the former is a specific case of the latter
11/13/2010 12:40:49 PM
11/13/2010 1:07:29 PM
Quite true. You began hanging with less secular people and were indoctrinated into non-belief. There is no proof either way, so you cannot claim the former was indoctrination and the latter was learning the truth.
11/14/2010 10:56:50 AM
11/14/2010 11:00:24 AM
Well, he did make it sound as if his beliefs were entirely a result of the people he was around.
11/14/2010 11:13:39 AM
11/14/2010 4:27:35 PM
11/14/2010 11:34:01 PM
11/15/2010 8:46:05 AM
This discussion again?^^Atheism is not anti-theism. The former is a lack of belief. The latter is active opposition to belief, which requires contrary evidence.Indoctrination is incidental to spirituality and atheism.
11/15/2010 9:19:58 AM
Except that there actually are mountain-loads of contrary evidence against almost every definition of god.The only definition of god which cannot actually be disproven is the one that is indistinguishable from nothing. One whose being and effects cannot be observed.
11/15/2010 9:34:56 AM
Not true. There are a mountain of witnesses claiming to have seen God or his minions. It is just that no one has collected physical proof of the encounter.
11/15/2010 10:02:54 AM
What's not true? That there are mountains of contrary evidence? Provide a definition of god and I will provide the contradictory evidence.
11/15/2010 10:08:00 AM
11/15/2010 10:41:26 AM
11/15/2010 11:09:53 AM
11/15/2010 11:40:24 AM
11/15/2010 11:46:33 AM
11/15/2010 11:47:26 AM
11/15/2010 11:54:27 AM
LoneSnark, are any of these FSM's effects visible to non-believers? Does he affect the Universe in any way other than letting those who believe in him know that he's there? Can his followers show any evidence for his existence beyond personal revelation? Does he use a method to communicate to them in any falsifiable way?All "personal gods" fall into the category of "indistinguishable from nothing". There is absolutely no proof of them, no reason for anyone other than the person to believe in them. Even the person is not justified in their belief, because without some sort of effect in reality beyond their mind they can't actually ever be certain they aren't deluding themselves. See: every crazy person that ever made up a story that had no external validation. Again, the subject of their story's "existence" is indistinguishable from nothing. It has the same effect that the actual Santa Claus (not the story of Santa Claus mind you, we're talking about the actual character) has on the world. None.
11/15/2010 12:14:07 PM
11/15/2010 12:15:11 PM
11/15/2010 12:21:13 PM
http://climate.nasa.gov/evidence/seems slightly more plausible than someone raving about a god that no one else can see.Also:
11/15/2010 12:35:42 PM
11/15/2010 12:46:05 PM
11/15/2010 12:56:35 PM
If consciousness' locality is limited to our brains, how is it that we can view events outside our body's environment during near-death? If consciousness' physical essence is limited to electrical stimuli in the brain, how is it that our brains can receive signals and create memories when they are devoid of all electrical activity, ie clinically dead? There are far too many documented cases and far too much correlation among completely distinct people to simply dismiss them as coincidence or fraud.Here, I am presenting "spirituality" as the "belief" that the human consciousness can exist outside the brain, to the point where it can observe, remember, and even create stimuli in the "real" world. This is a phenomenon that currently has no scientific explanation.[Edited on November 15, 2010 at 2:02 PM. Reason : .]
11/15/2010 1:59:00 PM
Oh man, where to begin...
11/15/2010 2:19:39 PM
As an additional point, are dreams "proof" of a magical world?
11/15/2010 2:52:38 PM
11/15/2010 4:49:54 PM
11/15/2010 4:57:08 PM
11/15/2010 5:18:10 PM
^ I'm just jumping in here, but have you posted any links that back up these claims? I'm genuinely curious to read them.
11/15/2010 6:08:28 PM
-I wasn't suggesting that 10% was not statistically significant, only if there actually was an afterlife you'd see more consistent results. You wouldn't see Nintendo Wizards or white Jesus.
11/15/2010 6:47:34 PM
11/15/2010 7:01:04 PM
NDEs? Are you fucking serious?
11/15/2010 7:27:41 PM
I guess I could have taken that approach too. One more thing for Lumex. Brain death is not "cessation of brain function". It's the full necrosis of cerebral neurons.No one is declared brain dead when purposefully arrested during surgery because their core temperature is dropped sufficiently to temporarily suspend the necrotic process. The patient should have a normal temperature and be free of drugs that can suppress brain activity if the diagnosis is to be made on EEG criteria.
11/15/2010 7:47:50 PM
11/18/2010 8:05:04 PM
It's not that there's no convincing evidence; there's just no evidence at all.Not only that, but there's no suggested mechanism for how it should occur. Religious folks should keep their assumptions to theology and stop trying to hijack science. Either way, it's funny that these people see that mechanistic explanation is, at least, valuable for convincing people of a viewpoint. That's why they try to package their shit as an actual empirical hypothesis, which it isn't. If it were, it would have been abandoned long ago. It's a point of dogma, plain and simple. It's also incorrect.[Edited on November 19, 2010 at 1:14 PM. Reason : .]
11/19/2010 1:13:08 PM
Bingo. Religious person = I have a conclusion and now must find evidence to support.Sane person = I draw conclusions from the evidence that we find and can modify these conclusions given new or contradictory evidence.I cannot fathom how any intelligent person would prefer the first method for determining what is true over the latter.
11/19/2010 1:49:51 PM