled it out: it was a specific event that occurred in a well-defined time frame, we see active evidence this is not the case. When it comes to refuting a god, we have only passive evidence that a god does not exist: absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
Interesting factoid: Only one paper in Nature has ever been published without being peer reviewed, "A structure for Deoxyribose Nucleic Acid". The structure proposed by Crick and Watson was so elegant and perfect it was thought no reviewer would be able to keep quiet about it.
Interesting indeed! I did hear relatively recently of one paper (not mentioning any names) that was intentionally ignored by the referee as they were working on their own paper with similar conclusions. Though on the whole, the system works well.
Well I'm a little surprised he wasn't admonished by anyone and indeed is still allowed to hold a position of government. This suggests there is some sympathy for such ideas, which is really frightening.
Sympathy, apathy, or just not wanting to stir up further trouble.
Imaginery numbers are just shortcuts, as far as I understand them.
I'm not sure I'd use the word shortcuts - they're mathematical explanations for complex phenomena, yes.
Then I would say we are in agreement. Though which is better, a false negative or a false positive? Is it better to deny evolution or support intelligent design?
I'm not quite sure what you're getting at here. Arguably, of the two choices it's better to support intelligent design, as evolution clearly works (so should not be denied), intelligent design is merely an addition to it, suggesting a guiding influence (thus showing support for it means one is not denying evolution).
I cannot imagine what form such 'pro-active' evidence would take. If you are mining for gold what more evidence do you need apart from "we can't find any". Must you keep digging until all the Earth has been mined?
I cannot imagine either, but it may exist, so we should keep looking.
As for gold, I have moved around a lot, and every burn, stream or drain we have had, we have always looked for gold in - just in case.
Yes but still you cannot claim that the FSM worshippers are false, "FSM is just testing you by placing all that evidence on the internet that it was a human creation". Perhaps it's rival worshippers acting to descredit the idea of the one true god? what is the difference between FSM and YHWH?
The difference is that of the nature of the evidence against them, and as such I'll revert to my earlier terminology: The FSM has "active" evidence against it - we have evidence of the idea's creation. This is not absolute proof, which we know is unattainable, but it actively rules against it as a theory.
As an idea, YHWH has only "passive" evidence against it, as we have nothing but supposition with which to decide anything. We have no evidence against, we only do not have evidence for it.
As Bertrand Russel said:
"...[that quote about teapots again.]"
The quote is, of course, very true. One would also consider you a madman if you came up with something like the seven choirs of heaven and fish on Friday, had it not been heard before. However, I am saying that we are not talking about a teapot, as we are not talking about handing down the Ten (15?) Commandments or whatever: we are talking about the creation of the Universe (and possible ascension of Man) as envisaged and/or influenced by a conscious being. This is not analogous to the teapot, merely analogous to anything floating around somewhere that cannot be explained by 'natural' phenomena.
They are the same thing.
And since you are (I assume) an A-fairyist what does that make you with regard to god?
I'm not sure you caught my point. You have taken two different concepts and given them the same physical characteristics. By asking do I believe in fairies tidying my garden, you are effectively asking whether I believe God tidies my garden - the answer to both of which is no. For one thing, I have no garden, and for another, if I did, I doubt it would be very tidy.
(Edited for tags again)
