YoursTrue
Faith-confidence in what we hope for (Hebrews 11)
The rain in Spain comes mainly from mars, maybe.It has been raining a lot in Missouri this summer where I am.
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The rain in Spain comes mainly from mars, maybe.It has been raining a lot in Missouri this summer where I am.
They show that brains evolved. There are still very simple animals with no brains. We can find brains at all sorts of levels of development. There is nothing magical about the evolution of the brain.So what does all that prove? O no, sorry, I mean what is that evidence of? Brains, no brains?
You're confused.The rain in Spain comes mainly from mars, maybe.
Hm, I wonder if an Alfred E. Neumann face has anything to do with it.You're confused.
I have it on what says it's good
Christian Authority that it's Neptune.
Not Mars.
And water went the other way.
Excess flood water was wafted to
Neptune where it serves to this day,
shining bright as a warning Beacon.
Against incoming rogue angels.
Don't believe me? Reference available
on request
So all the Islamic states we see around the world at the moment have abandoned "the true spirit of Islam" and instead their citizens live lives in an economic rather than a religious reality, you're saying?
Agreed, the point is closed.I agree, but am not sure why you cared to make that point.
Sure, irreducible complexity postulates that the functionality of every single constituent of any living system is dependent on the other constituents and vice versa. It’s neither possible to exclude a constituent nor a constituent can be functional or evolve in isolation of the other interdependent constituents.Is this part of an irreducible complexity argument?
Agreed, the point is closed.No, but I believe that it likely occurred in the past.
But it didn't adequately support that position. The central tenet - that genetic variation occurs across generations and that environments decide which variants will dominate a populations gene pool - is still intact.
It’s relevant because you are the one who insisted that the ends of ring species are different species and you claimed it to be evidence of evolution. Simply, It’s not.I told you that I'm not interested in discussing this topic unless you let me know why you think it's relevant, and you chose not to.
But we do, just as we have a mechanism for macro-orbiting to proceed. What's needed to say that it won't or can't proceed is a mechanism to stop it. You see an icicle growing from your eave. Will it grow forever? No. Mechanisms exist to prevent that. It will eventually hit the ground if it doesn't fall from its own weight, and spring will come to thaw it. But you don't have that with evolution or Pluto orbiting until you get to the end of Pluto or of life. Nothing less will prevent either from going on and on and on and on indefinitely.
I don't look at orphan links. You'd need to summarize its salient points in a sentence or two for me to decide if it's worth reading. What is your best reason for one to change his mind about consciousness being compatible with naturalism?
How is physical reality different from physical process? If you acknowledge that physical processes don't imply consciousness, why you insist that consciousness is physical?I don't see a contradiction there even if you change it to what I actually did say - that I have no reason to believe that consciousness isn't an epiphenomenon of physical reality (physicalism - roughly the same as naturalism and materialsm)
It’s totally supported by the fact (as clarified in the article above) that there are no known physical processes/mechanisms to account for thoughts/self-awareness/consciousness.That's an unsupported claim.
The observed behavior is the same, which is “input processing/decision making”.I judge by behavior.
I've said that you must be redefining cognition, which in its first definition implies consciousness. "Decisions" in an unconscious entity are like the "decisions" of a toe to grow nails.
Didn’t you already acknowledge that physical processes don't imply consciousness; did you change your mind? do you think that processes that run within the robot are not physical?It might be. The problem is that it appears that we can never know
I didn’t accuse you of anything, I’m only asking you to respond to logic by logic. If your response is simply that this is the way you believe it (energy is involved) period. Then it’s not a rational argument. Would it make sense to you if I do the same?It seems that your persistent m.o. is to attack anyone whom you disagree with and accuse them of ignorance. Maybe if you actually studied you would understand that you're all too often not right, and this is a place you can start even though it's not a scientific source per se: Evolution - Wikipedia
Didn’t I advise you before to resist the urge to attack a person to compensate for your feelings of insecurity/inadequacy. Yet you as well as other fellow attackers insist to expose your vulnerabilities to everyone to see how pathetic you are.It's dishonest and / or brainless.
Which says what it says of the religion and
it's sponsors.
you appear to love the idea that you are an ape and that you couldn’t find the vaccine.You appear to hate the idea that you are an ape.
you appear to love the idea that you are an ape and that you couldn’t find the vaccine.
I am not the on in need of such a vaccine. I need to remind you that you are the one that denies reality.you appear to love the idea that you are an ape and that you couldn’t find the vaccine.
I went over it at least twice. Would you pay attention the third time? You can't try to insult others when you were the one that ignored the explanations given to you.
what?I am not the on in need of such a vaccine. I need to remind you that you are the one that denies reality.
Of course I love the fact that I am an ape. Unlike you I do not think that I am a giraffe. Or do you think that you are a lichen? It is hard to get a straight answer out of you at times. I would never deny that I am a human. Yet you seem to do it quite often.
It is a negligible matter. You do not understand the important criteria for ring species to exist. You, as all creationists do a t times, are only clutching at straws.So, your “contemporary sense” is that even if the essential qualifier for the ring species concept to have continuous gene flow around the ring cannot be satisfied, it doesn’t matter for you, it’s merely a little negligible matter but the populations complex would still quality as ring species? Are you serious?
Your “contemporary sense” doesn’t make any sense. In fact, it qualifies as the third most ridiculous claim ever made on the thread. The first one was also yours. Congrats.
Maybe your ignorance is due to extreme forgetfulness. You seem to have forgotten who is in need of your vaunted vaccine.what?
try again. I mean keep searching for the vaccine.
It’s not a threat but rather the consequences of our actions. We make the choice.What threat are you under?
It’s the other way around. The rise of the golden age had its roots in Islam itself.The decline had its roots in Islam itself.
Do you really believe that when Gerd B. Müller was talking about “dogmatic hostility” in the royal society conference in 2016, he was talking about me?Ease up on the projection please. The only dogmatic hostility has come from you. But, I do thank you for admitting that you are wrong again.
Not at all, let me explain some Islamic concepts.In fact, one of his basic ideas is that there is no such thing as cause and effect: there is only God's will. As such, the very essence of scientific investigation is denied as un-Islamic. This had an entirely negative effect on subsequent intellectual life.
History acknowledges the golden age era to be from the 8th to the 13th century. But I’m not the one who claimed that the golden age continued to the 17th century, (long after the death of Al-Ghazali on 1111), the wiki link did. See the link below under “decline”.Also, it is hardly the case that the golden age extended to the 17th century. The intellectual innovations of the early centuries (up to the 9th century) were mostly done by non-muslims. When Islam took a firmer hold, the advances in math and science stagnated. Of course, the mongol destruction of Baghdad and the Bayt al Hikma was a major blow as well. After that, the primary advances in math and science were done in mongol lands, not in the heart of Islam. If you include their work, you *might* be able to argue that intellectual advances happened in Islamic lands up to about the 14th century, but that is really pushing it.
the Ottoman period spanned more than 600 years (1300 - 1922), the Ottoman empire was the most powerful states in the world during the 15th and 16th centuries and came to an end in 1922.Sure, the Ottoman empire had some military successes after that (including the destruction of the Byzantine empire), but intellectual creativity had already died.