...come up with boneheaded conclusions like this one:http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/11/05/cover.story/index.htmlSeriously, where do they get off making claims like this? Science does stand in opposition to many traditional claims that religion makes, but against the God concept itself?Science has nothing to say about the concept of God itself. The concept of God is a concept lacking any empirical content in and of itself. There's no way to test for the existence of God (in practice or in theory). No amount of evidence can stack up to prove his existence, or disprove his existence. It's outside of the bounds of scientific inquiry.This is what happens when you take a bunch of scientists and let them run around without a leash. They forget the boundaries of their sandbox, and think they can use their method to make judgments about all sorts of things. The really embarassing thing for them is when they forget what science can and cannot achieve.It sucks to see so many brilliant minds make such silly conclusions.[Edited on November 5, 2006 at 10:43 PM. Reason : .]
11/5/2006 10:42:57 PM
and this...is why atheists are silly
11/5/2006 10:45:48 PM
Asking "Does God exist?" in scientific terms is like asking "what is chair plus banana?" in terms of arithmetic over the natural numbers.Science has no place making judgments about stuff that has no intersection with phenomenal reality at any point.
11/5/2006 10:57:57 PM
Know that I shall crack your skull like a clam on my tummy!
11/5/2006 10:58:45 PM
Nor does man, but that's just my 2 cents.
11/5/2006 11:12:07 PM
I'll answer the question for them. There is no god
11/5/2006 11:24:38 PM
i would actually like to hear what Francis Collins, the Director of the National Human Genome Research Institute, has to sayhe's obviously a very important scientist yet has a lot of faith, which is unusualoverall, this is a silly topic though, and a silly thing to be debatingreal scientists are more in line with mechanics than philosophersthey do real work
11/5/2006 11:36:26 PM
11/5/2006 11:46:07 PM
All the god(s) of major religions throughout western civilization tend to involve having demi-god children who use tons of magic before they die. And often times the demi-gods come back from dead. And often times these gods battle goatman & serpents. All those stories were old news in religion before Jesus came around to repeat them (see Hercules, Apollo, Asclepius and countless others). But the magic elements of the stories can be said to be unlikely assuming that conditions in the past are like the conditions of today. The non-phenomenal god that a philosopher would defend is a far cry from any god that anyone of faith would ever believe in, and any atheist would claim to definitely not believe in.
11/5/2006 11:48:34 PM
11/6/2006 12:02:35 AM
right, there might need be some clarification or loose definition of what we mean by God. you're talking about a personal God, as those are the Einstein quotes you're focusing on. McDanger's exact words were 'God concept,' so this is what i was talking about. there is going to be a cosmic smack in the face to many of us as quantum physics continues to redefine reality and delve into spirituality. as a person who knows very little, i boldly predict one of the nastiest religious/spiritual debates in human history when this hits the traditional projection of a personal God head-on. there will inevitably be a revolution, and this is going to be one of the biggest in human history.
11/6/2006 12:34:59 AM
If you think scientists are bad, what about lawyers? Just as some scientists try to tackle certain insoluble questions with the scientific method, some lawyers apparently believe that certain outcomes--if not all outcomes--should be determined through the adversarial system. Both are examples of humankind's arrogance in the face of overwhelming evidence that there is some higher entity or power responsible for the existence of all perceived reality and beyond. I am no expert on faith--I do not identify myself with any specific religion--but doesn't this get to the heart of what faith is about? Isn't it about transcending science and the law and all manner of worldly things to just believe? And for critical thinkers that would choose to do so, just believing is a very scary proposition, isn't it?
11/6/2006 12:36:05 AM
11/6/2006 12:41:43 AM
DONT DATE ROBOTS
11/6/2006 12:44:29 AM
Keep telling yourself that, man. All the universe and possibly beyond and everything contained therein just. . .happened. . .in a big bang. All this was just a happy-assed accident. Weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee! Ingnorance really IS bliss!
11/6/2006 12:47:33 AM
11/6/2006 1:13:18 AM
11/6/2006 1:40:52 AM
11/6/2006 2:19:01 AM
^ Stop rippin' off George Carlin. One with the balls to call himself "God" should not need to plagiarize. You will note well that I posted "some higher entity or power [emphasis added] responsible for the existence of all perceived reality and beyond." In addition, I posted "I do not identify myself with any specific religion." I find it curious that you immediately tried to pigeonhole me as a monotheist. Is that your typical MO?In any event, what I actually posted bears no resemblance to your twisted version of it. Why don't you pull back, regroup, and post something besides regurgitated bullshit--you know, for a change.
11/6/2006 4:44:18 AM
11/6/2006 7:18:43 AM
writing about jazz is like dancing about architecture
11/6/2006 9:23:11 AM
11/6/2006 10:59:01 AM
11/6/2006 11:03:43 AM
11/6/2006 11:42:54 AM
aha chair plus banana
11/6/2006 11:47:44 AM
^^^^ I guess education and "faith" are less compatable than I gave them credit for being.[Edited on November 6, 2006 at 11:50 AM. Reason : ]
11/6/2006 11:50:24 AM
it's not really about education and faithit's about scientists and faithscience is about objective reasonas a scientist, you can have faith, but you will have to make a disconnect between what you do for a living and your religious beliefssome do it...
11/6/2006 11:55:03 AM
I submit that nobody here can prove or disprove God and all discussions along that line are entirely irrelevant.
11/6/2006 12:04:48 PM
^ Nor can anyone prove or disprove the existence of the Loch Ness monster, and all discussions along that line are entirely irrelevant.
11/6/2006 12:27:59 PM
That isn't true at all.
11/6/2006 12:52:11 PM
proving or disproving the loch ness monster is as simple as draining the entire lake it is supposed to be living in.proving or disproving an entity beyond our realm of existence is entirely impossible because it is not to be proven or disproven[Edited on November 6, 2006 at 1:07 PM. Reason : .]
11/6/2006 1:07:40 PM
11/6/2006 1:35:38 PM
11/6/2006 2:05:00 PM
for all of you who believe in god, why do you believe in god instead of hades or poseidon? since you don't, how can you PROVE there's no hades or poseidon. hell, you all could be dead wrong in which god is real and end up in your supposed hell anyway
11/6/2006 2:22:44 PM
The son of the Almighty God, and one associated with resurrection. Apollo. The one from the religion where a woman causes the downfall of man (Pandora), and the surviving pious couple have to repopulate the world (Deucalion story), the religion of immaculately conceived demi-gods who come back from the dead (Theseus, Hercules), and the one where gods do water to wine type magic (Athena & Dionysus, where the story actually represents the cultures achievement of creating wine as a way of preserving fruit nutrients throughout winter. The one where babies are abandoned or sent down rivers, and later come back as leaders (Oedipus). Why does the Vatican store pictures of Apollo that later artists used as a base on how to depict Jesus, why does every modern hospital, ambulance, and medical facility have the staff of Aesculapius (the Greek symbol associated with acts of healing and resurrection)? Because these are stock type characters that you’ll find in Zoroastrianism and the stories of Gilgamesh (had a great flood, flooding was a part of farming which is a big part of ancient life) and countless other myths before and after Jesus came on scene. And these stock type literary characters represent cultural achievements, physical migrations of people, economic changes, and people’s hopes and desires. Yahweh seems no different than any of the gods who came before him or after him.But McDanger isn't discussing a notion of god that any large group of people would ever believe in. Science can't disprove an utterly useless notion of god. But science and reason can pretty much show that no interesting god(s) are very reasonable.
11/6/2006 2:32:37 PM
There are a lot of things in this world which we cannot understand, or even achieve understanding of. However, this does not mean that people in general should not ask themselves the question, "What is the meaning of life?" For all people the question leads to a different and individualistic spiritual end. Not all people believe in an afterlife, and some people believe in nothing at all. However, their conclusions are no less valid than yours, and that is the point.
11/6/2006 2:39:18 PM
11/6/2006 3:07:26 PM
11/6/2006 3:17:47 PM
11/6/2006 3:20:12 PM
"Huh? I always thought quite a few people believed in a God that "set up" the Universe and never mucked with it again."I think more people think of a god who either uses a lighting bolt crafted by a cyclopes as a weapon during times of war, or a god who takes the form of a flaming shrub, or a god who put a child in a women to grow up to guide and save his creations, or a god communicates with his prophets, or a god who rides around on a giant eagle beast to get around inside of creation.There are a few of the people you describe. But the majority of people who believe in god, believe in one who mucks around occasionally. I doubt scientists who don't believe in god are giving your notion of god as much consideration as the majority's notion of god.
11/6/2006 3:23:17 PM
11/6/2006 3:26:04 PM
"Heavier-than-air flying machines are impossible" (Lord Kelvin of the British Royal Society, one of the nineteenth century's top experts on thermodynamics, 1890s).
11/6/2006 5:46:02 PM
^ And your point? Scientist love being wrong. This is the one thing that most religious types don't get. Science can be wrong, and since it can be wrong it can be right! If a religion cannot be wrong then it can never be right. A good scientist will pat you on the back if you can prove him wrong, because if you can prove him wrong then science has learned something new. This is how science works. If creationists could prove evolution wrong they would get all future noble prizes, but they are up against 150 years of outstanding evidence including every strand of DNA on the planet.[Edited on November 6, 2006 at 6:45 PM. Reason : sp][Edited on November 6, 2006 at 6:46 PM. Reason : noob]
11/6/2006 6:45:28 PM
11/6/2006 7:23:33 PM
how does that make you an atheist?
11/6/2006 10:14:01 PM
^yeah, my thoughts exactly. unseen aliens that do nothing with regards to nature aren't what we're talking about here.
11/6/2006 10:29:01 PM
^^^ maybe you should have consulted wiki before posting[Edited on November 6, 2006 at 10:29 PM. Reason : ^^^]
11/6/2006 10:29:19 PM
11/6/2006 10:33:46 PM
^^^^^^ pyrolyte
11/7/2006 12:16:38 AM
"Nobody will ever need more than 640k RAM!" -- Bill Gates, 1981He obviously has no credibility to work in any technical field, especially computing.
11/7/2006 12:33:19 AM