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Why do humans have genes for full body hair?

TagliatelliMonster

Veteran Member
You define evidence that way I guess. Where does it come from, is that the definition from science?

It's what the very word means.
If you have no model or claim that is falsifiable / verifiable, then data is just data.
Data can only be evidence "for or against" something, if there is a something that is verifiable / falsifiable in the first place.


It's a good thing that I don't want to make God into a scientific hypothesis.

It's only a good thing for your insisting to believe it without justification.


You must have a lot of faith because there is no evidence that God does not exist.

I never made the claim that no gods exist.
I tend to try and stay clear of useless claims.

There is no evidence that leprechauns don't exist either. How much energy do you spend claim no leprechauns exist?

We are discussing the claims of theism. ie "god exists".
"god does not exist" is a separate claim. Nobody is making that claim.

Consider it like a court case.
The accused is either guilty or innocent.
So 2 claims are possible: he is guilty or he is innocent.

In court though, only the claim of guilt is being investigated.
When a court rules "not guilty", that isn't synonymous for "innocent". It just means that the accuser failed to make his case to sufficiently demonstrate his claim of guilt.

So you could say that my atheism is like me saying that I rule "god not guilty existing".

And the reason is simple: theists, who make the claim that god IS guilty of existing, failed to sufficiently demonstrate their case. In fact, the very framing of their claim (unfalsifiable) makes it IMPOSSIBLE for them to sufficiently demonstrate their case.

That unfalsifiability, by itself, is already enough for me to reject it out of hand.

The undetectable dragon may exist.

Or he may not. How would you know? Again: the undetectable and the non-existent look exactly alike.

When it comes to anything like that we can ask if there is any evidence for it's existence.

And the answer is going to be "no", since the undetectable (= unfalsifiable) can't have any evidence by definition.

With the Biblical God there is evidence

There isn't. There are only claims and believers of said claims.

and I guess that is why skeptics are hell bent on wanting to falsify the Bible.

"hell bent"?

First, that's emotionally laden language that is neither here nor there.

Secondly, plenty of the bible is demonstrably false. It's okay to point that out. Especially when conversing with people who deny that.

Third, you could disprove the bible from a to z and still that wouldn't prove no gods exist.

And I guess that makes the Bible falsifiable evidence even if it is not something that science can use.

1. the bible isn't evidence. the bible is a collection of CLAIMS

2. Plenty of claims in the bible are in fact falsifiable yes, because they deal with things in reality, with events in reality. Take a literal reading of adam and eve for example. That makes predictions about the genetic record of humans (it predicts an enormous bottleneck since according to that claim, at one point there were only 2 humans in existence). Or take Noah's flood. That makes predictions about the genetic record of all complex life (mass reduction of populations to only a handful) and also about geology. Those things are testable. And if we don't find such genetic bottlenecks in our sequenced genomes... then those claims are falsified. Meaning that those particular bible stories are incorrect.


Since the predicted bottlenecks do not exist, we know that those stories can not be literally true. So the literal interpretation thereof is demonstrably false.


I don't accept all claims as being true.

So only those you already believe then?
Only those associated with your religion, which more then likely is just determined by your geographic location and / or culture you happen to be born into?

You completely dodged the point made, btw.
It's okay though. I would do my best to dodge it also if I were in your place with your mindset.

I already said that the evidence for the Bible God is the falsifiable Bible. The claims are the evidence.

And I already explained how claims aren't evidence, like in the previous quote where you dodged the point. Claims require evidence.

To say that the claims are the evidence, is textbook circular reasoning.

There you go, religion and politics, steer clear.

????

Why would I stay clear of the topic of religion on religiousforums who's whole reason d'être is... discussing religion??????????

This is a new low.

I was not saying that saying that the Bible is unfalsifiable evidence is silly. I do think that the attempts to falsify it (thousands of them probably) are silly, especially if it is unfalsifiable.

You are seriously confused.

The claim that god, or the supernatural, exists is an unfalsifiable claim. Regardless of who makes it or where it was written down.

That doesn't mean that the book that contains such claims doesn't also make OTHER claims that are in fact falsifiable. Like above, where I gave the example of noah's flood or adam and eve.

Disproving those claims doesn't disprove any unfalsifiable gods or other supernatural stuff.
Instead, it just disproves those claims of the flood and adam and eve. That's it.


Are you really saying that science has shown that the universe came into existence naturally or that life came into existence naturally?

I didn't mention anything specific. Stop trying to move the goalposts.
Your bible claims that "god did that" when it speaks of adam and eve and the flood. Both are disproven by the evidence. The testable predictions don't check out. That falsifies those claims.
And in case of creationism, there in fact is a natural mechanism that explains the origins of species. You might have heard of it.... it's the corner stone theory of modern biology.

Sounds like skeptic misleading rhetoric about science to me.

I bet all science that flies in the face of your religious beliefs, sounds like that to you.

I don't care what other people's gods told them, we are talking about the Bible God.

WHOOSH!

That's the sound of the point flying over your head at light speed.

And yes I don't think the Bible is dictation from God but I see the Bible as truth about God and what He has done and said.

Yes. You successfully repeated what I just said. You believe the words of men who claimed to be speaking for their god.

You don't care about followers of other religions saying the same.
That is your double standard.

Just like you, I don't care about those either. The difference is that I don't share your double standard. So I put the followers and authors of your religion in the same boat.

It's men claiming to speak for gods.


How about the Bible, that is different in nature to all of these.

No, it isn't. You just think it's "special" because you are a follower.
A muslim consider his islam to be "extra special" also.
Every follower of every religion thinks his religion is "extra special" compare to all others.

From my side of the fence though, that is not at all surprising.
It's just the follower's bias at play.

In reality, it's all the same in principle.

If you can show that God was not needed for creation then you might have a point, otherwise no, all these god of the gaps things that skeptics claim have shunted God out mean nothing to the Bible God who created everything.

Classic god of the gaps argument.
To quote Neil deGrass Tyson: "If that is how you define your god.. then your god is an ever receding pocket of scientific ignorance".

Gods keep being pushed back as science unravels the nature of reality. Gods always occupy the gaps in knowledge. Now you put god front and center at the creation of the universe. And apologists will come up with "arguments" like Kalaam or "fine tuning" and what-not to rationalize it.

If however tomorrow for example science beyond a shadow of a doubt proves a multi-verse including the exact process of universe generation.... then I bet a bazillion dollars that your god will be pushed further back as the creator of the multi-verse.

This is so because gaps in knowledge are the only places that gods can occupy without flatly denying the evidence of reality.

Off course some, like YECs, don't have any problem with such irrationality...

It probably does actually show that Poseidon isn't required for those things, unless Poseidon is a creator God. We are talking about the creator Bible God however and the one who can work through natural processes if He wants to.


:rolleyes:

See... this is the problem with unfalsifiable claims.

Yes, if you define your unfalsifiable god as an entity that can do anything while remaining undetected, then sure - he can do anything while remaining undetected.

But then you are back at square one. And unless you acknowledge to holding a double standard, you should believe that I have an undetectable pet dragon.
 

TagliatelliMonster

Veteran Member
I'm talking about observing many bullet holes in real tissue.

I know.
And I just explained to you how that can lead you to draw false conclusions.

But it seems to fall on deaf ears.

Trusting my conclusions makes more sense than trusting some random internet person.

Sure, but you are moving the goalpost now. This wasn't about just believing a "random internet person".

What, for example, your conclusions drawn from your "personal experience" are contradicted, and perhaps even explained, after rigorous testing under controlled conditions?

Is your trusting your "personal conclusion" in light of such still "more sensible"?
If you say "yes", then you set yourself up for a myriad of false beliefs.

Real life experience always trump internet warriors.

But it doesn't trump actual evidence.
 

TagliatelliMonster

Veteran Member
I have always read a lot of books about hide tanning and still do. But to learn all the ins and outs there's nothing that replaces personal experience. Even watching something on video doesn't give you the feel for doing it. Having tanned thousands of hides still doesn't make me an expert, IMO, but it makes me the person self styled experts have come to for advice in my particular field. You will never get there without putting in the time, effort and personally experimenting to find out what works and what doesn't.
I have learned to trust personal experience.


Let's go the extra mile then. Perhaps then it will be clear.

- "personal experience" / "personal observation" tells you that the earth is stationary. You don't "feel it move", do you?

- "personal experience" / "personal observation" tells us that objects can't be measured here while simultanously showing up there. Yet sub atomic particles do exactly that.

- "personal experience" / "personal observation" tells us that the flow time is a constant, everywhere for everyone. Einsteinian physics tells us that is not the case at all and that it is in fact relative to the observer depending on speed and gravity.



What you are in fact invoking here with your "personal experience" / "personal observation" is no more or less then intuition and common sense. And we KNOW those are unreliable on many occasions for various reasons.

Your mind can play serious tricks on you.
Humans tend also to confuse correlation with causation.
Humans tend to engage in pareidolia
Humans tend to engage in type 2 cognition errors.


While intuition / common sense are useful when reasoning about things involving well-understood processes and mechanisms, they are entirely useless when dealing with unknowns and ignorance.

NO AMOUNT of "intuition and common sense" would make one come up with relativity or quantum mechanics. Only poking, and accepting, the objective evidence of reality will reveal such.

1000 "philosophers" locked in a room will accomplish less then 1 physicist in a lab.
 

metis

aged ecumenical anthropologist
Moving the goalpost, will not advance your case.

PS: the point was scientists. And it's simply not true that the "vast majority" of scientists believe in a "creator god". But not that it matters, because the discussion is about some vague god belief, but rather concerning very specific points about evolution.
According to Susskind, about 50% of biologists are theists and only 10% of cosmologists are. Of the latter, even those that are theists are not exactly conventional.
 

SkepticThinker

Veteran Member

Is that the only thing "explain" can mean, "how"?

Yes. "God did it' doesn't explain how. Or anything about it at all, really.

There are a number of ways to define something. How do you define gravity? What is it? Do you know what it is or define it in other ways?
This is a total evasion. And you've missed the point.

I just pointed out to you that you can't even define what spirit is, let alone demonstrate it's existence and therefore you can't describe any of it's attributes, and here you are trying to give it attributes. And you sure are quick to tell us what spirit isn't, but have yet to tell us what a spirit actually is. We don't generally define things by what they aren't.

You're attributing characteristics to a thing you can't even define in the first place. And that you also claim isn't measurable in any way. So, how did you attribute characteristics to such a thing?
Other than just making it up?

We get to decide if you believe that God does not exist. Does that mean that we give up on evidence?
Faith is where we go when the evidence ends. We leap into belief or unbelief.
I don't decide what I'm convinced of. I'm either convinced by the available evidence, or I'm not.

Exactly. Faith is where we end up when you've backed yourself into a corner, or as you say "when the evidence ends." Which means that faith isn't a reliable pathway to truth. So it's useless to me.

If there is no evidence, or the "evidence ends" then that's the point where you have to reasonably say "I don't know." Invoking faith doesn't provide us with any explanations whatsoever. It doesn't get us anywhere. And since apparently anything can be believed on faith, it's pretty useless as a tool to help us determine fact from fiction. It's the point where you seem to just give up and believe whatever you want.

There is no "faith" in not believing in something because you don't have enough evidence. That's just silly.
 

Wildswanderer

Veteran Member
What, for example, your conclusions drawn from your "personal experience" are contradicted, and perhaps even explained, after rigorous testing under controlled conditions?
Controlled conditions isn't necessarily a benefit.. things in nature aren't so controlled. What actually works is all that matters.
 

Wildswanderer

Veteran Member
Let's go the extra mile then. Perhaps then it will be clear.

- "personal experience" / "personal observation" tells you that the earth is stationary. You don't "feel it move", do you?

- "personal experience" / "personal observation" tells us that objects can't be measured here while simultanously showing up there. Yet sub atomic particles do exactly that.

- "personal experience" / "personal observation" tells us that the flow time is a constant, everywhere for everyone. Einsteinian physics tells us that is not the case at all and that it is in fact relative to the observer depending on speed and gravity.



What you are in fact invoking here with your "personal experience" / "personal observation" is no more or less then intuition and common sense. And we KNOW those are unreliable on many occasions for various reasons.

Your mind can play serious tricks on you.
Humans tend also to confuse correlation with causation.
Humans tend to engage in pareidolia
Humans tend to engage in type 2 cognition errors.


While intuition / common sense are useful when reasoning about things involving well-understood processes and mechanisms, they are entirely useless when dealing with unknowns and ignorance.

NO AMOUNT of "intuition and common sense" would make one come up with relativity or quantum mechanics. Only poking, and accepting, the objective evidence of reality will reveal such.

1000 "philosophers" locked in a room will accomplish less then 1 physicist in a lab.
You are just revealing how much science doesn't know. So. . thanks for the backup.
In the real world what matters is what works.
 

SkepticThinker

Veteran Member
Controlled conditions isn't necessarily a benefit.. things in nature aren't so controlled. What actually works is all that matters.
Controlled conditions are always beneficial when it comes to scientific study of anything. For one thing, it helps remove human biases, which we all have. Also, it helps determine causation rather than just correlation. That's why it's done that way.
 

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
Says the guy who thinks a .223 is more lethal than a 30.06.
I suggest you conduct a test on that, utilizing a real charging grizzly bear.
No, we were discussing damage done when it strikes and why. But if you did not rely on strawman arguments you would have nothing.

Why do you dodge my reasonable questions? One's that you probably agree with. Is it because you know that as usual you are wrong and I am right when it comes to matters of science?
 

Wildswanderer

Veteran Member
I asked you about the ability of a .30 06 to go through bodies. How many bodies do you think that a 30 06 would go through? How many bodies would a single round of .223 go through? Just a rough estimate is all that I would need.
That would depend entirely on what the bullets hit. For example, a lighter caliber bullet, that travels through the rib cage of a deer, but then hits the shoulder bone on the other side, is likely to fragment or remain inside the animal, while the larger caliber will punch on through more bone. If you hit the heart directly of course it's not going to matter much one way or another, but the larger caliber has more knockdown power, so you are less likely to have to trail the animal as far. Could you kill two with one shot? In theory, but it certainly wouldn't be recommended to try.
You might remember in Quigley down under, he drops two people with one shot after waiting for them to line up. With that particular gun, that is not really that far fetched, but that's a huge chunk of lead. A lot of soldiers have been killed with a .223, but the question in this discussion is which causes the most tissue damage. And that's why I said the 30 caliber caused more... because I've examined a lot of bullet holes in deer.
 

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
A
That would depend entirely on what the bullets hit. For example, a lighter caliber bullet, that travels through the rib cage of a deer, but then hits the shoulder bone on the other side, is likely to fragment or remain inside the animal, while the larger caliber will punch on through more bone. If you hit the heart directly of course it's not going to matter much one way or another, but the larger caliber has more knockdown power, so you are less likely to have to trail the animal as far. Could you kill two with one shot? In theory, but it certainly wouldn't be recommended to try.
You might remember in Quigley down under, he drops two people with one shot after waiting for them to line up. With that particular gun, that is not really that far fetched, but that's a huge chunk of lead. A lot of soldiers have been killed with a .223, but the question in this discussion is which causes the most tissue damage. And that's why I said the 30 caliber caused more... because I've examined a lot of bullet holes in deer.


And you regularly hunt deer with a .223?

Also, please note, you changed the argument a bit. You stated .30 caliber rounds. Their are quite a few variations. Since we are discussing the effect of velocity over that of just caliber you should have been talking about some of the lower velocity rounds such as .30 30 rounds. Why focus on only the faster rounds?
 
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Wildswanderer

Veteran Member
A


And you regularly hunt deer with a .223?

Also, please note, you changed the argument a bit. You stated .30 caliber rounds. Their are quite a few variations. Since we are discussing the effect of velocity over that of just caliber you should have been talking about some of the lower velocity rounds such as .30 30 rounds. Why focus on only the faster rounds?
No I consider the .223 too small.
I use a 30.06 and people in my family use .243 and .30-30.
The speed depends on how much powder you are using, obviously. There's no reason a certain round has to be lower velocity.
 
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