Thief
Rogue Theologian
cause and effect is a very safe assumptionYou assume a creator not in evidence.
matched pair
can't have science without them
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cause and effect is a very safe assumptionYou assume a creator not in evidence.
yeplogic and reason take it.
And yet here you are begging said Babylon Babe to embrace you....Science is defined by its methods. The basic is to assume the absence of God's influence on nature -- methodological naturalism. I am sorry to disappoint you, but Science is the Babylon Babe from the Revelation.
Can not have God with them either....cause and effect is a very safe assumption
matched pair
can't have science without them
cause and effect is a very safe assumption
matched pair
can't have science without them
you can't do experiments without the relationshipThere is no such thing as a law of cause and effect in science. It is a human concept but not scientific. There are several examples of thinks happening without cause. For example radioactive decay. What causes it, the answer is absolutely nothing.
The Big Bang theory actually says nothing definitive about the presumed very start of the universe. It accounts for the evidence we have - from nature - of an expansion from an initial hot and dense state. If one tries to extrapolate general relativity back from this state, one ends up with infinite density at a finite time in the past, a "singularity".
That's as much as science can say, because that's as much as observation of nature justifies.
you can't do experiments without the relationship
all effects ......have a cause
Without nature nothing can be natural. There was no nature until after the big bang.This makes no sense.
The big bang first is an unknown event. As in, we don't know what triggered it. The origins of the universe (of the big bang) are unknown at this point.
So it could be a natural event or it could be an unnatural event. Although there is no evidence at all for it being an unnatural event.
And also considering that just about every phenomenon that was once attributed to "supernatural" causes, turned out to have natural causes, I'll put my money on the big bang being a natural event.
Since there is zero evidence of anything supernatural, right out the gates the "supernatural" is always the least likely.
Define "nature"Yes that's the common theory However if nature didn't exist how could it be a natural event was the question. If we don't know if nature existed then it can't be claimed as a natural event. Nor can it be claimed a supernatural(a god) event without evidence of the supernatural.
So its simply we don't know.
What does anything being the "most popular" have to do with whether or not it should be considered correct or whether or not its explanations or models match up closely to reality?Christianity... the most popular understanding of who God is.
Define "nature"
I ask because you seem to be using one that greatly differs from the one I use:
Why must it be confined to an eco system?Nature is the natural world; consisting of all things. While natural is that exists and evolved within the confines of a ecosystem
What happens in the nieghbouring eco system is natural for that system.Why must it be confined to an eco system?
Are there things that are "natural" in one ecosystem that are not "natural" in a neighboring eco system?
That does not address my question.What happens in the nieghbouring eco system is natural for that system.
Define withinThat does not address my question.
What is the need for the addition of "within the confines of a ecosystem"?
The only reason I can think of is that there are things that are natural in one eco system that are not natural in another eco system.
Those words are from YOUR presented definition, not mine.Define within
Define confined
Define eco system
Its not my definition. Its a given definition I accept. Feel free to use google and research to what you are looking for and accept.Those words are from YOUR presented definition, not mine.
Perhaps you can answer the question and in doing so define those words as you (or or your source) defines them?
Whats natural within the eco system of the rain forest won't be at Antarctica.That does not address my question.
What is the need for the addition of "within the confines of a ecosystem"?
The only reason I can think of is that there are things that are natural in one eco system that are not natural in another eco system.
I did not say it was your DEFINITION.Its not my definition. Its a given definition I accept. Feel free to use google and research to what you are looking for and accept.