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remember, time is a human concept. we only use it to help us measure things. the fact is, the cosmos could have existed and will exist in both directions in time, infinitely. no one created the cosmos. there was no beginning of time. it just is. its just always existed. this concept is something humans have yet to overcome? or understand? because we created "time", logically there must be a beginning right? but thats.. not really applicable to everything. we only can apply time to things we can measure. but there must be things that are not measurable. such as "the beginning". something can't come from nothing. if it can... then it must be gods creation. but then god came from nothing? or god just is... has always been. just like time. it's the same concept. i honestly feel when it comes to measuring existence of time ... you can't do it. there is no value that represents time in that formula. time isnt a factor. it doesn't exist. the argument above has lead to this logical fork, which both still lead to the same rationale. something just exists and was never created. it just is. one refers to the creator(s), god(s). one refers to the driving force behind all of the cosmos. |
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what we dont understand is why does our universe have these rules like the conservation of energy, the speed of which light/gravity/neutrino's in a vacuum cannot go beyond ~300,000 km/s.... Quote:
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I hate it when my family tells me to "Thank God" for all the good things in my life and how he helped me over come major challenges like school and finding a job. I did all of that on my own. "God" didn't write no exam for me nor was he the one in my interviews. |
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Either you believe a creator gave you those chances and abilities or it's randomness that so happened to give you these things. For your Catholic family, their faith drives them towards the former instead of the latter. |
Honestly, I miss the good old days of religion; you know, back when science was "exploring the wonders that our creator has brought us and discovering the rules He is guiding us with". I think that faith and rational thought are only mutually exclusive when you want them to be. There are lots of people of faith who don't take their holy book in a totally literal sense, but instead use it for guiding principles (which is kind of how it was intended). I was raised an Anglican, and went through all of the learnings and the hoohaws and whatnots, drinking the wine and eating the crackers, but I kind of got frustrated with it. I mean, Anglicans here are more progressive now, but it really frustrated me when The Church was all about love and tolerance, but really only if yuo were a member of the club and said as much. I'm glad things are changing, but it's not enough to drag me back. I'm a huge believer in science, but that doesn't mean I'm going to completely discount faith either. There may one day be a scientific answer for everything, but that day is long long off. And until then, I'd really rather not think that once I die, the lights go off and it's all gone. *poof*. Now, all that said, I think Evolution deniers and Young Earth Creationists are fucking retarded, and that people who fight for "intelligent design" to be put in to textbooks are some of the biggest idiots in the world. |
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Ok, let me open up the possibility that there could something that resulted in the creator. So what then? How does that change anything in the creator vs. universe-just-is theories? It's still the debate between intelligent design vs. randomness. |
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I also don't think defining what religion I personally believe in helps in the debate between intelligent design vs. randomness. That's all. |
Not sure if sort of intelligent but fanatical person or troll :pokerface: |
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Shit. I shouldn't think about these things unless I'm drunk or stoned. Too hard to take in while not in an altered state of perception. Also: like Ulic said, Cause and effect come from our perceptions of the fourth dimension (time) and its progression. There's no proof saying that time does actually flow linearly outside of our own perception, and IIRC there are physics proofs showing that time is not a stable static unidirectional stream as we perceive it. But again, until we do more science, we'll never know. ..But that's mostly just because we don't have a magical answer-key-book to refer to that has all the answers of particle physics. |
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Bill Nye keeps cool and schools UFO expert starts at 6:00 |
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Creationist theories don't fill the cause-effect gap of our origins. A cause-effect relationship requires a distinct, manifest, unambiguous bridge between the cause and effect explained by our existing pillars of knowledge, much like modern-day evolutionist theory. The "creator" snapping his fingers and bringing something into existence may form the basic skeleton for a comprehensive explanation, but it absolutely does not satisfy. |
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The striking thing to me is that even if you have randomness +vastness, it doesn't "DO" anything unless there are certain rules with cause & effect. Like the chemical reaction O2 + 2H2 -> 2H2O + energy. Science helps us discover all these rule-sets: physics, chemistry, biology, etc... What it doesn't do is explain how these rule-sets came about. I see science as an infinite rabbit hole that will always result in more questions when we discover an answer. It's possible that it is an infinite loop of discovery -> questions -> discovery -> ... {infinite}. Or that there is some end like discovery -> questions -> ... God. What you choose is up to you. |
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Creator/god --> question --> creator/god and no progress. Imagine if our ancestors were satisfied with god always being the answer lol. |
logically we have to define what intelligent design is. inˇtelˇliˇgent deˇsign Noun: 1 The theory that life, or the universe, cannot have arisen by chance and was designed and created by some intelligent entity. now we have to define intelligent inˇtelˇliˇgent/inˈtelijənt/ Adjective: 1 Having or showing intelligence, esp. of a high level. 2 (of a device, machine, or building) Able to vary its state or action in response to varying situations, varying requirements, and past experience. and entity enˇtiˇty/ˈentitē/ Noun: 1 A thing with distinct and independent existence. 2 Existence; being: "entity and nonentity". i think our understanding of intelligence, existence is and what an entity must consist of is warped and blinded by our egos, combined with the fact that, it is the only way we can perceive anything (and everything). when we look at rocks, they don't seem too intelligent. but when we zoom out and see how rocks, magma, tectonic plates, core of earth, all combine and flow together to sustain whatever else (life), we can start to call it an entity. gaia. but it is only an entity and intelligent when viewed as from a whole. because it is a system that has patterns you can identify. if you were to zoom out to the most macro possible view of the cosmos, you can probably find the same patterns. im not saying someone designed it intentionally. but perhaps, intelligent design is a by product of existence. we seem to deem things intelligent if they fit into a system. but what exists that doesn't fit into a system? i can't think of one thing. but really, in life when you get obsessed with something, your mind filters everything out and you find that something, everywhere you look. the cosmos is a blank canvas. the possibilities on the canvas are almost infinite. but whatever is painted onto the canvas still has to follow the rules of the canvas. to exist within the cavas it has to work that way. regardless if it is to do with randomness. even if it is randomness, it is still a system within the canvas. and so far, both religion AND science state they just have existed, forever, and ever, and the concept of "beginning" is a human thing. but i can totally see this to be another circular never ending cycle, much like fractals and our universe/cosmos. we search for a reason, from top down, "we" say it's god. from bottom up "we" use science and slowly climb till we reach our goal of finding an answer to life (god/the driving force behind existence). why is it we understand 'never ending', but we cant understand 'no beginning'? looking at a fractal helps understand the concept. if you keep zooming out, you can zoom out infinitely. if you zoom in, you can zoom in infinitely. it seems completely logical and it makes sense right? why can't you apply the same logic to the cosmos, to time, to existence. it's just layer upon layer upon layer infinitely both ways. doesn't it make so much more sense when you look at it that way? there's not much to argue about once you understand this concept. that and it satisfies both sides of the argument. intelligence is a by product of existence, and existence is a by product of intelligence. "I think, therefore I am" -Descartes |
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Can you link to an article that talks about this? Or at least the name of the theory? I'd like to learn about that. |
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Organized religions are a little more realistic now realizing they have to accept evolution (Church of England and the Vatican), only when we are dealing with our religious right friends down south do they attempt to inject stupidity like creationism back into school. |
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How to suck at your religion - The Oatmeal |
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There's no fear in unanswered questions, just an excitement in finding them; it allows people to explore, discover, theorize and imagine different possibilities. Religion for all its worth is the ancient man's science. Religion, myths and superstitions were all borne out of ignorance. Read up on Cargo Cults, it's a perfect example of how ignorant/ancient people reacted to things they didn't understand. In the Cargo cult's case, airplanes; in ancient arab jew days it was thunder, lightning, earthquakes and other natural phenomena. |
Whoa, Dude, Are We Inside a Computer Right Now? | VICE lol this could be true too, but it only adds to both arguments as well. |
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"The church doesn't like it the people to grow up, because you can't control grown ups" "The people don't need to be born again, they need to grow up and take responsibilities..." -John Shelby Spong, rt. Episcopal Bishop. |
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