mikkel_the_dane
My own religion
As I said, it's all about how you just happen to feel.
Great way to make all of lifes important decisions
Well, I use reason, logic and evidence if relevant and include feelings if relevant.
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As I said, it's all about how you just happen to feel.
Great way to make all of lifes important decisions
Interesting.That's true.
I'm a Christian theist and I find that whether I think the first 11 chapters of Genesis are literal or not it does not make a difference and there is always something to attack.
And it goes beyond that to all parts of the Bible that are attacked by atheists/skeptics.
All Bible believing theists are in the same boat in that regard.
One line of enquiry in the study of / hunt for abiogenesis has been to find a place likely to have the potential to bring the necessary elements together. Here's a link showing why hydrothermal vents in the ocean are a promising candidate, how they hint at the potential to assemble the ingredients of a self-reproducing cell. Again, I don't suggest this is established, but it does show the hunt is guided by reasoning from evidence.Possibly. Discoveries in chemistry may mean that adding some chemicals into a certain environment is all that is needed and all those hard things just happen like magic. And this would show something.
That seems reasonable. However, it doesn't do away with human curiosity to know how life began.The fact that we are here shows that we are here I am told.
That's not what the bible says. The bible acknowledges that there are other gods ─ thou shalt have no other gods before me is probably the most famous example, but here are some more references ─Israel was monotheistic from the time of Moses till Israel, on and off, turned to idols.
That site is BS, I'm afraid. To claim that it is "mathematically impossible" for life to have arisen naturally is either silly or, perhaps more likely, deceit, i.e. to manufacture a fake talking point for creationists. Do you really suppose that if it truly had been found to be mathematically impossible, science would not acknowledge this? It would be the discovery of the century and Nobel Prizes would follow.
England has an interesting theory that the flow of energy through chemical systems tends to maximise entropy and that maximisation tendency will quite naturally lead to self-organising of chemistry into life, given enough time, since living things increase entropy more rapidly than inanimate processes. He calls it "dissipation-driven adaptation". It's an elegant idea, though I have not seen much development of it since England first published it, I think in 2014.
But Brian, this is the trouble. You are stumbling around, looking for sciency ideas that support what you want to believe, but you don't have the background to differentiate the serious ideas from the charlatanic BS. As I've often observed before on this forum, mainstream Christianity has no trouble reconciling itself to the findings of science, so long as one lets go of the notion of God needing to continually interfere in his creation, as if it were a badly maintained car. There is no evidence of that. On the contrary, the wonderful thing about creation is the way things seem to fit together and can be explainable in terms of each other. My strong advice is to consult theologians that understand science, rather than peeing into the wind trying to pretend science doesn't worlk.
Did you actually read and understand the objections to biblical historicity?
That is what I'm learning from my research into what terms mean, including scientific conjecture from what they think is from the beginning of life onward. Such as dna and genomes. While there are obviously structures called chromosomes and ribosomes, figuring how these things came about seems to be in the realm of fantastic possibilities.
All of science is a work in process. What's not known today may be understood tomorrow. What's known today was unknown yesterday. When I was born DNA was not understood, and plate techtonics was fantasy.
The controversy is mechanism, the details are not the issue.
So yes, chemistry doesnot explain it all -- yet, but it is the only known, reasonable or proposed mechanism that would account for life. God/Magic is a special pleading and extraordinary claim, and explains nothing.
Your evidence is subjective, so useful only to yourself, and I don't see how your beliefs are reasonable if they're unevidenced or logically invalid. Please explain.
Yes, I understand. Where evidence ends, so does reason, and "evidence for us," ie: feelings, intuition, &c, is epistemically and discursively useless. Your belief is unsupported by reason or evidence. Our lack of belief is the logical default.
It is not. How is it rational? Please show your work.
No, it follows algebraically. Boolean Algebra Calculator - Boolean expression calculator
So no God is necessary, it can happen automatically, by ordinary chemistry.
Natural mechanisms work when there is something to work with. When we come to creation, God has said that He did it and there is nothing to work with for a naturalistic answer, just speculations.
When we come to life all that science can do is define life in such a way that it is a chemical story and then work out some way that chemistry could have done it.
They are evidenced by my subjective ....
But I don't really need evidence to believe ..
Yes! Exactly!I actually believe first in the possibility of a God and then I find evidence that confirms that belief even if it is subjective.
What atheist here has done that? Now your personal version of "God" has been shown not to exist, but that does not mean that all versions have been shown to be false. Not even all Christian versions of God have been shown not to exist.I said, The atheist and skeptic commandeer science for themselves and lie about science showing that God does not exist when sceince does not do that but the atheist makes up their evidence from things that science does not claim.
Does that mean that you think that science does not show that God does not exist?
Or does it mean that you think that the science that atheists use to show that there is not God, actually does objectively show that there is not God, and is not a subjective interpretation?
I have a feeling that he will not understand this point. There is a rather specific phrase that those that do not understand respond with.Your version of theism is not the only one around. You are not even the only type of a Christian.
Do you know these people? :- BioLogos - God's Word. God's World. - BioLogos. I have not read in any great depth what they have to say, but it seemed to me from casual perusal that they are fairly sensible about all this. If I were you, this is the sort of reading I would do on the subject. There's also a guy called Alister McGrath, a fellow chemist (he was one year ahead of me at Oxford, though I never knew him), then biochemist and now Professor of Divinity. He is Anglican. He has written quite well on this.The headline is that abiogenesis is impossible. There is always change in probability when the right environment or ways of understanding are found. So I don't think what it says is proof. I also don't think it would matter what the probability supposedly is, science would always seek ways to show abiogenesis happened naturally.
That's a strange way to try to show that natural abiogenesis is true. It doesn't make much sense imo.
I don't know the ins and outs of what is claimed on that site, but yes I could avoid a lot of debate if I understood Genesis 1-11 in a different way. But I have trouble with that. I might have a light bulb moment one day.
True, and remarkable, given the lack of evidence.There are many believers.
That we deny the theistshave objective evidence.Is what not true?
First, most atheists don't claim god doesn't exist. Why is this basic, definitive feature of atheism so elusive?I see that science does not say that God does not exist. That is the subjective opinion of atheists who want to use science as their subjective evidence.
I find making unsubstantiated claims on RF can be hazardous.Mostly your responses are probably not an atheist position.
When you atheists and science make unsubstantiated claims, you can jump to the conclusion that my responses are a theist position.
I never claimed facts showed God does not exist. I claim the idea is logically unsubstantiated; that it's poorly evidenced.My evidence is subjective and facts, reason and logic are convincing to me.
Show me a fact that shows that there is no God.
All I am doing is showing that a position that says that there is no God is subjective.
And now we see eye-to-eye.OK good, science does not show that God does not exist.
We don't know is a reasonable position for those who don't accept the subjective evidence of a theist.
I believe is a reasonable position for those who accept the subjective evidence of a theist.
Your 'evidence' has retreated to a first cause assertion. which you know can't be refuted. But it is unevidenced conjecture. You can't meet your burden of proof, so it can be dismissed as unfounded.It obviously worked or we would not be here. My claim is that it needed God to set up the right environment and it required God to have created the right material and it required God to start things off. And God may have done this more than once with different types of life forms. Gaps in the fossil record can cope with that instead of the theory of rapid evolution that has been suggested. Science can't cope with a God doing anything of course.
We all know abiogenesis occurred. There is life, where previously there was none. Science proposes a familiar, testable mechanism. Theology proposes magic. There are no other propositions I'm aware of.But really abiogenesis seems to be evolution in chemistry to get the right things that chemicals form and eliminate the wrong ones, so that you end up with a functioning machine which may or may not be life, but ends up as life at some point.
You've spoken to Him? It's this claim has nothing to work with.Natural mechanisms work when there is something to work with. When we come to creation, God has said that He did it and there is nothing to work with for a naturalistic answer, just speculations.
How do you define life, absent chemistry? Is it some kind of magical spark?When we come to life all that science can do is define life in such a way that it is a chemical story and then work out some way that chemistry could have done it.
Fine. You believe as you feel. But don't claim your belief has any epistemic validity. It's ontologically indefensible.They are evidenced by my subjective evidence. It is logically valid to say I have enough evidence to believe in a God, even if you think it is not enough or good evidence.
But I don't really need evidence to believe in a God, that is just your demand. If you don't believe or accept the evidence God has given that is up to you. You have put yourself in that position by saying that an immaterial God should have the evidence that the material universe has.
Science doesn't even attempt to work with the unevidenced, or the subjectively evidenced.Can you show me how it is rational to say that an immaterial God should have objective evidence that science can work with?
I actually believe first in the possibility of a God and then I find evidence that confirms that belief even if it is subjective.
I've noticed that headlines in newspapers or on the internet can be misleading.I have no doubt that science one day will say that they have worked out how and in what environments life developed.
That sort of thing has already been done but more problems will be sort of sorted out and atheists and skeptics will have more to crow about even if science does not prove natural abiogenesis by doing that.
Headlines to the general public always create a lie.
The problem is that gorillas and birds, for example, have not evidenced they have formed any kind of religious tenets. Only humans have done that.The headline is that abiogenesis is impossible. There is always change in probability when the right environment or ways of understanding are found. So I don't think what it says is proof. I also don't think it would matter what the probability supposedly is, science would always seek ways to show abiogenesis happened naturally.
That's a strange way to try to show that natural abiogenesis is true. It doesn't make much sense imo.
I don't know the ins and outs of what is claimed on that site, but yes I could avoid a lot of debate if I understood Genesis 1-11 in a different way. But I have trouble with that. I might have a light bulb moment one day.