holy crap you people care too much about unimportant shit
4/23/2010 4:02:54 PM
4/23/2010 4:03:09 PM
^^ Yeah man religion never affects anything*sees South Park creators get death threats*
4/23/2010 4:03:34 PM
Golovko I think our definitions of prayer are not aligning. My working definition of prayer is a petition to God to provide some service. Then when you claim prayer works, you are effectively stating that you petitioned god and it responded in some measurable way. If this is true, prayer must affect change more often than non-prayer affects change. This has been tested and is not the case.Are you working with some other definition of prayer?
4/23/2010 4:05:12 PM
4/23/2010 4:05:30 PM
4/23/2010 4:06:14 PM
4/23/2010 4:06:25 PM
4/23/2010 4:07:52 PM
You rest your case on my typo?
4/23/2010 4:10:46 PM
4/23/2010 4:12:18 PM
4/23/2010 4:15:22 PM
4/23/2010 4:15:31 PM
Burden of Proof, meet Golovko. Golovko, Burden of Proof.Also, prayer kills children. See above. The absence of prayer has never killed a child.
4/23/2010 4:17:22 PM
burden of proof? I missed the part where I'm trying to invite you to Church on sunday?
4/23/2010 4:18:27 PM
I provided a link Golovko, you don't have to.And prayer isn't a belief, it either works or it doesn't, it's one of the few measurable things about religion.[Edited on April 23, 2010 at 4:20 PM. Reason : .]
4/23/2010 4:19:53 PM
4/23/2010 4:22:03 PM
It is dumb for you to believe in prayer. It is not dumb for me to not believe in it.Holy shit man. PRAYER CAUSED THE CHILD'S DEATH IN THAT AND OTHER INSTANCES. It wasn't like, oh they prayed, and the kid also died. The kid died BECAUSE the adults chose prayer over medical treatment.Never has prayer saved a child when not praying would have killed it. I'm certain this point will also be lost on you because you are deluded and think that prayer does anything.http://whywontgodhealamputees.com/superstition.htmAlso, that study was attempting to show the measurable affect of prayer on healing, not disprove anything. The results of that and every other study on prayer do a pretty effective job of disproving it however.Also, the fact that it doesn't fucking work is a pretty good disproof of prayer.[Edited on April 23, 2010 at 4:25 PM. Reason : .]
4/23/2010 4:22:43 PM
4/23/2010 4:24:15 PM
4/23/2010 4:25:35 PM
GolovkoCould you please respond to this statement
4/23/2010 4:27:09 PM
Fuck me. Please pray for some brain cells.It's not up to me to prove anything. I'm not the one making the claim that prayer works."Prayer does not work" is not a claim. It's a proven fact. Many studies have been done. Real world observations support this fact. Children get cancer and die no matter how much people pray for them."Prayer works" is a claim that has no basis in fact. Until real world observations can support this claim, it will be the logical equivalent to "unicorns are real".[Edited on April 23, 2010 at 4:30 PM. Reason : .]
4/23/2010 4:27:50 PM
4/23/2010 4:27:59 PM
4/23/2010 4:28:29 PM
this thread brings the lolsfunniest of all is knowing that the sand in disco_stu's vagina just keeps getting grittier and grittieri think i will now actively support national prayer day because the people who are so vehemently against are too retarded to support in any way
4/23/2010 4:35:50 PM
4/23/2010 4:36:04 PM
4/23/2010 4:37:08 PM
4/23/2010 4:37:21 PM
4/23/2010 4:42:36 PM
4/23/2010 4:51:43 PM
I think your quote is taken out of context. No where does it say that National Prayer Day is unconstitutional because people could sue. It's just a statement. It doesn't follow that Black History Month is unconstitutional because Black History Month in no way respects the establishment of religion.
4/23/2010 4:59:10 PM
"Crabb ruled atheists and agnostics could sue because..."not"Crabb ruled the holiday to be unconstitutional because..."
4/23/2010 5:01:27 PM
4/23/2010 5:03:28 PM
my logic?My logic is that it respects the establishment of religion, which is directly prohibited by the 1st line in the Bill of Rights.It has nothing to do with alienating anyone. Jesus, you're obtuse.
4/23/2010 5:04:25 PM
Your logic is flawed. Let me find a study to prove it to you...
4/23/2010 5:10:47 PM
This thread turned out how I expected it would. Again, discussing the "merits" of prayer is not going to solve anything. Some people believe that you can communicate telepathically with the designer of the universe, and he'll honor that communication in ways that will manifest in the real world. It's not very different than any other brand of mysticism, except that it's supported by dogma assembled over many centuries, and reinforced by indoctrination. There are other people that only believe in things that can be verified with in the physical world. There isn't any in between. You can choose myth or you can choose reality, it's up to you. People prayed to Zeus thousands of years ago, and they thought it worked. Were they right?Anyway, none of that matters. The point is that the federal government should not even be designating holidays like this, much less one that encourages practicing any sort of religion. Separation of church and state isn't that fucking hard to understand. The majority of what the government does is unconstitutional.
4/23/2010 6:01:55 PM
1) Waste of political capital and federal time and money2) Stupid parents kill their kids for any number of reasons, prayer has nothing to do with it. http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/05/09/national/main2778653.shtmlhttp://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/11/08/child.starved/index.htmlhttp://arstechnica.com/gaming/news/2005/06/547.arshttp://hamptonroads.com/2010/04/norfolk-mother-gets-17-years-death-abuse-babies?cid=mrjust to name a few3) At some point, some asshole is going to have the federal holiday known as "Christmas" declared unconstitutional and get run out of town by the angry mob that now has to work on Christmas. Sometimes, you just have to leave well enough alone. Taking away people's celebrations aren't going to get you into their good graces and isn't going ot endear them to your point of view.
4/23/2010 7:18:01 PM
The bill's wording, particularly "an establishment of religion" clearly indicates a particular establishment, and not religion as a whole. The National Day of Prayer is constitutional.
4/23/2010 7:20:41 PM
i agree that its not constitutional but because of supported reasons not inane ramblings like ^^^. the amendment doesnt pass the lemon test.now, to prayer:prayer does not hurt anyone, and is not a mental illness. psychologists have even identified a mechanism in the brain that makes some people more open to religion, even if its not true its hardly an illness or defect.you loosely mention the double blind studies that show that when people are prayed for they don't do any better than control group. however, you ignore the studies that show that people who pray tend to have fewer complications after surgery. now, this hardly proves god but it highlights the positive effect of prayer. anyone with even a highschool understanding of psychology should recognize that the idea that people who have a positive perspective on their recovery because of whatever reason will actually do better. take god out of the equation and there is still nothing wrong with it, without god prayer is really just talking through things and meditating and having an inner monologue about life. how is any of this negative? if it provides any amount of hope or comfort how is that a bad thing? if god is not real and prayer does not work there is still no harm and still some benefit. and even if praying isn't effective it surely isn't hurting anyone.but all of this is irrelevant to the issue, the merits of prayer have absolutely nothing to do with the court ruling. the judge found that the day does not meet the requirements of the lemon test. you all are just using this as an example to attack and bash something that has no impact on your life. i wonder why, why do you care if people talk to an imaginary magical being? are you jealous of the comfort they get from it? did someone give you some pamphlet or website pointing out the numerous contradictions in religion and now you feel the need to tell everyone about your profoundly new perspective while sitting on your high horse and pretending to be some kind of intellectual giant?
4/23/2010 7:27:35 PM
4/23/2010 7:31:25 PM
It's true that prayer can have have what amounts to a placebo effect. The side effects of prayer, however, are no illusion. And don't conflate prayer with meditation; they're two entirely different things. There is no delusion involved in meditation.
4/23/2010 7:41:11 PM
what are the "side effects" of prayer? you can't list any, there are none. instead, you will reply with examples of people, not prayer, doing bad things in the misguided name of religion, not prayer.
4/23/2010 7:46:46 PM
No, I listed things that are associated with prayer. Those would be the side effects - things you wouldn't get with a sugar pill. Again, not an exhaustive list:It provides false consolation. It corrupts the minds of the young and impressionable. It reinforces a delusion. It wastes time and energy. It is often motivated by selfishness and solipsism. It is servile behavior.And by "it", of course, I mean prayer.[Edited on April 23, 2010 at 7:55 PM. Reason : ]
4/23/2010 7:55:19 PM
why is it false consolation, why not just consolation? and how then is consolation a bad thing? so if i pray for you, i can corrupt your mind? no, thats ridiculous. oh you meant the person praying? thats ridiculous too; if people are going to be corrupted by something as simple as prayer than they have problems outside of anything we are describing. but thats beside the point because its simply your opinion and is based on nothing except your opinion.after that first line those are your opinions and not results (or "side effects").
4/23/2010 8:27:10 PM
It is false consolation because it is consolation derived from a lie, or a delusion. If you pray for people, particularly people who are young or impressionable, and they're aware of it, than you are leading them to believe that things can be achieved or obtained through telepathic communication with non-existent beings.I would consider these to be just a few of the potential side effects of prayer. And yes, I did say potential. It is not unimaginable that some prayer can be relatively harmless, except to the mind of the person engaged in it. But that's a far cry from conceding that such activity is even remotely "wholesome", which was the point I took issue with.Whatever good that might come from prayer could also be derived from meditation or, in some rare medical cases, a sugar pill. But neither of those alternatives require a person to engage in wishful thinking, seek real world results through superstitious rituals, or imagine that the universe is concerned with their daily affairs.[Edited on April 23, 2010 at 9:50 PM. Reason : ]
4/23/2010 9:30:19 PM
4/23/2010 9:41:55 PM
ITT lazarus (oh the irony), tells us how when his mother would kiss his boo boos to make them all better as a child, it destroyed him, by consoling him with a lie and a delusion and a superstitious ritual, she corrupted his mind.
4/23/2010 10:11:52 PM
Or how 'bout I give you a citation?Largest Study of Third-Party Prayer Suggests Such Prayer Not Effective In Reducing Complications Following Heart Surgeryhttp://web.med.harvard.edu/sites/RELEASES/html/3_31STEP.html
4/23/2010 10:18:51 PM
How is kissing boo-boos a superstitious ritual?And by the way, if you're looking for irony, check out the endless supply of unprovoked ad hominem attacks from the religious apologists in this thread.
4/23/2010 10:21:46 PM
To some extent ideology is overriding practical concerns in this thread. If you oppose the far-religious right, then strategically the best move is to deny them petty, irrelevant bullshit to get upset about. Whether there is or isn't a national day of prayer doesn't actually affect anybody, but it riles up a small number of atheists and libertarians while commanding the attention of much LARGER numbers of conservative Christians. I think Obama's doing the smart thing by denying a really scary foe another flag to rally around.I think the NDP is borderline at best, Constitutionally speaking. But it's also completely irrelevant to everyone except the fringe, and if it'll keep the big scary fringe a little more subdued then I say keep the thing rather than start a battle in the culture war that Democrats and moderate Republicans never seem to win.^Kissing boo-boos is something that has zero positive effect, and is done simply to provide empty comfort. Given the filth inside an average human mouth, it probably does more harm than good. He's actually got a fairly reasonable comparison there, which surprises me.And oh, d5str0y3r -- if you are capable of respecting people that you sincerely believe are party to one of the most destructive forces in the world, then there's something wrong with you.[Edited on April 23, 2010 at 11:22 PM. Reason : ]
4/23/2010 11:20:52 PM
^^^ Citation irrelevant to claim. Claim was "people who pray tend to have fewer complications", not "people who are prayed for tend to have fewer complications" I don't find any support for the first claim other than what you might glean from the studies about having positive outlooks in general post surgery, but your citation does nothing to support or deny the original claim.^^ Are you suggesting that motherly kisses have healing properties? Or that the act of a kiss somehow alters the healing process?^ You wound me sir. I may not be the best intellectual mind here, but I try to at least stay within the bounds of reasonableness.
4/23/2010 11:25:09 PM