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karenmeal

The God Delusion - Richard Dawkins

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Everyone should remember that there are still plenty of things in this world that can not or have not been explained by science or religion.



Just because something cannot be explained does not mean the best explanation is God did it or any other supernatural explanation. It just means we don't understand it yet and it needs to be investigated.



You mean like "how life on Earth began"?



100 years ago we didn't understand the origin of earthquakes and tsunamis. Some societies attributed them to angry gods. 300 years ago we didn't understand lightning and thunder - most societies attributed them to angry gods. 400 years ago we didn't understand that gravity controlled the dynamics of the solar system and galaxy - many societies believed in crystal spheres placed in the heavens by gods.

Explain how incomplete (but growing) understanding of the origin of life REQUIRES the invocation of a supernatural explanation, as opposed to more scientific research.



I wasn't saying anything against scientific advancement. My point was about the dogmatic hostility by the more zealous types to attack those who question certain (percieved) weaknesses of certain scientific theories.



Incomplete understanding is not a justification for claiming the science is a fraud, and is not proof of supernatural intervention. Over the centuries as knowledge expanded, the claimed role of the supernatural has diminished. Since "past is prologue" we have every reason to think that this will continue; science did not stop with the election of G.W. Bush.

Incomplete knowledge of what happened 3 billion years ago is not evidence of the weakness of science, it is evidence of the extreme difficulty of the problem since we have not yet developed time travel. Sometimes I have a hard time figuring out what happened just last week:S.



So asking questions is bad?



Asking questions and finding answers is called "science". Making up answers and invoking the supernatural is called "religion".
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The only sure way to survive a canopy collision is not to have one.

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I think there are 2 categories

1 - Those with a religious level of belief:
a. Believe in some sort of diety
b. BELIEVE there is not any sort of diety

2 - Those that don't know either way:
a. admit they don't know (agnostic)
b. don't care either way (some other kind of agnostic)

Note I choose to lump the atheists in as a religious type.

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Driving is a one dimensional activity - a monkey can do it - being proud of your driving abilities is like being proud of being able to put on pants

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Depends on how you define "atheist." Believing there is no god is very different from not believing in God as defined by the standard religions.

Wendy W.



Well, there's the problem, really. Two quite different concepts (creation of the universe vs, supernatural intervention in human affairs) given the same name.
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The only sure way to survive a canopy collision is not to have one.

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Following your logic would tend to leave only Buddhism and Wiccan as worthy or respect.



I simply asked a hypothetical question that you just didn't answer. I also did not mention "christians" specifically, so I wonder where your head is in this response. Methinks you're stuck. Enjoy your tangent



You asked an abstract question, and I gave it concrete form. How is that a tangent?

Are you suggesting that religions should be judged by comparing how little evil they do?
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> some people will say, for instance "I believe in god, I think God is
> the universe." I don't even know what that means, let alone how to
> argue against it!

Why do you have to? If you choose to study it, then you might decide "hey, this is a good idea" or "this is a load of shit" - and thus accept it or not. But until then, why try to fit people to that particular pigeonhole?



Good point, and outside of this site I wouldn't. I don't go looking for fights, I just read here and there they are;).

That was also a very poorly thought out part of my post - I would actuelly like to know what people mean when they say refer to things like that. What i probably should have said is that on the face of it, it seems like those ideas of god are so far apart from the standard definiton that they seem, to me at least, to no longer fit the meaning of the word.

If someone says "I believe in a god that is the laws of physics" do they actually believe anything different to what I do, and is "God" adequate terminology to describe their belief?
Do you want to have an ideagasm?

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Are you suggesting that religions should be judged by comparing how little evil they do?



are suggesting engineers should all be judged by counting how many bridges/balconies/buildings collapse?

I am completely in disagreement that doctors that go to church should have their licenses to practice revoked - for the sole reason of their church attendance.

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Driving is a one dimensional activity - a monkey can do it - being proud of your driving abilities is like being proud of being able to put on pants

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Agnostics believe that both theists and athiests have made up their minds prematurely, because there is not enough evidence to make a decision about the issue with any reasonable amount of certainty.



This best describes my belief. At this time I believe nothing is absolute but I realize I do not have enough knowledge and thus I must continue to learn. (Minds are like parachutes, they work best when open.)

"Agnostics claim either that it is not possible to have absolute or certain knowledge or, alternatively, that while certainty may be possible, they personally have no knowledge." Wikipedia
"That looks dangerous." Leopold Stotch

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I think Christians have killed more humans than have Poseidon followers.



Now let's compare Christians to non-religious groups. I'm sure you can guess I'm referencing those godless commies. ;)



Wanna talk about the folks that ordered the bombing of Warsaw, Coventry, Dresden, Hamburg, Hiroshima and Nagasaki? The builders of Treblinka and Auschwitz-Birkenau?



I see. Since that "who killed more" angle just ain't gonna cut it, you want to redirect to a tit-for-tat exchange. :o

How about the look at death tolls for the last 100 years???



Why did you start with a comparison with non-religious groups then? Whatever Mao and Stalin did, it was not in the name of religion.



I think it was after you compared a hypothetical comprison to historical occurences.

BTW, nice backtrack. ;)

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I think there are 2 categories

1 - Those with a religious level of belief:
a. Believe in some sort of diety
b. BELIEVE there is not any sort of diety

Note I choose to lump the atheists in as a religious type.



Until I was old enough to go to school I had absolutely no concept of god. Didn't know what the word meant, never heard of Jesus etc. Never crossed my mind that there might be some big dude sitting up there pulling the strings. I very much doubt you would call that state of non-belief religious.

Then I was old enough to go to school, sat through my first religious assembly and thought to myself "what on earth is this beardy dude talking about?" (No joke, took me at least 2 or 3 years to figure out that people actually did believe the stories) So, I still held the same lack of belief about god, my outlook on the universe changed not one bit (though my outlook on human gullibility did), had I suddenly become religious?
Do you want to have an ideagasm?

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Everyone should remember that there are still plenty of things in this world that can not or have not been explained by science or religion.



Just because something cannot be explained does not mean the best explanation is God did it or any other supernatural explanation. It just means we don't understand it yet and it needs to be investigated.



You mean like "how life on Earth began"?



100 years ago we didn't understand the origin of earthquakes and tsunamis. Some societies attributed them to angry gods. 300 years ago we didn't understand lightning and thunder - most societies attributed them to angry gods. 400 years ago we didn't understand that gravity controlled the dynamics of the solar system and galaxy - many societies believed in crystal spheres placed in the heavens by gods.

Explain how incomplete (but growing) understanding of the origin of life REQUIRES the invocation of a supernatural explanation, as opposed to more scientific research.



I wasn't saying anything against scientific advancement. My point was about the dogmatic hostility by the more zealous types to attack those who question certain (percieved) weaknesses of certain scientific theories.



Incomplete understanding is not a justification for claiming the science is a fraud, and is not proof of supernatural intervention. Over the centuries as knowledge expanded, the claimed role of the supernatural has diminished. Since "past is prologue" we have every reason to think that this will continue; science did not stop with the election of G.W. Bush.

Incomplete knowledge of what happened 3 billion years ago is not evidence of the weakness of science, it is evidence of the extreme difficulty of the problem since we have not yet developed time travel. Sometimes I have a hard time figuring out what happened just last week:S.



So asking questions is bad?



Asking questions and finding answers is called "science". Making up answers and invoking the supernatural is called "religion".



So what's the scientific answer to "how did life on Earth begin?"?

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Until I was old enough to go to school I had absolutely no concept of god. Didn't know what the word meant, never heard of Jesus etc. Never crossed my mind that there might be some big dude sitting up there pulling the strings. I very much doubt you would call that state of non-belief religious.



Nope, wouldn't call it religious. Wouldn't call it atheist either. "Never crossed my mind" isn't a choice to dis-believe, it's just agnostic in it's purist form (don't know, don't care).

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Are you suggesting that religions should be judged by comparing how little evil they do?



are suggesting engineers should all be judged by counting how many bridges/balconies/buildings collapse?

I am completely in disagreement that doctors that go to church should have their licenses to practice revoked - for the sole reason of their church attendance.



I didn't write anything about bridges. YOU brought up the topic of human sacrifices by religions. Nice tangent attempt, though.
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I didn't write anything about bridges. YOU brought up the topic of human sacrifices by religions. Nice tangent attempt, though.



The irony here would be amazing if the subtleness of the post wasn't akin to a moose charging through a bakery.

however, to repost the same original question concerning blatant unreasoning negative religious bias (in total disregard to demonstrated individual character) would just be a waste of time, I see.

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Driving is a one dimensional activity - a monkey can do it - being proud of your driving abilities is like being proud of being able to put on pants

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>So what's the scientific answer to "how did life on Earth begin?"?

We don't know yet. We have several theories on how it _may_ have begun, but we can't yet say with any certainty which is correct yet.



Don't you mean "which, if any, is correct?

Which theory has the most evidence to support it? Do any of thses theories go beyond conjecture?

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Asking questions and finding answers is called "science". Making up answers and invoking the supernatural is called "religion".



So what's the scientific answer to "how did life on Earth begin?"?



Incredibly stupid question.

What was the religious answer to "what creates lightning storms" or "what creates earthquakes" 1,000 years ago? Do you fault scientists of the 11th Century for not having discovered electrostatics or plate tectonics? If the Roman church had had its way, we'd still believe the Earth is center of the solar system.
...

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>If someone says "I believe in a god that is the laws of physics" do
>they actually believe anything different to what I do, and is "God"
>adequate terminology to describe their belief?

Well, what matters is that it's adequate to _them._ To me, the ultimate test of any religion/god/system of belief is how it helps a person live their lives; indeed, it's the only use of religion that makes any sense IMO.

But anyway, some definitions of related terms:

Theist - someone who believes in a supernatural intelligence who created the universe, is still here, listens to us when we pray, and occasionally has some real-world effects like turning people into pillars of salt, curing cancer in believers, destroying cities etc.

Deist - someone who believes in a supernatural intelligence, but one who basically set up the laws that govern the universe in the
first place, then let those natural laws take their course. He doesn't interfere in the lives of man, and doesn't listen to (and judge) prayers and whatnot. Note that such a belief is congruent with evolution.

Pantheist - someone who believes that god effectively IS the universe of natural law, that god arises from their interaction rather than the other way around.

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>So what's the scientific answer to "how did life on Earth begin?"?

We don't know yet. We have several theories on how it _may_ have begun, but we can't yet say with any certainty which is correct yet.



Once again, religion serves a great purpose for scientists to wrap up the work and make it clean (by putting out one extreme theory to piss them off enough to do more than the typical, half-assed job). I say keep creation on the books until we can reduce the "several theories on how it _may_ have begun" to one with certainty.....

people are contrary and won't work to prove something, only to disprove something they can't stand

Religion, motivating scientists for 3 thousand years and counting...

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Are you suggesting that religions should be judged by comparing how little evil they do?



are suggesting engineers should all be judged by counting how many bridges/balconies/buildings collapse?

I am completely in disagreement that doctors that go to church should have their licenses to practice revoked - for the sole reason of their church attendance.



I didn't write anything about bridges. YOU brought up the topic of human sacrifices by religions. Nice tangent attempt, though.



And you compared them to the Crusades. Nice tangent attempt. ;)

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I didn't write anything about bridges. YOU brought up the topic of human sacrifices by religions. Nice tangent attempt, though.



The irony here would be amazing if the subtleness of the post wasn't akin to a moose charging through a bakery.

however, to repost the same original question concerning blatant unreasoning negative religious bias (in total disregard to demonstrated individual character) would just be a waste of time, I see.



Well, that was so subtle I can't tell if it is a PA or a compliment.;)
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The irony here would be amazing if the subtleness of the post wasn't akin to a moose charging through a bakery.



Well, that was so subtle I can't tell if it is a PA or a compliment.;)



I think it depends on whether the bakery is located in Los Angeles or Alaska.
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>Which theory has the most evidence to support it?

Right now I'd go with the autocatalysis model - the ability of some very simple molecules to replicate themselves and "inherit" the structure of their "parent." Once you have the ability to reproduce and inherit traits, evolution begins.

>Do any of thses theories go beyond conjecture?

Several have been demonstrated in the lab, which goes significantly beyond conjecture. We can create amino acids in the lab using nothing but simulated primordial atmosphere and lightning. We can cause unlimited replication of very simple molecules under the right conditions. We have observed spontaneous creation of lipid bilayers, the precursors of cell membranes.

The ultimate test is going to come from one of two angles - the bottom-up approach or the top-down approach. The bottom-up approach is going to start with the basics (atmosphere, water, ooze, lightning) and attempt to show the path to creating a self-replicating organism. The top-down approach attempts to take the most basic life-forms we know (i.e. archaea and the like) and remove evolutionary enhancements until we have an organism that can do nothing more than (barely) reproduce, then show how such an organism can form from the basics. Both are making pretty steady progress. If we achieve success on the bottom-up approach, we'll have _one_ way life might have formed. The top-down approach is more likely to show how _our_ version of life formed.

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Asking questions and finding answers is called "science". Making up answers and invoking the supernatural is called "religion".



So what's the scientific answer to "how did life on Earth begin?"?



Incredibly stupid question.


I'll pass that on to Bill Von.

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What was the religious answer to "what creates lightning storms" or "what creates earthquakes" 1,000 years ago? Do you fault scientists of the 11th Century for not having discovered electrostatics or plate tectonics? If the Roman church had had its way, we'd still believe the Earth is center of the solar system.


Nice turn around. Instead addressing the topic you try to make it about alternative thinking. I notice that throughout this exchange, you've repeatedly tried to make it about superstition or outdated incorrect beliefs or making up answers.

It's like you want to make this into a Science vs. Religion issue, when I've just been asking about the science aspect of it.

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Until I was old enough to go to school I had absolutely no concept of god. Didn't know what the word meant, never heard of Jesus etc. Never crossed my mind that there might be some big dude sitting up there pulling the strings. I very much doubt you would call that state of non-belief religious.



Nope, wouldn't call it religious. Wouldn't call it atheist either. "Never crossed my mind" isn't a choice to dis-believe, it's just agnostic in it's purist form (don't know, don't care).



I was looking for an answer to the second part of the post;)
Do you want to have an ideagasm?

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