Research on Belief in God

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Re: Re:

Merckx index said:
Since neither of us was there in the beginning, how does either of us know whether God was?

Because He says He was. And the Bible has proven itself to be an authority on such matters.

So if one airplane crashes due to a mechanical malfunction, should we halt all airline flights, because our knowledge of airline mechanics is not perfect? Should we assume we know nothing at all about airplanes? If someone dies because of the wrong treatment in a hospital, should we close all hospitals, and go back to primitive medicine? If your computer crashes, do you assume that the people who created the software running it know nothing, and stop using computers entirely?

A malfunction is different from something that is flawed down to its core. Evolution is deeply flawed. If airplanes were flawed to the point where they never worked than yes we should halt all use of airplanes until the problem is completely fixed.

But not as absurd to assume that God came from nothing. Typical double standard. The scientific view of our origins can't be right because something can't come from nothing. But the religious view is correct because God can come from nothing. If you can argue that God has always existed, why can't scientists argue that the building blocks of matter always existed? Which is more believable?

God didn't come from nothing. He has always been. Matter doesn't design things (such as our universe.) Being's (such as God) design things.

I won't even get into quantum theories that argue that what we call nothing can in fact give rise to particles from quantum fluctuations.

Perhaps if you get into it I'll be enlightened. ;)

Not to the satisfaction of many other scholars who are just as well qualified, and might just be operating with less bias. Again, a clear double standard. You find a few areas of evolutionary biology where there is a little controversy, and jump to the conclusion that the entire science is flawed. I find huge areas of Biblical interpretation where there is controversy, but that's no problem to you, because your side is always right.

Would you care to name some problems you have with the Bible?
 
Re: Re:

Jspear said:
Merckx index said:
Since neither of us was there in the beginning, how does either of us know whether God was?

Because He says He was. And the Bible has proven itself to be an authority on such matters.

So if one airplane crashes due to a mechanical malfunction, should we halt all airline flights, because our knowledge of airline mechanics is not perfect? Should we assume we know nothing at all about airplanes? If someone dies because of the wrong treatment in a hospital, should we close all hospitals, and go back to primitive medicine? If your computer crashes, do you assume that the people who created the software running it know nothing, and stop using computers entirely?

A malfunction is different from something that is flawed down to its core. Evolution is deeply flawed. If airplanes were flawed to the point where they never worked than yes we should halt all use of airplanes until the problem is completely fixed.

But not as absurd to assume that God came from nothing. Typical double standard. The scientific view of our origins can't be right because something can't come from nothing. But the religious view is correct because God can come from nothing. If you can argue that God has always existed, why can't scientists argue that the building blocks of matter always existed? Which is more believable?

God didn't come from nothing. He has always been. Matter doesn't design things (such as our universe.) Being's (such as God) design things.

I won't even get into quantum theories that argue that what we call nothing can in fact give rise to particles from quantum fluctuations.

Perhaps if you get into it I'll be enlightened. ;)

Not to the satisfaction of many other scholars who are just as well qualified, and might just be operating with less bias. Again, a clear double standard. You find a few areas of evolutionary biology where there is a little controversy, and jump to the conclusion that the entire science is flawed. I find huge areas of Biblical interpretation where there is controversy, but that's no problem to you, because your side is always right.

Would you care to name some problems you have with the Bible?

The Bible was written as a national epic saga, after which theology intervened. A cheap replacement for philosophy, with many inept borrowings from our sources, the moment that superstition and false hope at the expense of more virile viewpoints came to prevail. Plutarch docet.
 
Re:

Buffalo Soldier said:
Since people in the Word Politics thread want to reserve it to Conspiracy Theories only, I bring my remark here:

It's simple: keep your religious views out of politics. I do not care if you do or do not believe a bearded guy in the sky made people gay and then forbade them to be together, keep it out of politics, keep it out of other people's lives.
Marriage laws have nothing to do with religion. I do understand people can not be married in the eyes of your church if they do not follow the rules of your testament or whatever. But that's not a reason to base you civil law system on that.

LOL. Politics is a religious topic.
 
Science is a result of the limited intelligence of the human mind, compared to the intelligence of God. It would be hardly surprising if it contains large errors. Science should not be put on any pedestal as being a great source of knowledge.
 
Apr 12, 2009
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Science does contain large errors. Scientists know that.
But it still is a great source of knowledge, it would be extremely weird to deny that?
 
Re:

Buffalo Soldier said:
Maarten, I do not want to criticize your religion, even though I do indeed think it is silly (I sometimes let go when talking about something I believe to be so incredibly nonsensical, forgetting that a lot of people believe the words written in the bible to be based on some divine words. Sorry for my tone.).
I am criticizing you bringing your religion into the life of others and into politics though.

I have no problem people arguing against gay marriage based on reason or morals. I would most probably not agree with them, but I am happy to argue with that. I do have a problem on people arguing against the same thing 'because their God told them so'. I am happy not to live in a land where the word of god defines the rules of my society.

When someone states he does not want live on this planet (it is covered in darkness), because a majority of the people in his country sees nothing wrong with 2 same-sex people marrying each other even though he is sure his god would not want that, I do take offense to that.

What it really boils down to is the religious not wanting to extend certain rights they enjoy to members of society they maintain don't conform to their religiouscentric definition of what is legitimate. Willing support of discrimination means nothing to them, in fact, to the contrary, nothing could be more just.

Of course as regards same-sex marriage, nobody is forcing the varrious religions to abide, but even this isn't satisfactory. No religion wants the State, belivers and non-believers alike, to abide by its religiouscentric concept of what marriage is, even if of course civic union has long since been institutionalized for heterosexual couples as "marriage" in the fullest legal sense, in parity with church weddings.

The churches weren't capable of resisting secularization here, however, homosexuality is evidently far too abominable to just let slide.
 
Oct 23, 2011
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Re: Re:

Merckx index said:
The problem with many religious claims, certainly those of Jspear and GM, is that they're based on belief in a different world, subject to different rules, from the one that governs our political life. Though people like Jspear try to misrepresent the definition or the practice of science to support or rationalize their views, in the end those views always come down to one thing: everything in the Bible is literally true. You can’t argue with it because it’s the word of God, and God is infallible. So if science contradicts the Bible, science must be wrong, or as he might put it, scientists are wrong, and they aren’t really practicing science. I can’t even ask Jspear what his response would be if there were scientific evidence as certain to him as watching his HD that evolution occurred, because he would simply deny that this is possible. His mind is absolutely shut on this issue. There is nothing that can change it.

I can't speak for others, but as for me, I'm absolutely willing to change my beliefs on the basis of sound evidence.

Merckx index said:
This simply is not how our political life operates. It’s based on material evidence, not on some book written thousands of years ago. The ongoing discussion in the politics thread about the missile that shot down a commercial airliner last summer is an excellent example of this. One might despair at the conflicting claims of the Ukrainians and the Russians, but in fact both sides agree completely on the framework governing the debate. Neither side claims the other side fired the missile on the basis of what God said; they claim this based on photographs, geolocation, analysis of fragments of the plane, and other scientifically-based methods. One or both sides may be misrepresenting this evidence, but neither side denies that it is evidence, and that this evidence is the only way to decide the issue.

It’s the same way with the issue of same-sex marriage. If you want to engage in this argument, on either side, you can appeal to evidence such as 1) studies bearing on the question of whether homosexuality has a genetic basis, is learned, or chosen; 2) the effects of having same sex parents on any children they may have; and 3) the effects on children of not knowing and/or interacting with both their biological parents. Or you can simply argue that the principles of modern societies are not consistent with denying one group or class of people the same rights and benefits that other citizens enjoy.

I don't think these issues are quite the same. The discussion about the missile is one regarding what factually happened. Now the issue of same sex marriage - not that it shouldn't be related to the concrete facts available to everyone, because of course it should - isn't about facts, but it's about ethics. Not just about what is, but about what ought to be. Science can tell you about what is, it can predict some things that will be, it can reveal truths about what was, but I don't think science can tell us what ought to be, in a moral sense. It can reveal facts that are very relevant to what we think ought to be, but it can't tell us what's good or bad. Science can elucidate for us what homosexuality is, what causes it and if we take science in a broad sense including sociology and so forth, not just natural sciences, than it can tell us about same sex parenting and the results it has on children and so forth, but it can't tell us whether these things are good or bad in a moral sense.

But I think politics should actually be very much about how we want our society to look like, about what ought to be, about what things are good and what things are bad and I don't think we can reach an idea about such things solely on the basis of material evidence. So we need more than that; we need moral principles to guide us in making laws and governing our societies. The problem is, with the variety of worldviews that are common in our western societies, the moral principles that people build their political beliefs on, are really diffuse and often at odds with each other. But as much at odds as they are with each other, I don't think society benefits from saying religious worldviews and the moral principles that they provide are a no go in the political arena. Wouldn't the idea of keeping religion out of politics amount to basically limiting the political freedom of certain people because we think their ideas are stupid? That doesn't seem awfully democratic to me.

However, I do think there's more to be said about it. One problem that does arise if we take specific worldviews, religious or not, into politics, is that it can kind of stop the conversation. Actually, in a discussion, whether political or not, one should be aware that the different participants might start of from some very different premises. A statement like "we shouldn't allow this because God said so" might be completely true, but still, if the other participants in the discussion don't even believe God exists, the statement doesn't mean anything to them and it kind of kills the conversation. If somebody asks me about my beliefs and why I belief them I don't mind replying in the line of; 'I believe this to be so and so because God has revealed this in his Word.' But if I'm participating in a debate about something with people who don't share my faith and I'm trying to actually make a case about something, than I know I can't use such a line of reasoning, not because it isn't true or because I'm ashamed of my beliefs or anything like that, but simply because I know it won't help bringing my point across at all, because such a statement would be meaningless for the people to whom my plea is aimed, simply because they don't share the relevant premises that make such a statement meaningful. Therefore I do think that in political debates or whatever such statements often aren't really appropriate, again, not because they're not valid, certainly not because I think religion should be kept out of politics as a matter of principle, but simply because such statements often aren't very helpful in a political discussion. :)
 
Re: Re:

Maaaaaaaarten said:
Merckx index said:
The problem with many religious claims, certainly those of Jspear and GM, is that they're based on belief in a different world, subject to different rules, from the one that governs our political life. Though people like Jspear try to misrepresent the definition or the practice of science to support or rationalize their views, in the end those views always come down to one thing: everything in the Bible is literally true. You can’t argue with it because it’s the word of God, and God is infallible. So if science contradicts the Bible, science must be wrong, or as he might put it, scientists are wrong, and they aren’t really practicing science. I can’t even ask Jspear what his response would be if there were scientific evidence as certain to him as watching his HD that evolution occurred, because he would simply deny that this is possible. His mind is absolutely shut on this issue. There is nothing that can change it.

I can't speak for others, but as for me, I'm absolutely willing to change my beliefs on the basis of sound evidence.

Merckx index said:
This simply is not how our political life operates. It’s based on material evidence, not on some book written thousands of years ago. The ongoing discussion in the politics thread about the missile that shot down a commercial airliner last summer is an excellent example of this. One might despair at the conflicting claims of the Ukrainians and the Russians, but in fact both sides agree completely on the framework governing the debate. Neither side claims the other side fired the missile on the basis of what God said; they claim this based on photographs, geolocation, analysis of fragments of the plane, and other scientifically-based methods. One or both sides may be misrepresenting this evidence, but neither side denies that it is evidence, and that this evidence is the only way to decide the issue.

It’s the same way with the issue of same-sex marriage. If you want to engage in this argument, on either side, you can appeal to evidence such as 1) studies bearing on the question of whether homosexuality has a genetic basis, is learned, or chosen; 2) the effects of having same sex parents on any children they may have; and 3) the effects on children of not knowing and/or interacting with both their biological parents. Or you can simply argue that the principles of modern societies are not consistent with denying one group or class of people the same rights and benefits that other citizens enjoy.

I don't think these issues are quite the same. The discussion about the missile is one regarding what factually happened. Now the issue of same sex marriage - not that it shouldn't be related to the concrete facts available to everyone, because of course it should - isn't about facts, but it's about ethics. Not just about what is, but about what ought to be. Science can tell you about what is, it can predict some things that will be, it can reveal truths about what was, but I don't think science can tell us what ought to be, in a moral sense. It can reveal facts that are very relevant to what we think ought to be, but it can't tell us what's good or bad. Science can elucidate for us what homosexuality is, what causes it and if we take science in a broad sense including sociology and so forth, not just natural sciences, than it can tell us about same sex parenting and the results it has on children and so forth, but it can't tell us whether these things are good or bad in a moral sense.

But I think politics should actually be very much about how we want our society to look like, about what ought to be, about what things are good and what things are bad and I don't think we can reach an idea about such things solely on the basis of material evidence. So we need more than that; we need moral principles to guide us in making laws and governing our societies. The problem is, with the variety of worldviews that are common in our western societies, the moral principles that people build their political beliefs on, are really diffuse and often at odds with each other. But as much at odds as they are with each other, I don't think society benefits from saying religious worldviews and the moral principles that they provide are a no go in the political arena. Wouldn't the idea of keeping religion out of politics amount to basically limiting the political freedom of certain people because we think their ideas are stupid? That doesn't seem awfully democratic to me.

However, I do think there's more to be said about it. One problem that does arise if we take specific worldviews, religious or not, into politics, is that it can kind of stop the conversation. Actually, in a discussion, whether political or not, one should be aware that the different participants might start of from some very different premises. A statement like "we shouldn't allow this because God said so" might be completely true, but still, if the other participants in the discussion don't even believe God exists, the statement doesn't mean anything to them and it kind of kills the conversation. If somebody asks me about my beliefs and why I belief them I don't mind replying in the line of; 'I believe this to be so and so because God has revealed this in his Word.' But if I'm participating in a debate about something with people who don't share my faith and I'm trying to actually make a case about something, than I know I can't use such a line of reasoning, not because it isn't true or because I'm ashamed of my beliefs or anything like that, but simply because I know it won't help bringing my point across at all, because such a statement would be meaningless for the people to whom my plea is aimed, simply because they don't share the relevant premises that make such a statement meaningful. Therefore I do think that in political debates or whatever such statements often aren't really appropriate, again, not because they're not valid, certainly not because I think religion should be kept out of politics as a matter of principle, but simply because such statements often aren't very helpful in a political discussion. :)
 
Re: Re:

Maaaaaaaarten said:
Merckx index said:
The problem with many religious claims, certainly those of Jspear and GM, is that they're based on belief in a different world, subject to different rules, from the one that governs our political life. Though people like Jspear try to misrepresent the definition or the practice of science to support or rationalize their views, in the end those views always come down to one thing: everything in the Bible is literally true. You can’t argue with it because it’s the word of God, and God is infallible. So if science contradicts the Bible, science must be wrong, or as he might put it, scientists are wrong, and they aren’t really practicing science. I can’t even ask Jspear what his response would be if there were scientific evidence as certain to him as watching his HD that evolution occurred, because he would simply deny that this is possible. His mind is absolutely shut on this issue. There is nothing that can change it.

I can't speak for others, but as for me, I'm absolutely willing to change my beliefs on the basis of sound evidence.

Merckx index said:
This simply is not how our political life operates. It’s based on material evidence, not on some book written thousands of years ago. The ongoing discussion in the politics thread about the missile that shot down a commercial airliner last summer is an excellent example of this. One might despair at the conflicting claims of the Ukrainians and the Russians, but in fact both sides agree completely on the framework governing the debate. Neither side claims the other side fired the missile on the basis of what God said; they claim this based on photographs, geolocation, analysis of fragments of the plane, and other scientifically-based methods. One or both sides may be misrepresenting this evidence, but neither side denies that it is evidence, and that this evidence is the only way to decide the issue.

It’s the same way with the issue of same-sex marriage. If you want to engage in this argument, on either side, you can appeal to evidence such as 1) studies bearing on the question of whether homosexuality has a genetic basis, is learned, or chosen; 2) the effects of having same sex parents on any children they may have; and 3) the effects on children of not knowing and/or interacting with both their biological parents. Or you can simply argue that the principles of modern societies are not consistent with denying one group or class of people the same rights and benefits that other citizens enjoy.

I don't think these issues are quite the same. The discussion about the missile is one regarding what factually happened. Now the issue of same sex marriage - not that it shouldn't be related to the concrete facts available to everyone, because of course it should - isn't about facts, but it's about ethics. Not just about what is, but about what ought to be. Science can tell you about what is, it can predict some things that will be, it can reveal truths about what was, but I don't think science can tell us what ought to be, in a moral sense. It can reveal facts that are very relevant to what we think ought to be, but it can't tell us what's good or bad. Science can elucidate for us what homosexuality is, what causes it and if we take science in a broad sense including sociology and so forth, not just natural sciences, than it can tell us about same sex parenting and the results it has on children and so forth, but it can't tell us whether these things are good or bad in a moral sense.

But I think politics should actually be very much about how we want our society to look like, about what ought to be, about what things are good and what things are bad and I don't think we can reach an idea about such things solely on the basis of material evidence. So we need more than that; we need moral principles to guide us in making laws and governing our societies. The problem is, with the variety of worldviews that are common in our western societies, the moral principles that people build their political beliefs on, are really diffuse and often at odds with each other. But as much at odds as they are with each other, I don't think society benefits from saying religious worldviews and the moral principles that they provide are a no go in the political arena. Wouldn't the idea of keeping religion out of politics amount to basically limiting the political freedom of certain people because we think their ideas are stupid? That doesn't seem awfully democratic to me.

However, I do think there's more to be said about it. One problem that does arise if we take specific worldviews, religious or not, into politics, is that it can kind of stop the conversation. Actually, in a discussion, whether political or not, one should be aware that the different participants might start of from some very different premises. A statement like "we shouldn't allow this because God said so" might be completely true, but still, if the other participants in the discussion don't even believe God exists, the statement doesn't mean anything to them and it kind of kills the conversation. If somebody asks me about my beliefs and why I belief them I don't mind replying in the line of; 'I believe this to be so and so because God has revealed this in his Word.' But if I'm participating in a debate about something with people who don't share my faith and I'm trying to actually make a case about something, than I know I can't use such a line of reasoning, not because it isn't true or because I'm ashamed of my beliefs or anything like that, but simply because I know it won't help bringing my point across at all, because such a statement would be meaningless for the people to whom my plea is aimed, simply because they don't share the relevant premises that make such a statement meaningful. Therefore I do think that in political debates or whatever such statements often aren't really appropriate, again, not because they're not valid, certainly not because I think religion should be kept out of politics as a matter of principle, but simply because such statements often aren't very helpful in a political discussion. :)

No it isn't, it's about what the relgious say is ethical. There is a big difference. Since homosexuality is for the religous a moral perversion, it is ethical to prevent gays from enjoying the same rights as the heterosexual community.

Now we can debate which is the more ethical stance.
 
TheGreenMonkey said:
Science is a result of the limited intelligence of the human mind, compared to the intelligence of God. It would be hardly surprising if it contains large errors. Science should not be put on any pedestal as being a great source of knowledge.

The belief in an infallible God is also a product of limited human intelligence. You have a fallible human mind like everyone else, so how do you know your belief in God is not in error? You claim the Bible was divinely inspired, but did God reach down from the heavens and actually write the words on parchment? My understanding of what you believe is that God somehow talked to the authors of the Bible. But if they all had limited intelligence, how could they be trusted to get God's words right?

A major difference between science and religion is that religion is the product of a relatively few minds, whose views go unchallenged. Science is the product of a vast network of minds, the results of which are far more complex and far more self-correcting than the product of any individual human mind. No individual could have created alone the knowledge that underlies any piece of modern technology, just as no individual could construct a modern building all by himself. Even something as apparently simple as a pencil requires products and services from something like two hundred different sources. Science harnesses the efforts and creativity of millions of individuals.

With complexity of this magnitude, the wonder is not that science is imperfect, that it makes errors. The wonder is that it makes so relatively few of them. While theologians argue over whether the accounts in Genesis 1 and Genesis 2 are contradictory, a discussion that any first grader could participate in, the computer code that allows us to interact on the internet is so complex that only a handful of people in the world understand it. Yet we manage to create such codes with relatively few bugs, while the Bible, which is many orders of magnitude simpler, contains hundreds of inconsistencies that require theologians to tie themselves into knots to rationalize.

Maaaaaaaarten said:
I don't think these issues are quite the same. The discussion about the missile is one regarding what factually happened. Now the issue of same sex marriage - not that it shouldn't be related to the concrete facts available to everyone, because of course it should - isn't about facts, but it's about ethics. Not just about what is, but about what ought to be.

Sure, but the religious argument against same-sex marriage is not related at all to facts. That was my point. It’s based on a dogmatic view that homosexual relations are sinful. Period. There are no facts whatsoever to back that view up. Even if one believes the Bible is literally true, as certain posters here apparently do, the Bible provides no facts to back up its view. And even if the Bible did back up its arguments with facts, those arguments would have to evaluated keeping in mind that we today are aware of many facts that people back then were ignorant of.

This is generally the way religious texts operate. If one commands its followers to rape, pillage and murder, then its followers will do that, facts be damned. Thus we have all these debates about Islam. Why should anyone be surprised by Muslim extremists? If the Bible commanded that homosexuals be put to death, then either many devout Christians would attempt to kill homosexuals, or more likely, theologians would twist themselves into pretzels explaining why the Bible didn't really mean that.

All morals have a basis in facts. I could go a lot further, but won’t attempt to in this narrow environment, and point out that there is an enormous amount of evidence that prevailing moral views evolved, like other human traits, because of their survival value. There are many studies that show that many of our actions or beliefs about what is right in certain situations clash with traditional understanding of morality, that only an evolutionary view can account for.

But it’s not necessary to do that here. It’s only necessary to point out that any ethical stance is based to some extent on facts. Even the moral views declared in the Bible were based on facts, it's just that the people declaring them were either not very aware of this, or didn't believe it mattered. So when Jspear or GM argue that homosexuality is a sin, whether they are aware of this or not, their view is based on certain facts existing when the Bible was written. The proper way to argue would be to try to ascertain what these facts were, and bring them into the discussion, rather than dogmatically asserting the view as if facts were completely irrelevant.

However, I do think there's more to be said about it. One problem that does arise if we take specific worldviews, religious or not, into politics, is that it can kind of stop the conversation. Actually, in a discussion, whether political or not, one should be aware that the different participants might start of from some very different premises.

Yes, but look at the contrasting premises. The fundamentalist religious view is: the Bible is literally true, end of discussion. The modern secular view is: our views result from a constant give-and-take dialogue, the discussion never ends. One view says it has all the answers, the other view says the answers emerge from everyone’s input.

Jspear and GM are welcome to cling to their dogmatic views, but since all internet discussion presupposes the modern view, I really don't see the point in their joining in the discussion at all. I don't even understand why they would want to bother. It isn’t just that they have a different perspective from others. They have a different definition of what perspective is, they have a different framework in which perspectives are defined. They don’t come here to learn. They come here to test the strength of their refusal to learn. This is something they're actually proud of.

They’re welcome to believe that their dogmatism is superior, but all the modern technology they enjoy was created only through the secular view of give and take. Whenever dogmatism is tried, it leads to a dead end.
 
Re: God and Religion

Hugh Januss said:
The folks arguing on the religion side are heavily handicapped by the fact that there are more different conflicting versions of "Religion" than one can shake a stick at. :rolleyes:

Aye very true. Just like there are many different views of pretty much everything else in life - like science for example. It's an unfortunate reality.
 
Aug 4, 2011
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Look at the splits and arguments amongst religious leaders over Gay marriage.
Religion eventually catches up with the common sense view. It has to. It has to adapt. It takes time because it's an admission that their views are wrong and out dated and they have to change them in a less damaging way as possible.
I have noticed lately in discussions that there has been a lot of talk about God not being a man. Even religious people are now starting to think hard about simple things that were taken for granted.
As an atheist I find it all very interesting watching the huge u turns that have to be made because more people are becoming Atheist or agnostic.
 
Re: God and Religion

Jspear said:
Hugh Januss said:
The folks arguing on the religion side are heavily handicapped by the fact that there are more different conflicting versions of "Religion" than one can shake a stick at. :rolleyes:

Aye very true. Just like there are many different views of pretty much everything else in life - like science for example. It's an unfortunate reality.
No, not the same thing at all. There are different branches of science and different applications but you don't see Chemistry saying there are 118 elements while Geology says there are only 4, Earth, Fire, Water, and Air.
 
Re: God and Religion

Hugh Januss said:
Jspear said:
Hugh Januss said:
The folks arguing on the religion side are heavily handicapped by the fact that there are more different conflicting versions of "Religion" than one can shake a stick at. :rolleyes:

Aye very true. Just like there are many different views of pretty much everything else in life - like science for example. It's an unfortunate reality.
No, not the same thing at all. There are different branches of science and different applications but you don't see Chemistry saying there are 118 elements while Geology says there are only 4, Earth, Fire, Water, and Air.

I was speaking specifically about evolutionary science. There is not one consistent consensus in this area of thought.
 
Apr 12, 2009
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As I said before: when I hear someone say: "I am against gay marriage because I think same sex couples are not natural and are not able to raise children", I would very strongly disagree, but I could argue against that.
If one says "Gay marriage should not be legal because my god has told me so". Well, the debate is over, isn't it...
 
Re: God and Religion

Jspear said:
Hugh Januss said:
Jspear said:
Hugh Januss said:
The folks arguing on the religion side are heavily handicapped by the fact that there are more different conflicting versions of "Religion" than one can shake a stick at. :rolleyes:

Aye very true. Just like there are many different views of pretty much everything else in life - like science for example. It's an unfortunate reality.
No, not the same thing at all. There are different branches of science and different applications but you don't see Chemistry saying there are 118 elements while Geology says there are only 4, Earth, Fire, Water, and Air.

I was speaking specifically about evolutionary science. There is not one consistent consensus in this area of thought.

But why wrack your brain with a thousand concerns and general consensus, when there is Genesis?
 
Re: God and Religion

Jspear said:
I was speaking specifically about evolutionary science. There is not one consistent consensus in this area of thought.

Your original post didn't indicate any specificity. But in any case, there is enormous consensus in evolutionary science. I’m really not sure what you’re talking about. There are debates about various dates in evolutionary history, exactly when certain species emerged, and which species preceded them, and so forth, but these are relatively minor tweakings. There are more serious debates about the mechanisms of evolution, e.g., natural selection vs. self-organizing or other processes described by complexity theory; genetic vs. epigenetic inheritance; group selection; and the role of social and cultural evolution. These debates, though, are all held within a framework of consensus on the fact of evolution.

There are many competing views about how some evolutionary events occurred, but this should not obscure the fact that everyone agrees that these events were evolutionary. Even fringe views, like Rupert Sheldrake’s morphogenetic fields, dismissed by the vast majority of scientists, embrace the fact of evolution. Even severe critics of science, like the Illuminati, hard-core rationalists who believe that everything began with Euler’s formula, don’t deny the existence of evolution. All scientific areas of investigation feature spirited differences and debate, and any scientist will tell you that this is a healthy sign. It provides much more reason to believe scientists when they do agree on some very general phenomenon like evolution.

And though almost all of the creationist fire is focused on evolutionary biology, it’s at odds with far more than that. Most religious views, certainly including the literalist interpretation of the Bible, subscribe to philosophical dualism. Very few scientists accept this view, for the simple reason that dualism, essentially by definition, implies two non-interacting levels of existence.

Granted, the prevailing scientific view of materialism, a monistic view, has it’s own problems. No one can explain consciousness in terms of materialism, and I freely concede that I will go even further and argue that there is no apparent survival value of consciousness that could have driven its evolution. All the functional, observable features of evolution could have arisen in zombies, that is, beings just like us in every way except that they are completely unconscious. Indeed, the vast majority of our behavior is unconscious as it is (Sidelight: why God would have created us in that manner only a creationist can understand, just as only a creationist can understand why God would have created species with features that are superfluous, or that provide inefficient ways of accomplishing something necessary to survival. Evolution easily explains such imperfections, while creationists, as always, have to go to great lengths to rationalize why a perfect, infallible God would have made creatures this way).

But dualism is not just unexplainable in terms of current evidence, as materialism is. It logically makes no sense. This forum is not the place to go into that, but there are plenty of sources on the internet where this can be followed up. A materialistic explanation of consciousness, while apparently beyond any current human intellect, is not logically impossible, and it could have evolved even if it had no survival value. And there are other views, such as panpsychism, the notion that every form of matter is conscious to some degree, that also are conceivable explanations.

Another area of conflict that is not much discussed is free will. Jspear apparently thinks that everyone can freely decide whether to accept the existence of God or not. Like most people, he is almost completely unaware of the actual processes that go on in his mind during thought, believing in the myth that he freely chooses what to think or not to think. An enormous body of modern neuroscience says otherwise, and in fact, one of the central principles of science, cause and effect, is incompatible with free will in any traditional sense. While many scientists believe in free will, it's a watered down version very much unlike the traditional religious view of some sense of self that stands independent of the brain and decides what thoughts will be listened to.

As with dualism, which is closely related to free will, it isn't just that there is no evidence for free will in the traditional sense. The concept is incoherent. How could anyone exercise free will? Apparently we make decisions either randomly, or because of certain reasons. I think everyone can concur that a being making random decisions is not free, or if it is, freedom is not something to be respected or desired.

But what about someone who makes decisions based on reasons, as most of us do? Forget the fact that many of these reasons are unconscious, which by itself makes the notion of free will very problematic. Suppose they are completely conscious. You make a decision because of A, B and C. Clearly, these reasons A, B and C are causes of your behavior. So free will in the sense of independence of cause and effect is nonsensical.

As I said before, most scientists and philosophers accept that. They are busy defining a new concept of free will that takes this into account. My point here is that regardless of whether or not you really regard this as worthy of the term free will (I don't), it's very different from the traditional religious view. The traditional view depends heavily on the notion of this independence. Without it, the entire program of choosing to be saved, and deserving to go to hell or purgatory if you choose otherwise, falls apart.

So why don't literalists like Jspear and GM spend more time denouncing neuroscience, the way they denounce evolution, and indeed, why don't they denounce the entire enterprise of science, since it all rests on the notion of cause-and-effect, which is incompatible with their vision of free will? Probably because they aren't even aware of these problems, and even if they are, I doubt they're going to, say, refuse a brain scan following a serious fall while bike riding because they believe that neuroscience is deeply flawed. Anyway, Jspear has already indicated that he's a big fan of modern technology, which he thinks is based on a stronger version of science than evolutionary biology. He apparently doesn't see the hypocrisy here, of embracing technology that could not have been created without a worldview very much different from the one expressed by a literal understanding of the Bible.

You seem to be having a hard time understanding the fact that there are Christian scientists or simply agnostic scientist that don't except evolution that have contributed greatly in many areas of science.

You seem to have a hard time understanding that that is irrelevant--it does not answer my question. Sure, there are many scientists who call themselves Christian (Sir John Eccles, winner of a Nobel Prize for his work in neurophysiology comes to mind), but I have emphasized in all my posts that I'm talking about Christians who believe the Bible literally. Catholics, and many other Christians, accept evolution. Even Francis Collins, Director of NIH, a big believer in the Bible, and highly criticized by many scientists, knows that the Biblical version of creation is not literally true, and has admitted as much.

There are very few Biblical literalists who are scientists, and those who stay in business do so either by being hypocrites (like that geologist who operates under two identities), or by working in areas of science where the disconnect is not so obvious. My example of neuroscience was used precisely to point out that there are many literalists who aren't even aware that certain underlying principles that allow them to practice science at all are inconsistent with their view of original sin.

But even if they are aware, that doesn't prevent them from contributing to science. Many great contributions to human history have been made by people living a lie. That doesn't necessarily detract from the importance of their contribution, but it also does not turn the lie into a truth. Teddy Kennedy was a womanizer for much of his life, and was responsible in some manner for a young woman's death, but he also championed women's rights in the Senate.

That is basically the fallacy of your argument. You think that because someone who claims to believe the Bible literally makes a contribution to science, that proves that the literal interpretation is completely consistent with science. That simply is not the case. It's like saying that because some Hollywood stars who speak out on climate change live a lifestyle with a heavy carbon footprint, that heavy carbon emissions are not a problem for the earth. It's quite possible for people to be hypocritical, to say one thing and do another. Their actions do not necessarily prove their words wrong, and vice-versa.
 
Re: God and Religion

Jspear said:
Evolution has been developed starting with the presupposition that God doesn't exists and that He didn't create the world in 6 days - They then developed everything based on that. I'm sure you've heard before where they have taken volcanic rock that they knew was just recently formed - dated the rock - and it came out to be over a hundred thousand years old. How can that happen? Because the processes that they use to determine age are not all correct. They aren't based in sound science. They have a mindset that effects their work. Evolutionary science cannot be put in the same category as objective science.

I'm sure that Charles Darwin did not begin with the assumption that there is no god etc. Rather he looked at the natural world around him and made conclusions from that. That is the process of science. I can't say what he believed when he was young or later, but he certainly grappled with his religious faith or lack of it.

As for the volcanic rock "that was recently formed", I guess you mean solidified lava. Dating something like that is completely senseless, since it results from a melting pot that has risen from the depths and is a mixture of many things and not something that has laid underground in one block for a period. It's like saying we found a fossilized tree in a bed of rock 40 million years old and carbon dated it to be 40-45 thousand years old. Firstly, carbon dating is not going to give a figure much larger than that, since its half life is relatively short. Secondly, there's no carbon in the fossil, so what are you dating? So you're not proving anything.

Sure, dating is imprecise (but not at the level of going from 6,000 to 4.5 billion) and can give highly spurious results if the wrong method is used or there are impurities, but astronomy, geology, biology and physics all converge on showing that the earth is old. It's not a conspiracy by a small elite.

For example, how does any theory of a 6,000 year old earth and a world wide flood explain the existence of the remains of a coral reef under the coal beds in central England? How can such a theory explain/predict where deposits of coal, gold etc. lie? How does it justify the fact that there was no huge regression in human civilisation 4,000 years ago? How come there was pretty advanced civilisation in the first place? How does such a theory explain the huge number of species that exist after such a flood only 4,000 years ago? Evolution would have to act quicker than any evolutionist would accept.

Jspear said:
The internal consistency of the Bible is very different from any other book. It was written by 40 different authors over a period of 1500-2000 years. Many of theses authors didn't even know each other. Still the Bible has perfect consistency and accuracy. What supports Genesis? Fossils for one thing. Going later in time there are many other archaeological artifacts that support the Bible as well. There are over 24,000 manuscripts for the New Testament. Much more than any other book in antiquity.

The authors come from the same tradition. Maybe they didn't know each other, but they knew what had been written in the past. The books of the bible were selected by a commission, so they chose books that would show consistency. As for perfect consistency, you can find differences e.g. in the numbers of builders of the temple in Kings and Chronicles. OK, minor details, but it's not perfect consistency. Ecclesiastes is very existentialist in content until the final few verses (which many argue was a later edition) and seems to deny any concept of the afterlife.

As for the manuscripts, yes there are a lot, but many are small fragments. The earliest full manuscripts are from towards the end of the second century. The gospels were written in Greek from one to two generations after the events they describe, starting with Mark and finishing with John. There is an evolution in their content (OK there is the theory of the Q script which Luke and Matthew are supposed to use). In Mark there is no nativity, Christ's behaviour according to Mark does not indicate knowledge of a mission, which is more apparent in later gospels, which introduce nativity stories, which include the flight to Egypt (linking Christ to Moses) and his birth in Bethlehem due to a outlandish requirement for Joseph to go to the land of his ancestors for taxation purposes (no confirmation in the historical records of something which would require huge movement). This was to show that a "prophecy" came true (the prophecy in Daniel is of a similar type, the book was unknown in Jewish circles until the middle of the 2nd century BC, after the events it described). Also, the ancestral tree from Adam to David is stretched in comparison to the one in the OT to balance out the number of generations before and after David.
 
Re: God and Religion

Merckx index said:
So why don't literalists like Jspear and GM spend more time denouncing neuroscience, the way they denounce evolution, and indeed, why don't they denounce the entire enterprise of science, since it all rests on the notion of cause-and-effect, which is incompatible with their vision of free will? Probably because they aren't even aware of these problems, and even if they are, I doubt they're going to, say, refuse a brain scan following a serious fall while bike riding because they believe that neuroscience is deeply flawed. Anyway, Jspear has already indicated that he's a big fan of modern technology, which he thinks is based on a stronger version of science than evolutionary biology. He apparently doesn't see the hypocrisy here, of embracing technology that could not have been created without a worldview very much different from the one expressed by a literal understanding of the Bible.

You seem to be having a hard time understanding the fact that there are Christian scientists or simply agnostic scientist that don't except evolution that have contributed greatly in many areas of science.
 
Re: God and Religion

Tank Engine said:
I'm sure that Charles Darwin did not begin with the assumption that there is no god etc. Rather he looked at the natural world around him and made conclusions from that. That is the process of science. I can't say what he believed when he was young or later, but he certainly grappled with his religious faith or lack of it.

If you look at the natural world in the same manner with which you look at everything else, then you would conclude that there was some sort of creator. You wouldn't come to the conclusion that the God of the Bible exists - you would simply understand that the earth like everything else had to have been designed and created.

To come to the conclusion that Darwin did, you would have to start off with the assumption that there was no god. Darwin himself says he gave up Christianity when he turned 40 (1849) - The Origins of Species was published in 59.

As for the volcanic rock "that was recently formed", I guess you mean solidified lava. Dating something like that is completely senseless, since it results from a melting pot that has risen from the depths and is a mixture of many things and not something that has laid underground in one block for a period. It's like saying we found a fossilized tree in a bed of rock 40 million years old and carbon dated it to be 40-45 thousand years old. Firstly, carbon dating is not going to give a figure much larger than that, since its half life is relatively short. Secondly, there's no carbon in the fossil, so what are you dating? So you're not proving anything.

Fair enough

Sure, dating is imprecise (but not at the level of going from 6,000 to 4.5 billion) and can give highly spurious results if the wrong method is used or there are impurities, but astronomy, geology, biology and physics all converge on showing that the earth is old. It's not a conspiracy by a small elite.

I'm not an expert in this area so I don't understand all of it. Would you mind critiquing this article when you have time? It's kinda long.... http://www.christiananswers.net/q-aig/aig-c007.html

So in what ways are they showing the earth is old?

The authors come from the same tradition. Maybe they didn't know each other, but they knew what had been written in the past. The books of the bible were selected by a commission, so they chose books that would show consistency. As for perfect consistency, you can find differences e.g. in the numbers of builders of the temple in Kings and Chronicles. OK, minor details, but it's not perfect consistency. Ecclesiastes is very existentialist in content until the final few verses (which many argue was a later edition) and seems to deny any concept of the afterlife.

As for the manuscripts, yes there are a lot, but many are small fragments. The earliest full manuscripts are from towards the end of the second century. The gospels were written in Greek from one to two generations after the events they describe, starting with Mark and finishing with John. There is an evolution in their content (OK there is the theory of the Q script which Luke and Matthew are supposed to use). In Mark there is no nativity, Christ's behaviour according to Mark does not indicate knowledge of a mission, which is more apparent in later gospels, which introduce nativity stories, which include the flight to Egypt (linking Christ to Moses) and his birth in Bethlehem due to a outlandish requirement for Joseph to go to the land of his ancestors for taxation purposes (no confirmation in the historical records of something which would require huge movement). This was to show that a "prophecy" came true (the prophecy in Daniel is of a similar type, the book was unknown in Jewish circles until the middle of the 2nd century BC, after the events it described). Also, the ancestral tree from Adam to David is stretched in comparison to the one in the OT to balance out the number of generations before and after David.

Yes the authors did know what had been written before them but that doesn't discredit them at all. Jeremiah predicted the fall of Jerusalem and it happened. He (and other prophets) predicted the restoration of Israel. There are prophecies concerning the birth of Jesus, His death, resurrection; all these things came to be. There are hundreds of OT prophecies that have found their fulfillment in the NT; that gives the Bible amazing credibility. The cannon of scripture was understood and recognized by believers before the council of Nicaea. The manuscript evidence we have for the Bible is greater than any other book in antiquity. The books themselves were written from around 40-96 AD. They were written very closely to the events they described. There is no proof of a conspiracy amongst the writers trying to change the story or add on to what actually happened. The gospel narratives give some different details yes but that doesn't show contradiction. That simply shows they were showing and telling different aspects of Jesus life. John even said that he couldn't even begin to write about all that Jesus had done, it was to vast. Sorry, I don't quite know what you mean when you say the ancestral tree from Adam to David is stretched.
 
Re: God and Religion

12 or 20 of us could cite overwhelming evidence that the earth is round (or at least a mostly spherical shaped object) but Jspear would argue it at every turn and insist that we were wrong and he was right because ..........that's what HE believes. :rolleyes:
 
Re: God and Religion

Jspear said:
If you look at the natural world in the same manner with which you look at everything else, then you would conclude that there was some sort of creator. You wouldn't come to the conclusion that the God of the Bible exists - you would simply understand that the earth like everything else had to have been designed and created.

This goes back to William Paley. History is full of examples of how "common sense" is wrong. Most of the technology we enjoy today is the product of people who challenged common sense.

From Tank Engine:

Sure, dating is imprecise (but not at the level of going from 6,000 to 4.5 billion) and can give highly spurious results if the wrong method is used or there are impurities, but astronomy, geology, biology and physics all converge on showing that the earth is old. It's not a conspiracy by a small elite.

To expand on this a little, there are many other ways of dating prehistoric events beside isotope concentrations. For example, optical methods (electron spin resonance and thermoluminescence) can estimate ages of at least 100,000 years. Paleomagnetism, which takes advantage of reversals in the earth’s magnetic field that are in effect recorded by certain magnetic substances, can reach back several million years. Even something as simple and well known as annual tree rings have been used to estimate ages of more than 10,000 years, and some glaciers can be dated by annual layers back to more than 700,000 years.

Studies of the earth-moon relationship indicate that the earth's rotation is slowing down as the moon very gradually distances itself from out planet, with the result that day-night cycles are longer now than they were in the past. This in turn means there were more days per year hundreds of millions year ago, a conclusion supported by changes in daily and annual growth rings of coral. Corals may also be used for dating on the basis of sea level changes.

There are still other methods, such as comparing DNA sequences to create a molecular clock, that can't estimate absolute ages, but can estimate comparative ones, e.g., say that one species emerged several times further back in time than another.

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/earth-rotation-summer-solstice/

The age of other heavenly bodies is determined by the speed of light and the distance they are from the earth, and also by the expansion of the universe. These methods are completely independent of radiometric dating, and indeed, of any method used to date events on the earth.

I'm not an expert in this area so I don't understand all of it. Would you mind critiquing this article when you have time? It's kinda long.... http://www.christiananswers.net/q-aig/aig-c007.html

This is a useful article, I think, in that it offers some criticism of radiometric dating findings, though like most if not all creationist research, it mostly cites work not published in peer-reviewed journals, and makes the usual creationist assumptions, e.g., that the great flood happened and would have had such-and-such effects on the earth.

If someone more expert in geology than I am wants to comment on this, s/he’s welcome to. I’ll just point out that a relatively small number of errors or inconsistencies in radiometric dating don’t invalidate an enormous amount of data that are much less problematic. Many of the examples they give in which very different ages were determined were still all in the range of millions of years. And as I noted above, there are many other methods that also indicate the existence of what is often called deep time, which are not discussed here. These other approaches provide the missing context when the article states:

Are we suggesting that evolutionists are conspiring to massage the data to get what they want? No, not generally. It is simply that all observations must fit the prevailing paradigm. The paradigm, or belief system, of molecules-to-man evolution over eons of time, is so strongly entrenched it is not questioned—it is a “fact.” So every observation must fit this paradigm. Unconsciously, the researchers, who are supposedly “objective scientists” in the eyes of the public, select the observations to fit the basic belief system.

Yes, it's strongly entrenched, because it's supported by so many independent approaches. If you want to overturn it, you have to show that all these approaches are deeply flawed. That has not been done, though I will point out another article that criticizes some of these other methods:

http://www.cs.unc.edu/~plaisted/ce/dating.html

I haven't had time to read all of this. If I have time, I may critique it, though just from skimming it, I can see that the author has a tendency to make some rather wild speculation in order to invalidate scientific claims.

Regarding the link you produced, though, I will comment more specifically on this:

Red blood cells and hemoglobin have been found in some (unfossilized!) dinosaur bone. But these could not last more than a few thousand years—certainly not the 65 Ma since the last dinosaurs lived, according to evolutionists.[28]

This has been pretty much debunked. What the researchers found may have had a similar appearance to red blood cells, but there is no evidence that they were in fact cells. There also was no hemoglobin protein found in this bone.There apparently was heme, a small molecule that is associated with the hemoglobin protein and carries oxygen. This finding is not evidence for a young age of the fossils, though, as porphyrins, the class of molecules heme belongs to, are known to be quite stable. Another porphyrin, chlorophyll, for example, has in fact been found in sediments that have been dated to millions of years old.

Yes the authors did know what had been written before them but that doesn't discredit them at all. Jeremiah predicted the fall of Jerusalem and it happened. He (and other prophets) predicted the restoration of Israel. There are prophecies concerning the birth of Jesus, His death, resurrection; all these things came to be. There are hundreds of OT prophecies that have found their fulfillment in the NT; that gives the Bible amazing credibility.

Ah, yes, in the good old days they could predict everything, but nowadays we can't even predict the top 10 in the Tour de France.

So to summarize:

!) The literalist view of the Bible is inconsistent with a great deal more science, philosophy and scholarship than just evolutionary biology--e.g., the understanding of the brain revealed by modern neuroscience;
2) Even within the field of evolutionary biology, the inconsistencies are not limited to just the evidence for the age of the earth--e.g., the anatomical and molecular features of different species provide enormous support for the view that some species emerged before others.
3) Even just considering dating prehistoric events, there are many methods besides those based on radioisotopes, which also indicate a very old age of the earth.

I can understand and sympathize with criticism of individual findings in the area of dating, but they don't negate the huge body of work just in that area that validates a very immense period of prehistory. Even if most such studies were subject to a large degree of uncertainty, that uncertainty does not account for the discrepancy between millions or billions of years vs. a few thousand years, as TE pointed out. There's an enormous difference between arguing for a revision of the time table and throwing out the time table entirely and trying to make everything conform to a rigid, preconceived view.

The fact that a few scientists, or individuals with scientific degrees, support a creationist or literalist view also doesn't mean much. I pointed out, in my previous post (edited to respond to your following post), that it's quite possible for people simply to be hypocritical, to say one thing and do another. I'll add here that even if these scientists genuinely believe that their work supports their views, they are a small minority in the field. One could draw an analogy with climate change, where skeptics point to a few scientists who argue against the prevailing view. The majority is not always right, but when the majority is overwhelming, well over 90%, citing a handful of dissenters is not a very strong argument. There are dissenters in almost every scientific area, and the burden of proof is on them to demonstrate why they're right and almost everyone else is wrong.
 
When I read that article, I was also struck by the dinosaur passage. It made me curious how they are integrated into the creation story despite not being mentioned in the bible. Were they alleged to be killed in the flood?

At the heart of any scientific measurement is uncertainty. Some are more precise than others. I didn't really buy the authors critiques as anything other than picking at a few details to assuage an audience that only has a rudimentary understanding of science. I think the better argument would be just to admit the earth is old because God created it to look that way to foster human imagination and investigation etc. Too much evidence discredits the young earth theory IMO.
 
Re:

djpbaltimore said:
When I read that article, I was also struck by the dinosaur passage. It made me curious how they are integrated into the creation story despite not being mentioned in the bible. Were they alleged to be killed in the flood?

At the heart of any scientific measurement is uncertainty. Some are more precise than others. I didn't really buy the authors critiques as anything other than picking at a few details to assuage an audience that only has a rudimentary understanding of science. I think the better argument would be just to admit the earth is old because God created it to look that way to foster human imagination and investigation etc. Too much evidence discredits the young earth theory IMO.
Well, they wouldn't have fit on the ark, would they?