ahh yes, the blinders of religion are strong on you, aren't they
9/19/2008 1:14:04 AM
It's such a stupid troll act because there are really only two possibilities here:(1) You're trolling, except you're not clever enough to make it entertaining or genuinely funny or(2) You actually think you have a subtle, clever philosophical point -- which is pathetic
9/19/2008 9:32:50 AM
he has shown many times in the past that #2 is correct. burro has no understanding of the differences between trust and faith
9/19/2008 9:41:49 AM
Or rationally justified belief and faith, I guess.Dude sounds like a philosopher from the middle ages dropped in a confusing, complicated 21st century.Sorely needs some Kierkegaard.
9/19/2008 10:10:11 AM
what is rational to one is irrational to the next. and, oh the irony in declaring that trust and faith are different.
9/19/2008 10:26:06 AM
It's really worthless to argue this with you since you seem either incapable or unwilling to understand science (and ironically enough, religion).
9/19/2008 10:37:30 AM
it's really pointless to argue this with you since you seem unwilling to even question the limitations of science.
9/19/2008 11:01:03 AM
nobody questions the limits of science and refutes the findings of science more thoroughly than scientists.
9/19/2008 11:04:26 AM
riiiiiiight.
9/19/2008 11:13:27 AM
9/19/2008 12:14:59 PM
9/19/2008 12:20:59 PM
9/19/2008 6:46:30 PM
i just wanted to say...teaching evolution is not advocating a religious belief nor a lack thereof...it's only a scientific topic with practical applications and facts to back it up, just like chemistry, physics, microbiology, whatever...this one just happens to contradict a literal interpretation of the bible. but that doesn't mean the government is trying to suppress christianity by teaching it. it's not like darwin and all the other scientists were trying to disprove the creation story...they were just trying to figure out how shit works on earth. evolution has nothing to do with god one way or the other. science class is not the place to inject a discussion of religion.i also felt i should repost this...it pretty much says exactly what i was thinking:
9/19/2008 8:24:10 PM
9/20/2008 1:33:01 PM
Creationism is not science leave that shit at church or perhaps in literature class.
9/20/2008 2:24:11 PM
I'm glad to see that you are part of them ignant commoners, then. cognitive dissonance is a bitch, aint it? OMG, ISLAM AINT RIGHT, CAUSE JESUS SAYS SO!!! WE MUST OUTLAW IT!!!]
9/20/2008 2:42:53 PM
i think you're unwittingly the king of the strawman argument
9/20/2008 2:49:44 PM
If you don't want your kids to learn that crazy satanist evolution thing than you are more than able to send your kids to a private christian school where they will not be corrupted by the liberal god-hating progressive propaganda.
9/20/2008 2:52:00 PM
sigh. strawman much? WHere did I say I am against teaching evolution?btw, the islam and jesus thing isn't a strawman. It's a fucking point about bitching about something "not being science." It's, you know, the same damned thing. again, cognitive dissonance is a bitch.
9/20/2008 2:53:33 PM
9/20/2008 4:34:34 PM
9/20/2008 4:48:21 PM
let's hear your definition of religion then. because, you know, I thought the dictionary was a fairly accurate reference point...
9/20/2008 4:58:31 PM
I guess it's pretty easy to win arguments when you define words how you want.
9/20/2008 5:08:51 PM
9/20/2008 5:18:12 PM
9/20/2008 5:33:02 PM
9/20/2008 5:41:00 PM
9/20/2008 5:50:53 PM
I don't know what else to say. By your definition, the "state" is inherently religious because it has to follow a "set of tenets and practices." So the first admendment kind of caves in on itself by saying that the "state" can't establish itself. Reductio ad absurdum... the founding fathers were writing meaningless drivel or that's not at all what they meant by a "religion"
9/20/2008 5:58:39 PM
9/20/2008 6:10:12 PM
9/20/2008 6:14:54 PM
^I just spoon-fed the difference directly to you... If you can't even see that there's no point in arguing it.Denying that something fits into your own sphere of beliefs is NOT the same as denying that it should be believed at all.Also, using YOUR flawed definition, it would be very easy to define any school subject as a religion. Using an actual definition of religion, I would be very hard-pressed to do so. Using the all-encompassing definition that you have provided me... it's essentially a one-step proof, at least for math. For history it's about two.[Edited on September 20, 2008 at 6:22 PM. Reason : .]
9/20/2008 6:19:20 PM
9/20/2008 6:25:29 PM
yes but historians make claims about reality as does mathyou specifically emphasized the "often", so I don't think they would necesarily need to address the cosmos or human nature (although they can be used to do both)[Edited on September 20, 2008 at 6:34 PM. Reason : .]
9/20/2008 6:33:31 PM
9/20/2008 6:36:37 PM
9/20/2008 6:59:06 PM
.
9/20/2008 7:09:17 PM
no, showing that something else is a religion doesn't "prove my point wrong." It would only further my assertion that a religion need not be supernatural.
9/20/2008 7:10:58 PM
Wow, I had a ton of stuff typed in response to your post and thanks to an inopportune pressing of the "back" button, it's all gone now. So here's for the more brief version. I'm skipping some steps in reasoning with his explanation, but rest assured that I did reason through them.In summary, I agree with you the last part of your post when the problem is approached from a context-free philosophical standpoint. Except that I would not phrase it as "science actually is a religion", I would phrase it as "religion is an attempted science". I used some diagrams too...The way society sees it:. . . . / Ideas \Religion . . . ScienceA more accurate philosophical view:. . . . . . . / Attempted Science \Correct Science . . . . . Incorrect Science (pseudoscience)Pseudoscience being, here, any aspects of fact-based science which have been proven to be incorrect, or such "religious" ancient sciences such as Alchemy and Astrology. Modern major religions also fall under this banner of pseudoscience in the event that commonly-accepted fact-based science ("Correct" Science) discovers something in contradiction with said religious beliefs... until/unless that fact-based science is proven to also be incorrect by future scientific discoveries.What the school-teachings debate really boils down to in this regard is what filter we use to determine what our children learn. As a Libertarian, I believe that the simplest solution to this would be to provide parents and children with a choice of what they learn... provide alternative schools or alternative classes which teach different parts of the "Attempted Science" tree... allow children to enroll in a "Correct Science-only" class, or a class that teaches both... There could also be a class that teaches only the pseudoscience side of the tree, but in the interests of improving educational standards, it shouldn't be able to count as an alternative to 10th-grade biology.Speaking of standards, who's to determine what is "Correct Science"? To me, the obvious answer would be modern scientists, since that is who society at large trusts with conducting scientific experiments (to some degree this is why I was approaching the debate earlier from the "beliefs of society" standpoint). Since the "Correct Science" side is continuously changing and often losing old ideas and theories to the "Incorrect Science" side to be replaced by newer ones, it seems that it would make the most sense to consider "Correct Science" to be that which is currently believed and accepted by experts within the modern scientific community. Though certain parts of "Correct Science" may eventually be shown to be invalid, it would be little more than blind guesswork trying to determine what exactly will eventually be "disproven".On a personal level, I'd like to see my kids learning facts... or at least what are our best attempts at facts given society's level of scientific advancement. If they/I want religion, there's always church.[Edited on September 20, 2008 at 8:15 PM. Reason : .]
9/20/2008 8:14:52 PM
^ What browser are you using? Safari and I'm pretty sure Firefox all retain text boxes while moving back/forth.
9/20/2008 8:16:20 PM
Google Chrome, and I was actually surprised that it didn't retain what I had said... When I hit the back button on my mouse it sent me to the two or three sentences I'd typed before moving the mini-thread-overview window to page 3... and then when I hit forward all that was there were those couple of sentences.On further examination, the mini-thread feature below the posting box seems to do some wonky stuff to Chrome's back/forward feature. Maybe it's just the mess of code that is T-dub, maybe it's just a browser flaw, probably it's both.[Edited on September 20, 2008 at 8:23 PM. Reason : .]
9/20/2008 8:20:40 PM
9/21/2008 12:16:02 AM
9/21/2008 12:35:10 AM
you make me so wetnow to read what u said hmmm. I think you'd be hard pressed to argue that child rapists and Republicans are anywhere remotely in the same categorie, aside from them both being humans.[Edited on September 21, 2008 at 12:36 AM. Reason : ]
9/21/2008 12:36:05 AM
9/21/2008 12:42:58 AM
nope. there is much more in common between science and religion, and that is precisely why one is a member of the other.
9/21/2008 12:46:19 AM
I feel, then, it's safe that I presume you're a child rapist.edit:reading back over the thread, I think this may be the point of disagreement:
9/21/2008 12:55:49 AM
I feel the need to repost this again for the benefit of moron... who seems to be acting uncharacteristically stubborn, blunt, and ig'nant. Usually I can respect his posts.The fact is that even though religion and science approach issues with a different procedure/perspective... faith-based vs fact-based (which, really, is the ONLY difference between the two). The two of them essentially cover the same subject material, which is the whole cause of these contradictions and controversies. Even though religion may not claim itself to be a science (unlike Alchemy and the like), certain areas of religion can and do come into direct contest with science. Even the areas of religion that are currently NOT contending with science could conceivably do so in the future as science advances... that which is now considered 'supernatural' may one day enter the realm of the discoverable.The only part of religious doctrine that really doesn't fall into the realm of science are such verses as "[whoever] thus did speak upon the [whatever], saying '[something]' ", because this is simply an anecdotal recounting of events... and even phrases such as that could conceivably come into contest with historical evidence. Which... I suppose would actually be conflicting with the science of archaeology/anthropology. So strike that bit about anecdotal stories also not conflicting with science. Pretty much everything that can be said in a religion can also potentially be at odds with a science of some sort or another. You're right that they're not the exact same thing, but they both seek to occupy the same space of human thought.EDIT: I'd also like to elaborate on that one thing...
9/21/2008 1:10:15 AM
9/21/2008 1:29:04 AM
9/21/2008 1:44:19 AM
9/21/2008 1:55:18 AM