For as many as it takes. Or until people tire of discussing it.I wonder how many more years this subject has to be beaten to death for!
For as many as it takes. Or until people tire of discussing it.I wonder how many more years this subject has to be beaten to death for!
I'm already kinda getting tired talking to bricks.For as many as it takes. Or until people tire of discussing it.
lol You're still here.I'm already kinda getting tired talking to bricks.
Ya, but you and JLM are not bricks. I like reading what you and Sinister write but I stopped reading those long posts with biblical quotes.lol You're still here.
Ya, but you and JLM are not bricks. I like reading what you and Sinister write but I stopped reading those long posts with biblical quotes.
For as many as it takes. Or until people tire of discussing it.
Who is Dr. Francis S. Collins? What is rational faith? How does one integrate reason and belief?
Even trekkies know their addiction is based upon a fiction.
As long as religionheads declare their delusions to be "science" or "truth" and try to write them into the civil laws.I wonder how many more years this subject has to be beaten to death for!
Yes. Pretty much any fiction writer I've ever read has included some factual aspects of his or her life within their works. It adds a little realism to the tales, but in no way does it make the tales true and non-fiction. EG; I could suggest that there's a teapot god always orbiting the dark side of the moon and it is black porcelain with gold accents and holds 1.6 liters of the finest tea available anywhere. And there actually may even be a teapot such as the one I described, but if it isn't a god, the tale will still be fiction.Some rational faith, cj:
Of Lewis's arguments, which one was the most difficult for you to dispute?
"To my surprise, I found myself fairly easily compelled by his arguments about the existence of some sort of a God, because even as a scientist, I had to admit that we had no idea how the universe got started. The hard part for me was the idea of a personal God, who has an interest in humankind. And the argument that Lewis made there — the one that I think was most surprising, most earth-shattering, and most life-changing — is the argument about the existence of the moral law. How is it that we, and all other members of our species, unique in the animal kingdom, know what's right and what's wrong? In every culture one looks at, that knowledge is there. Where did that come from? I reject the idea that that is an evolutionary consequence, because that moral law sometimes tells us that the right thing to do is very self-destructive. If I'm walking down the riverbank, and a man is drowning, even if I don't know how to swim very well, I feel this urge that the right thing to do is to try to save that person. Evolution would tell me exactly the opposite: preserve your DNA. Who cares about the guy who's drowning? He's one of the weaker ones, let him go. It's your DNA that needs to survive. And yet that's not what's written within me. Lewis argues that if you are looking for evidence of a God who cares about us as individuals, where could you more likely look than within your own heart at this very simple concept of what's right and what's wrong. And there it is. Not only does it tell you something about the fact that there is a spiritual nature that is somehow written within our hearts, but it also tells you something about the nature of God himself, which is that he is a good and holy God. What we have there is a glimpse of what he stands for. I know this is not a new idea that Lewis came up with. It builds upon long traditions over centuries of careful scholarship and thought. But I'd never seen it before, and I don't think I've ever seen it explained as well as it is in his book." The Question of God . Other Voices . Francis Collins | PBS
What moral law can you identify? For me, slavery is always wrong.
Or maybe art imitates life, LG:
"The Vulcan salute was devised by Leonard Nemoy, based on a gesture made by various Jewish denominations, including Orthodox and Conservative. Nimoy learned the gesture, which takes practice to do, from visiting his grandfather's synagogue as a child ... The gesture forms the Hebrew letter "Shin" and represents the name Shaddai, which means "Almighty (God)."
The hand gesture is traditionally used by the Kohanim (Hebrew "priests"), Jews of priestly descent, during a blessing ceremony performed during the prayer service of certain Jewish holy days. The Jewish blessing is done with both hands, with arms extended upward at roughly a 45-degree angle, rather than one hand held upright as in the Salute.
The blessing is found in Numbers 6:22-24 of the Old Testament where God tells Aaron, Moses' brother, the first High Priest, to bless the Israelites and say, "May the Lord bless you and keep you. May the Lord make his face to shine upon you and be gracious to you. May the Lord lift up his countenance upon you and give you peace." Vulcan salute - Memory Alpha, the Star Trek Wiki
Who is Dr. Francis S. Collins? What is rational faith? How does one integrate reason and belief?
The very hardest thing for a human being to say, Dex, has always been "I don't know." They'll come up with the most abstruse, bizarre chains of fantasy to avoid it, then kill to defend their delusions.I find that Dr. Collins is quite wrong. "I know there is no God" is logically and philosophically indefensible, but Chesterton's assertion is also quite wrong, very few atheists would state it as a universal negative like that and those that do are over-reaching themselves. Atheism is simply the rejection of claims about the existence of a deity (of any description) on the grounds that the evidence and arguments offered in support of them are not sufficient to justify accepting them as correct. You cannot build a strong case for the plausibility of any deity on purely rational grounds unless, as Lewis does, you indulge in logical errors and fallacies.
And yet our most "advanced" civilisations have used child labourers, child soldiers, left the elderly to die, and murdered the intellectually disabled. And justified it, frequently in the name of God. I'm not talking about primitive, back-of-the-beyond tribes, they usually take care of their weak, to the maximum extent they can. I'm talking about Britain, France, Germany, the United States, Canada, those countries that folks here usually see as the shining beacons of morality, or at least better than all those primitives."What moral law can you identify?"
Harming the weak - whether they be the elderly, a child or people with intellectual disabilities. This should certainly be written on everybody's heart as wrong.
Someone is going to have egg on their face when their appointed day comes.The very hardest thing for a human being to say, Dex, has always been "I don't know." They'll come up with the most abstruse, bizarre chains of fantasy to avoid it, then kill to defend their delusions.
Sounds like sin to me.And yet our most "advanced" civilisations have used child labourers, child soldiers, left the elderly to die, and murdered the intellectually disabled. And justified it, frequently in the name of God. I'm not talking about primitive, back-of-the-beyond tribes, they usually take care of their weak, to the maximum extent they can. I'm talking about Britain, France, Germany, the United States, Canada, those countries that folks here usually see as the shining beacons of morality, or at least better than all those primitives.