Right, however I can use numerical evidence to show a high statistical probability that life, which has a streamlined definition, does exist outside of earth, in our universe.Unfortunately, when talking about God, he/she/it cannot have a streamlined definition accepted by all those who try and measure God. God, for all-intents-and-purposes, cannot be measured, and any conclusions you make, cannot be verified, or refuted, scientifically.Basically, these are very different questions. Comparing them along the same lines of reason, is silly.However, that does not mean that the questions should not be asked. Many faith-based assertions were made in the past, and they were found to hold validity.[Edited on September 5, 2006 at 8:07 PM. Reason : -]
9/5/2006 8:00:47 PM
just because you cant put a number on it with your methods doesnt mean that there is no chance that god exists[Edited on September 5, 2006 at 8:14 PM. Reason : that was my problem with you using math]
9/5/2006 8:13:47 PM
I have already said that I agree with you on that point. Again, I would never say that there is zero chance for anything. However, I feel as if you are wasting your time, unless however your faith-based observations could possibly lead to something that is measurable, something that holds water so to speak.When I said you're wasting your time, I really mean that you are looking for answers in the wrong places. Don't look for real answers in places that can only give you more questions.[Edited on September 5, 2006 at 9:03 PM. Reason : -]
9/5/2006 8:36:54 PM
and i think that if you use math to rate everything you are leading a sad life
9/5/2006 8:42:35 PM
I don't, but I appreciate your lack of concern.^ I never said that I don't have faith, but I am intelligent enough to seperate it from reason. I am well aware that my faith-based assertions hold little validity to any scientific mind. Therefore, trying to weigh a faith-based question against a science-based question, doesn't make any real sense.I would have to have faith that my faith-based question could be answered without science. In order to do this, I would have to believe in the question I ask first, then believe that asking it along side a science-based question, is just as reasonable.I think these are two seperate schools of thought entirely. The first type of question, answers questions with other questions. (Faith)The second type of question, answers questions with answers. (Math)[Edited on September 5, 2006 at 9:00 PM. Reason : -]
9/5/2006 8:43:22 PM
you cant answer if there are aliens anymore than you can answer that there is a god[Edited on September 5, 2006 at 9:03 PM. Reason : both rely on faith]
9/5/2006 9:03:33 PM
The Drake Equation suggests that asserting that aliens could exist is completely statistically reasonable, and therefore not entirely faith-based, like believing in God. (N = N* fp ne fl fi fc fL)N* = the number of stars in the Milky Way galaxyfp = fraction of stars with planets around themne = number of planets per star ecologically able to sustain lifefl = fraction of those planets where life actually evolvesfi = the fraction of fl that evolves intelligent lifefc = the fraction of fi that communicatesfL = the fraction of the planet's life during which the communicating civilizations survivesNo one can prove this to be true or false, yet. This too has elements of faith-based assertions, but this assertion, unlike assertions based on God, can be measured by science and could hold validity.Again, I think you are asking two completely different questions. One question begs for an answer that is attainable, while the other question just confuses all of the questions asked. Are you searching for an answer, or for more questions to justify the validity of your God question?There are many things in the world that we will never prove, but that does not make them unimportant, unreal, or unimaginable.[Edited on September 5, 2006 at 9:24 PM. Reason : -]
9/5/2006 9:12:27 PM
its also statistically reasonable that god existsi could make up an equation for it too[Edited on September 5, 2006 at 9:30 PM. Reason : .]
9/5/2006 9:26:07 PM
You see, no matter what you believe, the concept of "life" existing elsewhere in the universe, like it does on earth, does not involve invisible beings and unforseen horizons. We know what life is, and yes, it can possibly exist elsewhere in our universe. Anyone can understand this concept, because we think we know what "life" is, we think we know where life can survive, and we think we know how big space can be. Simple deduction allows anyone to understand the possibility of life, besides our own, in space.God, on the other hand, involves believing in something you cannot possibly understand. It requires a willful disconnect of reason. It requires believing for the sake of believing. It's different.
9/5/2006 9:45:18 PM
You can not possibly understand the size of the universeYour belief that aliens are out there is based on your faith of an equation that someone created, its no different
9/6/2006 6:22:16 AM
Yes, but I can at least "identify" the universe with some confidence.My faith-based assertion that a mathematical equation can "identify" life in another quadrant of space, seems to be different from your supposed equally reliable/justified assertion of an "unidentifiable" God.Just because you cannot prove "most things" with any real degree of certainty, does not inherently mean that you ought to feel justified in believing anything, just because of the insurmountable obstacle of "proof." Granted, absense of evidence is not evidence of absense, but a faith-based assertion that can be measured should not be compared on equal grounds to an unmeasurable faith-based assertion, imho.
9/6/2006 3:02:28 PM
Now that that point has been beaten to death...Out of genuine curiosity: Who believes in both the ancient anecdotes of magic tricks AND any anecdotes supporting alien existence?PM me your answer if you wish. I'll never share any identifying info about you and your belief if you do so.
9/6/2006 3:35:06 PM
9/6/2006 4:35:18 PM
Can't "now" and can't "yet" aren't mutually exclusive.
9/6/2006 5:20:30 PM
Germs were once a faith-based assertion. So was ether. The difference between them isn't that one was made up by a crackpot and the other wasn't. The difference is that they became testable hypotheses.Aliens, like Jesus' ability to rise from the dead, exorcise demons, and defy gravity, remain untestable hypotheses...[Edited on September 6, 2006 at 7:25 PM. Reason : what Stimwalt is saying...]
9/6/2006 7:23:06 PM
9/6/2006 8:55:19 PM
No, I do not agree.
9/6/2006 9:12:46 PM
What about the miracles of Jesus or the prophets mentioned in the Bible?God may forever be an untestable hypotheses, but a genetically improbable human theoretically could be born...
9/6/2006 10:08:37 PM
where the hell did genetics come from?
9/7/2006 8:30:33 AM
Genetic improbability, sure. But genetic variation can't overcome certain laws of physics.
9/7/2006 3:14:28 PM
Which ones? The 20% of them we claim to understand?
9/7/2006 4:46:50 PM
Did the folks who believe in alien visits hear anecdotes of those visits on a regular basis from friends, family, and respected community leaders when they were just children? Do the folks who believe in alien visits have an interest in those visits being real?Since you used the word "justified," I'm gonna have to say that they are equally justified because "justified" is a strong word that indicates something about evidence/arguments, and clearly both groups have the same evidence/arguments for their beliefs.[Edited on September 8, 2006 at 6:43 AM. Reason : sss]
9/8/2006 6:35:24 AM
There's a reason I used the same word in both instances.
9/8/2006 5:43:54 PM
http://www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/space/09/08/earthlike.planets.reut/index.html
9/10/2006 12:09:22 PM
^^Yeah, I picked up on that. Quit talking to me like I've missed something. I haven't.
9/10/2006 6:57:18 PM
New question.1) Would you say that salisburyboy-types are more, less, or equally justified for believing aliens visit Earth compared with religious people who firmly believe that gods have visited the Earth and performed magic tricks (resurrection, healings, defying gravity, prophecy) and civilized humanity?2) Upon what do you base your answer?I want to see where the edge of belief lies for most people. It's terribly difficult to define.
9/11/2006 1:10:02 PM
When you can't prove something one way or another its pretty hard to say one thing is more justified than the other.I think more people believe the religious component because the notion of a great-than-our-reality-entity (God) being responsible for the universe fills in all the mystery in existance for them. Aliens are simply a "they could be there" sort of thing but doesn't have nearly the personal "where do I come from" impact... unless you are a Scientologist, of course. Heck, I still get my head fuzzy when I start thinking about the universe and existence of anything in general. Humans, having a finite lifespan have trouble comprehending eternal existence so its much easier to accept the idea of a creator as opposed to simply another higher-intelligent species in the universe (it requires acceptance of things you can't prove but does little to soothe existential questions so there is little reason to care about it).I'm just rambling now...
9/11/2006 3:50:15 PM
People believe in many things that make very little sense in the grand scheme of things.I believe that I will survive to see tomorrow, but I have no real reason to believe this.I personally do not believe that aliens have visited Earth, mainly because I don't have any real reason too. I have no deductive utilities to harness this belief, it would be a far-fetched assumption based on a premise.I do believe that it's possible for other forms of life to exist and thrive in our universe, because life already does exist and thrive in our universe! Simple deduction.However, God is intangible. Some people would argue that Jesus was once tangible, and that the stories of the past would be deductive utilities, but it just doesn't make much sense to me personally.I would say that both are fair assertions, but one is much more deductive than the other.
9/11/2006 3:59:31 PM
^ I can agree with putting it like that.I do wonder why so few people are truly uncomfortable answering my question.
9/11/2006 10:14:00 PM
We can invade Iraq on anecdotal evidence...we can do anything.
9/11/2006 11:16:21 PM
So to generalize and formalize a theory:All individual, faith-based, belief systems differ solely according to the scope of credulity the individual affords a particular anecdote or body of anecdotes.No?
9/11/2006 11:43:00 PM
That sounds about right. Some people find it easier to believe that a half God-half human entity walked on water, turned water into wine and resurrected the dead than they do believing that the offspring of two kami became the islands of Japan. Are both not equally justified or equally absurd?
9/12/2006 12:09:09 AM
I feel like they are pretty equally justified, myself. It's bizarre how something that people take seriously enough to hate and kill one another hinges strictly on how many links in a game of telephone an individual--any of whom (including all of you and me), I'll add, will be objectively bad judges in the following activity--is willing to tolerate in a particular anecdotal structure before they say: "BULLSHIT! "
9/12/2006 12:32:49 AM
Here's the thing though. It isn't the anecdotes themselves that cause people to go all jihad on someone who believes a seperate anecdote. You know as well as I do that there are a plethora of factors that determine if a particular group is going to use their religion to bludgeon someone over the head for not believing as they do. I tend to think it lies with the power of group think and the importance to adhear to some kind of "higher" authority. Maybe it comes down to the nature of the particular religion at a particular time period.
9/12/2006 12:47:44 AM
But even that depends on something. Again, the present doesn't exist in a vacuum. It is the result of a lengthy past with a documented history. At minimum, one has to wonder what it was about the particular anecodotes of a particular people at a particular time made them relate so powerfully to something so differently.Here's a recent examination of what I'm talking about:http://www.usatoday.com/news/religion/2006-09-11-religion-survey_x.htm?csp=1
9/12/2006 1:19:45 AM
who would have known that st. thomas aquinas was in the dumbest third of our population
9/12/2006 1:30:52 AM
^ It's not just a cliche. It really is hard to see the forest from the trees.
9/12/2006 1:36:40 AM
If this is a digression from Gamecat's intentions then he can shoot me later, but this begs the question. Are religions without some sort of authoritative docterine (Bible, Koran, Torah, etc.) full of moral code and anecdotes any less justifed as being credible than those with pillars of hear-say and generations of translation?
9/12/2006 1:40:31 AM
That's the multi-billion dollar question.
9/12/2006 1:43:17 AM