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- Mar 18, 2007
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I'm waiting for my miracle too.He hasn't done anything so far to me, and neither turtles it seems.
I'm waiting for my miracle too.He hasn't done anything so far to me, and neither turtles it seems.
About the sea valleys, my bad. About the pillars thing, it's close enough to being suspended in nothing, or the pillars could be what was used to suspend the earth in nothing. About the ocean currents thing being vague, if I took a walk through the woods, I would take a path through them, but that doesn't make that path anything special, nor does it mean that there are special paths through the forest, whether or not there actually are.Teh_Ephy: Alot of those are not vague at all. They are quite plain and simple. And being supported by pillars....is suspended by pillars. Not by nothing. And you are leaving out one very important verse. The one with the valleys of the sea.
I've not noticed it because everything could have been answered with a perfectly logical scientific explanation, and even if it couldn't, it would just be more science waiting to be discovered. It's like saying "you have to be gullible to accept certain things as truth"How can you be absolutely sure he hasnt done anything for you. You've probably had many miracles. And just not have noticed it.
Hes done quite alot for me.
Okay, so prophetic was a bad word. Regardless, as I just said, it could be attributed to dumb luck.These versus are not prophetic. They are versus that show the workings of our planet that science has discovered, but the bible also had before modern scientists were even born.
Those quotes leave plenty of room for interpretation, and my interpretation is that they may have been formed with archaic knowledge. Science has been reformed and proven with contemporary knowledge time and again.Even still just because those versus could apply to both archaic knowledge and modern knowledge does'nt mean they are false. Science and mathmatics have concepts that apply to both. Does that make them automatically false?
A circle doesn't imply a sphere, and it fit with the archaic belief that the earth was a flat disc. The bible didn't say with it, but it doesn't prove either one.May I ask when did the Bible say that the earth was flat?
Infections may rid the body of certain types of cancer. If you say it was God though, I'll take your word for it. Even if S/He/they doesn't/don't exist, if you believe that you're going to get past some disease strongly enough (with God's help, or whatever), chances are you will. It's called the placebo effect, but it's still something rewarding you for believing in God.May I ask how and when did science clean this woman's lungs of a deadly cancer?
Prove that what was infallible?When did science prove that it was unfallible?
I'm saying that miracles can be attributed to ordinary things, whether or not they are miracles.When did science prove that miracles (which I and many others have experienced) did not exist?
w00t! agnosticism wins!Well, you could say God keeping you alive daily is a miracle.
On the other side, you could say science and logic has created all of what we think to be miracles.
The reason why this debate is sort of pointless is that both sides are extremely unprovable, as there can never be enough proof to prove or disprove one side or the other.
--donut3.5--
Never. Logic dictates that nothing is infallible but my existence.Ahhh...I meant to say, When did science prove that science was infallible?
Ironic...thats how we explain the feeling salvation gives us.......It would be like explaining colours to a blind man, or sound to a deaf man. You could convey the technical definitions, but no experience or true knowledge.
Ironic...thats how we explain the feeling salvation gives us.......
(Sorry for going a little off topic, I just wanted to point that out.)
GST: The gods of Egypt never gave me salvation, nor have they ever answerd my prayers as God has.
I'm tired of all these "what are we?" arguments. We don't know what we are. Even if the brain's functions don't explain it, that's disproving brains, not proving souls. Failing to explain something should not result to believing whatever explains it. They call those myths. Since the Renaissance, we've known better. We created the scientific method, utilizing creating a hypothesis from known facts and testing them to a sufficient amount of which we can create a theory.It is kind of odd...A biological machine, yet we are alive. and sentient. Much more than a mere computer made of flesh.
You immediately begin to guess that it is beyond our universe, not something that might have no mass, or an entity of which is composed of an undetectable material of which we have not discovered yet. Please, Mr. Freethinker, don't think your ideas are composed of umbrella terms.I submit unto you that our brains are nothing more than a series of chemical reactions, what's more to understand?
And if you cannot find, and will never find, any evidence to support that our brains cause experience, then what would it be? If experience is, in fact, beyond this universe, then why not call it a soul?
Key word: Think. How many times did people "think" they knew everything? People thought Greek mythology was reality. People thought the earth was flat. People thought many things. But people discover things that entirely change their perspective of reality. There are no longer 4 elements, but 118 and counting. Fire is now known as a chemical reaction between fuels and oxygen. What was once operated manually is now powered by electricity. You haven't discovered everything yet. You probably never will.I think we've discovered just about all materials and energy there is in this universe.
... what?And why would evolution evolve something that experiences?
I think we've discovered just about all materials and energy there is in this universe.
O RLY? Damn, my steam powered laptop must seriously be out of date... how many gears does your hard drive have?By the time the steam engine was invented, people thought everything that was going to be invented had already been invented.
EDIT: In case it isn't obvious, they were wrong.
The first reference to atoms started in 6th century BC India. Everyone since the beginning of time thought they were at the pinnacle of knowledge. They weren't, and we aren't. Stop thinking we are exclusive and start walking a mile in someone else's shoes.And at those times they were close to understanding the universe?
Times have changed, we've proved (pretty conclusively) that atoms are made of protons, neutrons and electrons.
And even if you understand how everything works, you can still invent new things.
Currently, scientists are working on proving what makes up protons, neutrons and electrons. Well, working on discovering the properties of quarks, at any rate.we've proved (pretty conclusively) that atoms are made of protons, neutrons and electrons.
"Farther than ever before"? No, really? "We haven't finished making the train track, but we've gone farther than ever before. In the past, we had nothing. Now we have a chunk of metal!" Technological advancement doesn't go backwards. We go "farther than ever before" every second.We are far from the pinnacle. Even so, we've come farther than ever before. For example: has there ever been anything even close to the computers that we are using right now?
Taking metaphors to a literal sense sure gets you places, doesn't it? Funny how you fought for the opposite in the "Wolf or Dog" thread. It seems all you use to contend is 8th grade physics.Building trains sure helped to greatly understand physics, didn't it?
I'm sure some smartass said the same thing about language. Or gunpowder. Or the wheel. Or many other clever creations. Here's an idea. Why don't you SHOW me the direct measurement of innovation you seem to be using?Your metaphor was unrelated.
My real point remains: We have computers. That's significant.
Computers help us about 1000 more than any other device has.
No, but what we can do with computers is very helpful.Actually, we can only take out of a computer what we put into one.
So, it's not like a crop. You put something little in and take a bigger thing out. Everything has to be preprogrammed or already existing for a computer to do it.
As in, a computer by itself will never be more intelligent or innovative than a human.