I looked up “snide” looks like a synonym for derogatory. I reviewed my posts in this thread and see nothing derogatory in them.Your posting is rife with snide remarks.
Perhaps you have me confused with somone else?
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I looked up “snide” looks like a synonym for derogatory. I reviewed my posts in this thread and see nothing derogatory in them.Your posting is rife with snide remarks.
So what exactly happened when God said Let there be light? Talk me through it.Well see, there’s your problem.
God didn’t use magic. He created the Heavens and Earth, and all matter, using natural means, through the physical laws He established.
How do you create something?
The information that exists in our observable Universe, that we can access and measure, only corresponds to the final ~10-33 seconds of inflation, and everything that came after. If you want to ask the question of how long inflation lasted, we simply have no idea. It lasted at least a little bit longer than 10-33 seconds, but whether it lasted a little longer, a lot longer, or for an infinite amount of time is not only unknown, but unknowable.
So what happened to start inflation off? There's a tremendous amount of research and speculation about it, but nobody knows. There is no evidence we can point to; no observations we can make; no experiments we can perform. ...
What law of nature predicts life would arise on earth?
What law predicts earth would be habitual for life?
What law predicts our solar system would form as it did with earth having water, oxygen, a moon, etc?
What law predicts the universe to even start to exist?
What law predicts the laws even forming?
Using what we know we try to predict and hypothesize all we can to understand yet at the same time what we do/try to understand is miniscule to what we don't understand. Trying to claim that anything in the universe is not by chance or random when we know so little is bordering asinine IMO.
What laws predict the laws would form as they did?
What law of nature predicts life would arise on earth?
What law predicts earth would be habitual for life?
What law predicts our solar system would form as it did with earth having water, oxygen, a moon, etc?
What law predicts the universe to even start to exist?
What law predicts the laws even forming?
Using what we know we try to predict and hypothesize all we can to understand yet at the same time what we do/try to understand is miniscule to what we don't understand. Trying to claim that anything in the universe is not by chance or random when we know so little is bordering asinine IMO.
What laws predict the laws would form as they did?
How does that question even make sense? The most fundamental laws *cannot* be caused for exactly this reason.
How does that question even make sense? The most fundamental laws *cannot* be caused for exactly this reason.
It does not make sense.
That is not biblical faith. Biblical faith is not blind belief, but is as real as knowing an electron exists without ever seeing one -because it is evident due to other things.Every character in The Bible didn't portray faith. That's the irony here . You could say each of the characters according to the storyline, had an objective experience that disqualifies faith all together.
I think Christians adopted faith as a substitute for the stories within the Bible and it seems to work with some people because they're living the lives of the characters within the Bible's mythology because none of it happens in reality.
To ask if a question makes sense, can only be answered based on subjective assumptions of what makes sense. I am dealing with the objective view of science and not subjective views of theological assumptions.
You hold a philosophical assumption/belief about the Laws of Nature. There are other ways to do that and then the answer changes.
You have to learn to spot when you use philosophical assumptions or indeed beliefs to answer any variant of what the universe fundamentally is?
As a skeptic the answer in regards to knowledge is that is unknowable. There are limits to knowledge and they pop up when we do philosophy, metaphysics and use our brains to make sense.
I think the stories are just artifice, and they always have been. And artifice doesn't work if it does not successfully represent notions that people feel to be real and significant. What is interesting is how so many people can become oblivious of the difference between the two: the story, and the ideals that the story is intended to present to the hearer/reader. Because the story 'feels real and significant', the hearer/reader believes that it IS real and significant. And they ignore the fact of the story (artifice) all together. But even for these people, I think it's important that we remember that the essence is still the notion being presented, regardless of the ignorance of the 'audience' about the artifice.Every character in The Bible didn't portray faith. That's the irony here . You could say each of the characters according to the storyline, had an objective experience that disqualifies faith all together.
I think Christians adopted faith as a substitute for the stories within the Bible and it seems to work with some people because they're living the lives of the characters within the Bible's mythology because none of it happens in reality.
I tried and failed to parse this sentence. Could you rephrase?That is philosophy and not science. I know that because the word "reason" that you use is in your brain and you have no evidence that this "reason" give evidence for "cannot be caused for exactly this reason".
Not necessarily true. For example, if the cause left a signature in the universe, we may be able to detect that.It is unknown what caused the universe if anything or if it is eternal, because we can't observe that.
We are inside the universe and we can't observed what is beyond the universe including what the laws of the universe are as caused or not.
There Was No Big Bang Singularity
Read it if you like and we can them debate it for the limit of science and knowledge.
It did; it left us the universe, itself. And it left us THIS universe, as opposed to any other.... if the cause left a signature in the universe, we may be able to detect that.
Because the universe is specific. It is this, and not that.Why do you assume there is a 'beyond the universe'?
They are not philosophically sound, and they are not scientifically provable. They are just convenient speculations on the part of men and women (scientists) that are unable to address the question of existential origin. It's an imagined justification for dismissing a question they cannot address.This can get into terminology. For example, the current multiverse theories are generally 'eternal universe' theories with our causal component in one small part of the larger universe.
You are jumping to unwarranted conclusions, here: projecting what is into the mystery of what is beyond.And, once again, to even talk of a 'cause' means you have laws governing that cause. This means the fundamental laws, whatever they are, cannot be caused.
I tried and failed to parse this sentence. Could you rephrase?
Why do you assume there is a 'beyond the universe'?
And, once again, to even talk of a 'cause' means you have laws governing that cause. This means the fundamental laws, whatever they are, cannot be caused.
OK, I read it. So what? We expect any singularity to be smoothed out by quantum effects. That doesn't mean there wasn't a hot dense stage to the universe. In fact, we know there was.
As skeptical as I am, I think the contemplation of the multiverse is an excellent opportunity to reflect on the nature of science and on the ultimate nature of existence: why we are here.... In looking at this concept, we need an open mind, though not too open. It is a delicate path to tread. Parallel universes may or may not exist; the case is unproved. We are going to have to live with that uncertainty. Nothing is wrong with scientifically based philosophical speculation, which is what multiverse proposals are. But we should name it for what it is.
— George Ellis, Scientific American, "Does the Multiverse Really Exist?"
For a start, how is the existence of the other universes to be tested? To be sure, all cosmologists accept that there are some regions of the universe that lie beyond the reach of our telescopes, but somewhere on the slippery slope between that and the idea that there is an infinite number of universes, credibility reaches a limit. As one slips down that slope, more and more must be accepted on faith, and less and less is open to scientific verification. Extreme multiverse explanations are therefore reminiscent of theological discussions. Indeed, invoking an infinity of unseen universes to explain the unusual features of the one we do see is just as ad hoc as invoking an unseen Creator. The multiverse theory may be dressed up in scientific language, but in essence it requires the same leap of faith.
— Paul Davies, The New York Times, "A Brief History of the Multiverse"
That's pretty much how I got swept into Christianity.I think the stories are just artifice, and they always have been. And artifice doesn't work if it does not successfully represent notions that people feel to be real and significant. What is interesting is how so many people can become oblivious of the difference between the two: the story, and the ideals that the story is intended to present to the hearer/reader. Because the story 'feels real and significant', the hearer/reader believes that it IS real and significant. And they ignore the fact of the story (artifice) all together. But even for these people, I think it's important that we remember that the essence is still the notion being presented, regardless of the ignorance of the 'audience'.
I would love to see examples of the ''weird stuff'.That is not biblical faith. Biblical faith is not blind belief, but is as real as knowing an electron exists without ever seeing one -because it is evident due to other things.
(more importantly, it is a firm foundation for making correct decisions in seemingly-impossible situations)
Heb 11:1 Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.
Open-mindedness to consider things and simple belief are part of its beginnings, but so are objective experiences.
All of those miraculous things many today would find laughable and consider impossible were done to initiate faith -a real background of evidences which give credence to things which have yet to be done -given to those God chose to give them at the time.
To say "none of it happens in reality" is understandable -but false. They -or similar -simply have not happened to you -yet. They happen all the time -as God chooses -to whom he chooses -but they will also increase and happen on a more grand scale in this time as that which is written comes to pass.
Unfortunately, people are concerned less with righteousness and more with powers -and there are many darkly-miraculous things happening all over the place even now which are rather impressive, but dangerously misleading. Groups involved are usually not be the type to openly share information, so many will not know exactly what is happening in that regard, either -until even that happens on a more grand scale.
Finding all of that ridiculous is understandable -and it's best to just focus on doing the right thing (especially the commandments as given) -but studying it decreases the freak-out factor when weird stuff does happen -and helps in making correct decisions because one is able to see and understand it correctly.
So to sum up Jehovah’s Witnesses claims....
I’ve responded to similar issues, several times. I guess you never read my responses.
I’ll post it again...
‘Noah’s Ark would have floated’
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