badp
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I never said it wasn't. I don't pretend to know which religion, if any, is correct. Because the truth is there is no way to either prove or disprove any major religion
How do you know that? Sounds like a bald assertion.
I never said it wasn't. I don't pretend to know which religion, if any, is correct. Because the truth is there is no way to either prove or disprove any major religion
Another philosophical question then. How does one know what he's observing is in the universe or outside it?
How do you know that? Sounds like a bald assertion.
Spoken like a man with no faith.
You know what you call a man who refuses to put money on a horse during the race? A coward. You can sit there and be critical, tossing stones all the while but you don't have any stock anywhere, so who are you to even try to judge those who do?Not quite. I don't have blind faith. Call me a Doubting Thomas, if you will. You know who that guy is, right?
I legitimately enjoyed this question. It made me think.
The answer I'll give is that for everything we see, we have no current reason to suspect any of it is outside of our own universe. But it's possible I suppose. I think that if multiple universes exist in a sort of matrix outside of our own universe, that a collision between two universal planes could maybe create a bridge of sorts
You know what you call a man who refuses to put money on a horse during the race? A coward. You can sit there and be critical, tossing stones all the while but you don't have any stock anywhere, so who are you to even try to judge those who do?
The problem is that methodological naturalism limits the definition of the universe to that which we can theoretically observe. So the question, "Can we observe anything outside the universe?" is akin to "Can we draw a square circle?" It's self-contradicting.
This is a big problem for the multiverse proponents.
And math is just numbers.
Follow the discussion and read carefully. It helps. The question was pointless, since the universe can be defined as all you can detect, everything there is that can affect you. Unless all the definitions are clear, then it is not philosophy, just sophistry.
This post is one long appeal to popularity.
Jose, Do you have any more logical fallacies you would like to throw at creationism?
Indeed. Which is why it is only entertained within the realm of theoretical physics. That is somewhat empirical however, because of the math involved. That's how we discovered black holes decades before observing one
Glad you brought that up. Neil deGrasse Tyson who is a theoretical astrophysicist likes to get on TV and talk about how Creationists are anti-science. I find that fascinating, given his own field of study involves a lot of anti-science, by definition.
Nah, it's dead. It was little more than a legal strategy designed (HAH!) to get creationist arguments in public schools, following a series of court rulings that banned teaching creationism in science classes.
It never even got off the ground before the Kitzmiller ruling put an end to that.
Science-wise, it never accomplished or contributed a single thing. So the only way it "lives" is in internet blogs and the like.
This has nothing to do with atheism. That you think it does only further demonstrates how ID creationism is about religion rather than science.
Ok then, give an example of something you think is "irreducibly complex" and describe how you determined it to be so.
IRREDUCIBLE COMPLEXITY is found in any "single system composed of several well-matched, interacting parts that contribute to the basic function, wherein the removal of any one of the parts causes the system to cease functioning."
A bow and arrow is an irreducibly complex example, because if you remove any of its parts, it ceases to function. Irreducible complexity is easy to detect by taking a functioning machine and starting to remove individual parts to see if it stops working the way it should when the parts are removed.
The example of the hunter and the bow shows us that intelligent design theorists have a valid rationale for detecting design in nature by finding irreducible complexity, a hallmark that an intelligent agent has been at work.
Though intelligent design may be compatible with the teachings of various religions, the theory itself is not a faith-based explanation.
Intelligent design is an empirically based theory that uses the scientific method to make its claims. The scientific method is commonly described as a four-step process, involving (1) observations, (2) hypothesis, (3) experiments, and (4) conclusion. As I was saying before, intelligent design begins with the observation that intelligent agents produce complex and specified information (CSI). Design theorists hypothesize that a natural object that is designed must contain high levels of CSI. Pro-ID scientists perform experimental tests upon natural objects to determine if they contain complex and specified info., and irreducible complexity is one easily testable form of CSI. Reverse-engineering experiments on biological structures show whether they require all of their parts to function.
When ID researchers find irreducible complexity in biology, they conclude that what is irreducibly complex must have been designed.
Some biological examples of irreducible complexity are: the process involved in blood-clotting, the cilium, the flagellum, the immune system, intracellular transport, and that's good for a start. You take one part away from the processes and you have a non-functioning situation.
(See Darwin's Black Box and Intelligent Design 101.)
Did you cut and paste your whole long post?
IRREDUCIBLE COMPLEXITY is found in any "single system composed of several well-matched, interacting parts that contribute to the basic function, wherein the removal of any one of the parts causes the system to cease functioning."
Though intelligent design may be compatible with the teachings of various religions, the theory itself is not a faith-based explanation.
When ID researchers find irreducible complexity in biology, they conclude that what is irreducibly complex must have been designed.
Some biological examples of irreducible complexity are: the process involved in blood-clotting, the cilium, the flagellum, the immune system, intracellular transport, and that's good for a start. You take one part away from the processes and you have a non-functioning situation.
Well yeah....the OP is me 1) citing an ID creationist telling another ID creationist "We're losing badly", 2) agreeing, and 3) showing data that backs up the fact that they are "losing badly".
I suppose you'd rather not be made aware of that information?
Frankly I don't really care.
Umm.... yes. Your argument so far is that one creationist admits that creationism is losing badly (meaning an unpopular position). You use this as a bludgeon to discredit the tenets of creation science.Um....no. The fallacy of argument via appeal to popularity would be "A majority of people say humans evolved from earlier forms, therefore it is true".
And from this you conclude......?Jose Fly said:I didn't do anything like that. All I did was note that public acceptance of evolution is on the rise,
Which is just another way of saying that public acceptance of evolution is on the rise.Jose Fly said:...and that some creationists are telling each other that they are losing badly.