Subduction Zone
Veteran Member
I would suggest a retraction.What is wrong with you?
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I would suggest a retraction.What is wrong with you?
…. Your second sentence is kind of garbled, so I am not sure what it says.
Maybe like this- Atheists demand that I answer Then, when I tell the truth, they say it is a lie.
Which part of this is not accurate?
"I decided on unevidenced faith what the truth is. I must maintain this rigid posture no matter what. My notion of truth is so weak that to shore it up, I will abandon integrity as neceesary, stating such falsehoods as suit me about matters of which I am profoundly ignorant."
But you appear to have blinded yourself. And when have atheists ever claimed the truth to be falsehood? You have put a huge burden of proof upon yourself.Sorry, it was not well formed. Atheists seem to claim that truth is falsehood. And reason seems to be that atheist don’t like the truth. I can’t change what I think is truth only because atheists don’t like it.
Maybe accurate for some. I personally think Bible is truth, because I see it to be correct.
I cannot understand the "just a lucky fluke deal." My must comes from the fact that complex form takes on function, function takes on purpose. The purpose of surviving. If we were accidental, then no functionality would happen, no survival.
I don't see that that follows. Those organisms that suffer unlucky accidents (eg mutations, disasters etc) get filtered out. Only the lucky survive. Just think of the many, often trivial, happenstances that could have prevented our ancestors from producing any one of us.
I agree that such a notion can be distasteful, but that is irrelevant to considering reality.
Sorry, it was not well formed. Atheists seem to claim that truth is falsehood. And reason seems to be that atheist don’t like the truth. I can’t change what I think is truth only because atheists don’t like it.
Maybe accurate for some. I personally think Bible is truth, because I see it to be correct.
While this is a parody, I cannot tell you how many times I've had such a debate with religious fundamentalists.
For those of you who refuse to waver on your beliefs in the presence of truth presented through objective evidence or scientific theory, what brings you to reject these truths? Comfort? Fear? Pride? Poor fashion sense?
Why compels you persist in arguing for you beliefs?
But you appear to have blinded yourself. And when have atheists ever claimed the truth to be falsehood? You have put a huge burden of proof upon yourself.
My degree is in Agri Industry. We studied a lot back then. I'm sure the knowledge has advanced. My knowledge of science is rusty and unpolished. You obviously can counter most I might present. The timing of Mediterranean flooding is obviously off in my thinking. I've been out of the study of Dinosaurs for many years. Nothing you present though will damage my belief in God. Or my belief in Scripture.It does not make much sense either that
one refilling would kill them when the
others did not, or that the local event
would have such cataclysmic global effects.
In the event-
Spinosaurus was a semi-aquatic form.
There were no aquatic dinosaurs.
The Med flooding cycles were an ice
age thing, 60 plus million years after
the dinosaurs went extinct.
I'm relatively familiar with most scientific thought
Or maybe not.
and find little that rules one, my faith, or the other, science, out.
And maybe you've not looked very much.
.
My degree is in Agri Industry. We studied a lot back then. I'm sure the knowledge has advanced. My knowledge of science is rusty and unpolished. You obviously can counter most I might present. The timing of Mediterranean flooding is obviously off in my thinking. I've been out of the study of Dinosaurs for many years. Nothing you present though will damage my belief in God. Or my belief in Scripture.
This is a rather unclear statement. Are you saying that you will remain a Christian even though Genesis is clearly a book of myths? Or are you stating that you will ignore reality no matter what?My degree is in Agri Industry. We studied a lot back then. I'm sure the knowledge has advanced. My knowledge of science is rusty and unpolished. You obviously can counter most I might present. The timing of Mediterranean flooding is obviously off in my thinking. I've been out of the study of Dinosaurs for many years. Nothing you present though will damage my belief in God. Or my belief in Scripture.
I speak under correction, but I think theist have already given a clear answer, but I think it may have fallen on death ears.I am well aware of the rampant fundamentalism in the world. I just know they aren't going to come in here and explain their reasoning for doing so. They don't really see it that way. All they are going to do is some more rationalization. Its a pretty simple equation, and I know the OP knows that.
I speak under correction, but I think theist have already given a clear answer, but I think it may have fallen on death ears.
I don't want to speak for all, in case I may be wrong, so I will speak for myself. I think this is a one sided affair, with those against belief in God constantly badgering (Sorry. Can't find another word at the moment) them for evidence for their God, without supplying evidence for your... you know.
So I think if we work forward from a point, we can both get what we are asking for. Does that sound reasonable?
Maybe here might be a good place to start.
I believe in creation.
You believe in evolution.
Am I right so far?
So would I be safe to say that like me, having knowledge of things, help you in making a decision, as to what to believe?They aren't exclusive as far as I can tell. The thread is about fundamentalism, however. I am quite far from that. I hold no belief so strong or sacred that I won't change it in the face of new information. Not everything I believe is scientific (such as the nature if God), thus it does not even take scientific evidence to change what I believe. The caveat to that being that if I do believe something due to scientific evidence (such as evolution) it will take scientific evidence to change that belief.
Knowledge is like perfection. Something to strive for even though its impossible to attain.So would I be safe to say that like me, having knowledge of things, help you in making a decision, as to what to believe?
I think it depends on what you consider to be knowledge.Knowledge is like perfection. Something to strive for even though its impossible to attain.
In my opinion, the only real difference between knowledge and belief is conviction.
What you learn from watching ants will always be filtered by what you expected before watching them. And what you've learned will consistently be altered from that moment forward by an entire array of things too numerous to list.I think it depends on what you consider to be knowledge.
If you bought a car, or house, a dog... you have knowledge of that you know you did those things... unless of course you believe that we don't even know if we are all just existing in someone's bad dream.
So knowledge doesn't have to be impossible to attain. It is just a brain's tap away... I believe.
Conviction is just a description of one's belief.
Knowledge on the other hand is not a belief, but what is available to us, and can lead us to belief.
For example, just watching ants gives us knowledge... of ants.
Their is a big difference between trying to get people to reason logically and to try to make them accept a religious belief. You conflate refute the creation myths with attacking Christianity. By your standards Galileo tried to refute Christianity.
It's still knowledge, no matter how we look at it.What you learn from watching ants will always be filtered by what you expected before watching them. And what you've learned will consistently be altered from that moment forward by an entire array of things too numerous to list.
It's still knowledge, no matter how we look at it.
To learn something, means:
1. gain or acquire knowledge of or skill in (something) by study, experience, or being taught.