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Author Topic:   My "Beef" With Atheists
lyx2no
Member (Idle past 4737 days)
Posts: 1277
From: A vast, undifferentiated plane.
Joined: 02-28-2008


Message 61 of 123 (482633)
09-17-2008 7:00 AM
Reply to: Message 20 by Watson75
09-16-2008 11:45 PM


Disdain
If you say "no," that means there's not point in going further. I will be forced to hold you in disdain (as a personal view), because I just think that would lack any sort of sense or sensibility. That would mean our minds just operate on entirely different wavelengths. You would be a true atheist, and therein lies the "beef."
Oh, goodie. I can cut to the chase on this one. Your an idiot without an original idea in his head; do you really think we've not all heard this tired tripe before? I hold you in disdain too. So there.

Kindly
When I was young I loved everything about cigarettes: the smell, the taste, the feel . everything. Now that I’m older I’ve had a change of heart. Want to see the scar?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 20 by Watson75, posted 09-16-2008 11:45 PM Watson75 has not replied

  
Agobot
Member (Idle past 5551 days)
Posts: 786
Joined: 12-16-2007


Message 62 of 123 (482635)
09-17-2008 7:34 AM
Reply to: Message 46 by Watson75
09-17-2008 2:51 AM


I see your topic is influenced by a topic i posted earlier titled "God is dead". Here are a few remarks I have that will probaly clear your misunderstandings with the atheists:
1. The fact the universe does not make sense without a God does not mean there has to be a God. It can exist without making any sense to our human logic, as we are so desperately small, meaningless and insignificant to the Universe.
2. There doesn't have to be a purpose for the universe to exist. It's mind boggling but we have to accept things that don't make sense to our feeble logic. We are nothing more than mould on a ball of dust rotating in space.
If you are able(it's hard) to wrap your head around these notions, you might be able to resolve your personal conflicts with atheism and reality.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 46 by Watson75, posted 09-17-2008 2:51 AM Watson75 has not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 64 by kongstad, posted 09-17-2008 7:56 AM Agobot has replied

  
kongstad
Member (Idle past 2891 days)
Posts: 175
From: Copenhagen, Denmark
Joined: 02-24-2004


Message 63 of 123 (482637)
09-17-2008 7:41 AM
Reply to: Message 33 by Watson75
09-17-2008 1:43 AM


Nice ad hominem...
Actually that wasn't an ad hominem. The ad hominem fallacy is when where a claim or an argument is rejected on the basis of an irrelevant fact about the person making the claim or argument.
The Dumbass comment was the authors opinion of you, and if your argument was rejected because you were perceived as a dumbass it would be an ad hominem.
But that was not what happened. In fact the dumbass comment was part of a message outlining one of your claims as troublesome.
Again to call you a dumbass for making stupid claims is not an ad hominem, but just voicing an opinion. Whether the clai was stupid or not is of course open to debate, but I think I have travelled far enough of topic by now.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 33 by Watson75, posted 09-17-2008 1:43 AM Watson75 has not replied

  
kongstad
Member (Idle past 2891 days)
Posts: 175
From: Copenhagen, Denmark
Joined: 02-24-2004


Message 64 of 123 (482640)
09-17-2008 7:56 AM
Reply to: Message 62 by Agobot
09-17-2008 7:34 AM


The fact the universe does not make sense without a God does not mean there has to be a God.
Hmm I disagree on your perception of facts. The universe makes sense to me, and I know of no gods.
It can exist without making any sense to our human logic, as we are so desperately small, meaningless and insignificant to the Universe.
Yes the universe can exist whether it makes sense to us or not. Why do I get the impression that you have a problem with this trivial fact?
And in what way are we small and insignificant to the universe? Does the universe perceive meaning? Doesn't this require intelligence? Are you claiming that the universe is intelligent?
There doesn't have to be a purpose for the universe to exist.
That sounds about right, glad we are on the same page.
It's mind boggling but we have to accept things that don't make sense to our feeble logic.
What is it that doesn't make sense? You think it only makes sense if the universe has a purpose to exist? How strange, can you xplain this quaint notion?
We are nothing more than mould on a ball of dust rotating in space.
I am sad to hear you think this. I have a rather different opinion about the human race, but then again we can't agree on everything.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 62 by Agobot, posted 09-17-2008 7:34 AM Agobot has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 67 by Agobot, posted 09-17-2008 1:42 PM kongstad has replied

  
Modulous
Member
Posts: 7801
From: Manchester, UK
Joined: 05-01-2005


Message 65 of 123 (482670)
09-17-2008 12:50 PM
Reply to: Message 1 by Watson75
09-16-2008 12:09 AM


I'm an atheist
Hi, I'm an atheist. I don't know if you'll return in 88 hours time or not. If you do, welcome back! If you want to spend some time here, you might want to work on your debate style. However, if you'd rather maintain an uncompromising appearance, unafraid to do bloody skirmish with atheists regardless of the consequences that's fine - but you might not get to stick around for too long.
Advice that is probably not wanted aside, let me try to tackle the debate at hand.
The only axiom I can perceive and truly hold to is that "we" and "this" are in fact here.
OK, I can run with that.
The question now is the following: does this axiom lend itself to the notion of an intelligent force behind it in a realm outside of it beyond our comprehension and perception
No. It neither supports nor detracts from the notion.
does it lend itself to the notion of a spontaneous birth that arrived from no-intelligence and came forth from “nothing” itself?
Once again no, not at all. The fact that 'we' exist and perceive 'this' can lead us nowhere without further axioms.
It appears as if, however, this is not the reality in which we live. This reality can most certainly in fact, lend itself to an outside intellect and force that we cannot comprehend, simply because of the only axiom we can empirically observe as fact. Why? Because of its very existence. In a world of "something" it hardly seems reasonable to assert that 'it came from "nothing"' as some sort of self evident truth.
Your argument is only true with the further axiom that reality must be describable in a fashion that Watson75 regards as 'reasonable'. I see no reason to accept that axiom.
Nevertheless, atheists do not assert that 'it came from "nothing"' as if it were a self evident truth. Atheists (in the sense you mean, as opposed to Buddhists or Animists or the like), generally stick to a model developed by science. The conclusions that the universe may either be a self-existing piece of 4d geometry or that our 4d universe is part of a greater dimensional reality whose origins cannot be speculated further upon or varieties in that vain, are not held to be 'self evident' but are actually built up on evidence.
However, none of these models state categorically that there is no intelligence behind the whole shebang somewhere or other. And atheists accept that this indeed may be the case, but why actually commit to believing that it is without any evidence that it is?
Of course, 'what about the intelligent force itself', the atheist would respond. "Where did it come from? It must have come from nothing, so your argument is negated." My response is that I know absolutely nothing about this dimension/realm, do not know the laws that govern it, or even if there are any laws. In this dimension, the universal truth of why there is an intelligent force, and how long it has existed (which is kind of a faulty statement, considering time would most certainly be skewed or non-existent in comparison to our reality), could and most likely would make perfect sense, if the human mind could even comprehend it.
Indeed, this being may be self-existing. Then again, so might this universe, or some braneworld may be self-existing. Who knows what the meta-rules are to reality? In this meta-realm as it were, it may be possible for things such as our universe to come into being, without intelligent force!
This is a much more distanced and agnostic approach, but still harbors traits of the close minded. It, in itself is a reasonable stance, however, it still completely shuts the door on the possibilities of the universe that the human mind should, and is capable of exploring.
Seems like a blanket statement, and I'm sure atheists would argue likewise about certain theists. Regardless, I am perfectly capable of imagining a wide variety of possible deities, transcendent realms, and peculiar and ironic twists in the nature of reality.
I just don't hold to a belief that any one of those flights of philosophical fancy are worthy of spending time actively believing and I wouldn't be making decisions based on them.
Strong atheism, on the other hand, the general stance of there is no proof whatsoever, therefore “God doesn’t exist,” deserves the most rebuking.
Agreed. Now if only I had ever found such an atheist, I'd shoot him and hang his head in my study - such a rare bit of game they are.
I do sometimes short-hand to 'God doesn't exist'. I mean the same thing when I, and anyone else, short-hands to 'Santa doesn't exist' or 'Faeries don't exist'. Strictly speaking of course they should be agnostic about Faeries. The should say 'Faeries may or may not exist, I just don't flipping know' - but it can get rather tiresome.
Betrand Russell:
quote:
As a philosopher, if I were speaking to a purely philosophic audience I should say that I ought to describe myself as an Agnostic, because I do not think that there is a conclusive argument by which one can prove that there is not a God. On the other hand, if I am to convey the right impression to the ordinary man in the street I think that I ought to say that I am an Atheist, because, when I say that I cannot prove that there is not a God, I ought to add equally that I cannot prove that there are not the Homeric gods.
And If I were isolated from all civilization on an island, I would come to the same conclusion, that has nothing to do with flying potatoes but rather, “Hmm, it seems quite reasonable to suggest that some kind of higher power/intelligence had a hand in creating what I see around me. Perhaps there is some sense and purpose to all of this. Just perhaps, maybe [sarcasm].” Hardly un-reasonable.
Yes, it isn't unreasonable. As far as human reasoning goes it is very common in fact. However, with a bit more information, one might come to a second level of assertion. The knowledge that we are imperfect reasoners. It then follows that just based on pure reason (rationalism) the world may or may not have had some intelligent guiding force involved in its existence. So with rationalism and empiricism we have determined that we need more evidence before we reach any conclusions about proposed intelligence.
Rationalism on its own...well that's an argument in its own right.
First of all, I think it’s a rebellion. So often, I think you will find that atheists at one point had some religious affiliation, found out how much bologna there was in all that, and completely went the other direction, and found the ultimate antithesis, atheism.
Yes, you probably will find that a lot. It's also stunning the amount of religious people who give talks on atheism that start with 'I used to be an atheist until I realized...'. If atheism can be born of rebellion, then maybe theists are sometimes born out of selling out?
For the record, I was CofE, then New Age Spiritualist, Buddhist, Universalist, Osho Cultist, monist, pantheist, nearly Muslim, pantheist, slavic pagan, pantheist, atheist. I think just about covers them.
It’s a rebellion against religious society as a whole, not only in the present, but going as far back as the birth of human existence.
If you found yourself surrounded by lunatics who thought that the world came out of nothing, which justifies killing European people through enforced ignorance regarding healthcare...perhaps you might be considered the rebel for thinking that God loves everyone, including Europeans or some such thing.
Religious folks believers in God/higher intelligence throughout the centuries have been un-enlightened, un-informed, un-intelligent, barbarians, that had no understanding of science, and progress, and we are in an entirely different class from them!
Well, I don't know too many that'd say that. It seems to me like you've spent a lot of time around angry teenaged atheists, who tend to smugly overstate their case much like angry teenaged anythings.
Many of my favourite historical figures were religious. I like some of them for their wit, intelligence, humour or pathos - to accuse them of the things you list would be ignorance.
And more than this, and coinciding with this rebellion, is simply put, arrogance. The atheist has the answers that 95% of the world today, and 100% of the world of the past has been blind from.
Atheists are simply people that do not pretend to have knowledge in one certain thing. I'm sure in a debate setting, you will find most of your opponents attempting to answer your questions with the most recent information at their disposal. And yes, that means older information may be inaccurate or untrue meaning people 50 years ago were blind of this new information.
I think everyone would agree that in the past 150 years or so there have been a number of important revolutions as a result of science and technology that have dramatically increased our knowledge of how things work along with our ability to exploit this knowledge. From a knowledge standpoint we stand at an unprecedented height. However, we could not have got here without the work of previous generations: though we might have gotten here sooner if certain people had not interfered. It is absurd to be arrogant about that fact, but humans is humans I guess. There is no shortage of arrogance from the theistic camp, agnostic camp or deist camp.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1 by Watson75, posted 09-16-2008 12:09 AM Watson75 has not replied

  
Rahvin
Member
Posts: 4039
Joined: 07-01-2005
Member Rating: 8.2


Message 66 of 123 (482673)
09-17-2008 1:08 PM
Reply to: Message 43 by Watson75
09-17-2008 2:32 AM


quote:
Rahvin writes:
Of course it's a legitimate question.
Great. Now, Yes or No. Must I restate the question?
I answered the question.
quote:
Of course it's a legitimate question. But the answer is likely less than what you'd prefer: the mere existence of the Universe is suggestive of nothing more than the existence of the Universe. The existence of a deity is simply one possibility with no supporting evidence, no different from the possibility of fairies hiding in a garden.
I thought I was extremely clear here, and considering the rest of my post. The mere existence of the Universe is not suggestive at all of anything. We don't know if a complex Universe requires a creator. We don't even knwo if our Universe is particularly complex at all! We have nothing else to compare it to. Our Universe may be unusually simple, or unusually complex, may require a Creator or may not, and we have no data from which to make any of those determinations. So the mere existence of the Universe is not suggestive of any of those things. In the absence of any evidence, all possibilities are equally likely, and there's no reason to violate parsimony by suggesting the existence of a deity simply because you like that idea the best.
That would be a no, Watson75, complete with an explanation of why.
It's a shame that I requested that the mods promote your topic despite the fact that it was a redundant wall-of-text, I follow up by responding in detail to both your initial post and your response to me, and in both your first response as well as these two follow-ups you simply ignore the vast majority of what I've said, change the subject, dodge rebuttals, and demand simple "yes or no" responses instead of detailed ones. Why, if I can give you the courtesy of reading and responding to the entirety of your posts, can you not do the same for me? That does not demonstrate good-faith debate.
And for you to suggest that this...
quote:
Do you believe this reality, this "something" you see around you, is at the very least "suggestive" of an intelligence that may be behind it.
is even in the same class/category/realm/dimension/universe as this...
quote:
Raving writes:
no different from the possibility of fairies hiding in a garden.
in other words...
quote:
Do you believe this garden you see around you, is at the very least "suggestive" of fairies that may be hiding in it?
Are you kidding me? Where's the logic and rationale in that. Honestly, I thought you're better than that. To compare my legitimate question with such rubbish, is just plain... rubbish. Is that the best you've got? You've certainly knocked yourself down a few pegs. And I'll give you an answer to that one. "No." Quite easy. I guess I'm a "fairy" atheist. And damn proud.
And yet you haven't shown why there is a difference between
(the existence of teh Universe is suggestive of a creator)
and
(the existence of a garden is suggestive that there are fairies hiding there)
Once again, you've flatly insisted there is a difference, responded with ridicule, and cannot see how they are exactly the same. You don't know what sort of Universe would be suggestive of a Creator, because you have no other Universes to compare ours to. There is no reason to assume that the existence of a Universe suggests that the Universe has a Creator any more than the existence of a garden is reason to assume that there are fairies hiding in it. Are both the Creator and the fairies possibilities? Of course. But there's no reason to beleive either are present becasue there is no data to suggest as much.
To paraprase Dawkins, you'll understand why I'm an Atheist with respect to your deity when you understand why you are an Atheist with regards to fairies.
Don't be afraid to answer. Just answer yes or no. Until you do so, we can't go further. You can be an atheist. That's 100% your right. Just like I'm a fairy atheist. You just have to answer.
I've answered multiple times now. Are you incapable of comprehending my responses? Are you simply too lazy to read them all? Or are you purposefully dodging in an attempt to make me appear to be avoiding your questions because you have no answer for my rebuttals?
Your second response:
quote:
So you say. But you haven't shown how I've supposedly twisted your words, you've simply stated that it is so. More bald assertions. To me, it sounds like you're furiously backpedaling becasue you have no argument. I rebut you, and you say "but that wasn't what I meant!"
I chose not to bother refuting everythin you say, because I know how it can tend to go on and on, and back and forth for seemingly forever. Don't worry, the "twists" are in fact there.
...that's not the way debate works, Watson75. Bare assertions are invalid. Period. If you cannot show where and how I have twisted your meaning, you're little more than a child whining "but that's not what I meant!" when told he's wrong.
If you cannot counter my rebuttals, then you are conceding by default.
But I will go back and forth with what I choose (in interest of time and life), so please, answer my question, and we'll start there.
Again, I've answered all of your questions, some of them multiple times. Frankly I'm becoming tired of repeating myself.
quote:
It's not suggestive of a Flying Spaghetti Monster at all.
Gee, so you answered with that one. Great, now go back to the first one. No waffling!
I answered all of them in each of my posts, Watson75. I haven't "waffled" once. I've answered your questions directly and supported my answers. You, however, have failed to respond to the vast majority of my rebuttals. I've pointed out dozens of logical fallacies contained in your previous posts. Simply ignoring them does not make them go away - it makes you appear to be a dishonest debater, and that (combined with taunting the admins) is why you've been suspended.
When you return, I'd appreciate a full response to my posts. If your time it too "valuable" to spend giving full responses while expecting others to spend their valuable time reading and responding to yours, you really don't belong on a debate forum.
So let's go back over what's gone wrong here:
Is not the world you see around you, with all it's intricacies, how it works like clock-work, at the very least suggestive of an intelligence, as opposed to a non-intelligence. You know, how if one thing was to change just a tad bit, none of it would work. I mean, as far as coincidences go, from you're angle, you're in a huge one. Something like 1 in a Googelplex. And beyond this mathematical anomaly, there is no sensibility in your belief. With no intelligence, no purpose, you're shutting the door on sensibility, straight out.
It's not. Others have used the "puddle/pothole" analogy, where the puddle beleives the pothole must be perfectly designed just for it because it fits perfectly, and changing it even slightly makes the puddle no longer fit. But the puddle fits the pothole, not the other way around.
I used a probability explanation to show you why your assumption that the Unvierse must be gigantically improbable is incorrect - given that a Universe is going to exist, some properties must show up, and every single possible result is equally improbable. When someone wins the lottery, it's a on in a million chance, but someone eventually will win. Every single player has an equally improbable chance of winning, but one of them will happen. In the case of our Universe, we have no idea what other possible values could exist in alternate Universes, and indeed ours could even be the only possibility - we have no data. So we don't know what the probability is, and we know that some result had to exist, and we know that our Universe does.
To say that the "finely-tuned" physics of the Universe for our form of life suggests the existence of a Creator requires that you assume in the beginning that our specific form of life is a desired result, which of course requires an intelligence, making you entire argument circular.
Your reasoning thus fails because you don't understand probability, you are claiming that the container is designed for the liquid rather than the liquid fitting whatever shape the container happens to have, you violate parsimony in the absence of evidence by introducing an extraneous entity where none is required, your argument is circular by containing your conclusion in your premise, and you appeal to your personal incredulity.
This was all pointed out in previous responses, and you ignored it all. Your reasoning is so flawed that it must be discarded as entirely wrong, not even a little right.
As I said before,
quote:
This is fallacious reasoning. Your personal credulity has no bearing on whether the Universe is designed or not. Merely saying "complexity is the result of design" is not evidence, as rocks are extremely complex and yet have no designer. Marveling at the extreme improbability of our Universe existing as it does has absolutely no relevance to whether the universe has a designer or not, any more than the improbability of rolling a specific sequence of dice rolls implies the existence of a luck fairy.
If you want to debate, then you must answer my rebuttals. If you again choose to try to deflect the argument onto a new tangent and completely ignore my points while simply insisting that you're right, then you honestly don't belong here.
To the mods, I apologize for requesting this topic to be promoted. I had assumed that Watson75 actually wished to engage in debate, and simply had an overly verbose and redundant writing style. This has not proven to be the case.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 43 by Watson75, posted 09-17-2008 2:32 AM Watson75 has not replied

  
Agobot
Member (Idle past 5551 days)
Posts: 786
Joined: 12-16-2007


Message 67 of 123 (482685)
09-17-2008 1:42 PM
Reply to: Message 64 by kongstad
09-17-2008 7:56 AM


kongstad writes:
And in what way are we small and insignificant to the universe?
In every way. In what way do you think we are significant to the universe?
Konstad writes:
Does the universe perceive meaning? Doesn't this require intelligence? Are you claiming that the universe is intelligent?
Why does the universe have to possess intelligence to say that we are insignificant to its existence? Don't you know that the universe survived for a fucking 13.7 billion years without us? How significant do you think you are for the universe?
The rest of you post makes even less sense.
Edited by Agobot, : No reason given.
Edited by Agobot, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 64 by kongstad, posted 09-17-2008 7:56 AM kongstad has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 69 by kongstad, posted 09-17-2008 6:37 PM Agobot has replied

  
Granny Magda
Member
Posts: 2462
From: UK
Joined: 11-12-2007
Member Rating: 3.8


Message 68 of 123 (482693)
09-17-2008 2:13 PM
Reply to: Message 21 by Watson75
09-16-2008 11:51 PM


Hi Watson75,
Is is not extremely legitimate to believe there may be sort of "intelligent force" behind everything you see and partake in?
No. What would cause me to think that? I have never seen any evidence of it. It might seem legitimate to a pig-ignorant superstitious Bronze Age subsistence farmer, but I like to aspire a little higher than that kind of mentality.
What you've presented is nothing other than multiple farces.
Thank you very much. Nice of you to say so.
if you were isolated on an island your entire life, with no contact with humanity you would wonder the following...
"I wonder if there is a greater intelligence behind what I see around me?"
If I were marooned as you suggest, I would most likely be unable to even begin to consider such abstract concepts, due to my lack of language.
You coudn't provide the answer, and would be an agnostic. If you went further, and really felt that there was, you would be a deist. And if you said, "nah, this is certainly not the product of intelligence" you'd be an atheist.
I'm pretty used to having other posters tell me what I think, as though they know better than I do, but you are really taking the biscuit. You assume to know what I would think, in a hypothetical situation.
Stop it. You are making unsubstantiated assertions about what I might or might not think. It's called a "strawman argument". Wouldn't you rather debate what I actually think and not your mistaken version thereof?
You wouldn't ask... "I wonder if there's a flying toaster oven that rules over me?" One is reasonable, even demands being asked, and one is just plain ridiculous.
Ganesh is not a toaster oven. I ask again; are you agnostic towards Ganesh? Or Apollo? Should your deity-of-choice be singled out for special consideration above the countless alternatives? What makes one evidence-free proposition more ridiculous than another?
Mutate and Survive

"The Bible is like a person, and if you torture it long enough, you can get it to say almost anything you'd like it to say." -- Rev. Dr. Francis H. Wade

This message is a reply to:
 Message 21 by Watson75, posted 09-16-2008 11:51 PM Watson75 has not replied

  
kongstad
Member (Idle past 2891 days)
Posts: 175
From: Copenhagen, Denmark
Joined: 02-24-2004


Message 69 of 123 (482746)
09-17-2008 6:37 PM
Reply to: Message 67 by Agobot
09-17-2008 1:42 PM


Meaning, and significance exists only in minds. Our lives a neither significant nor insignificant with regards to the universe, since the universe cannot conceive significance any more than a pebble can.
So the universe doesn't care about, because, well, the universe isn't the sort of thing that cares about anything. The universe didn't care about the Big Bang, it doesn't care whether there will be a big crunch, since it cannot care any more than a grain of sand can.
So no we are not insignificant to the universe, the universe is unable to perceive, so its a categorical error to try to anthropomorphize the universe by assuming significance has any meaning in that context.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 67 by Agobot, posted 09-17-2008 1:42 PM Agobot has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 70 by Agobot, posted 09-17-2008 6:48 PM kongstad has not replied
 Message 73 by Syamsu, posted 09-18-2008 6:06 PM kongstad has replied

  
Agobot
Member (Idle past 5551 days)
Posts: 786
Joined: 12-16-2007


Message 70 of 123 (482748)
09-17-2008 6:48 PM
Reply to: Message 69 by kongstad
09-17-2008 6:37 PM


kongstad writes:
So the universe doesn't care about, because, well, the universe isn't the sort of thing that cares about anything. The universe didn't care about the Big Bang, it doesn't care whether there will be a big crunch, since it cannot care any more than a grain of sand can.
So no we are not insignificant to the universe, the universe is unable to perceive, so its a categorical error to try to anthropomorphize the universe by assuming significance has any meaning in that context.
Yes, you are right about the wording, but still the universe is expanding and changing(galaxies are colliding, stars are turning to neutron stars, etc.). There are processes that have been taking place in the Universe at any moment in time for the last 13.7 billion years. These processes will continue whether we survive as species or if we go the path of the Dinosaurs. We are very insignificant to the processes that take place in the Universe. "Insignificant" is even somewhat an understatement, we are completely and totally worthless and irrelevant to their unfolding.
Edited by Agobot, : No reason given.
Edited by Agobot, : No reason given.
Edited by Agobot, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 69 by kongstad, posted 09-17-2008 6:37 PM kongstad has not replied

  
Adminnemooseus
Administrator
Posts: 3974
Joined: 09-26-2002


Message 71 of 123 (482764)
09-17-2008 9:23 PM


Watson75 permanently suspended
The launcher of this topic is permanently no longer available to post messages.
I'll leave it open and we shall see where it goes from here.
Adminnemooseus

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There used to be a comedian who presented his ideas for a better world, and one of them was to arm everyone on the highway with little rubber dart guns. Every time you see a driver doing something stupid, you fire a little dart at his car. When a state trooper sees someone driving down the highway with a bunch of darts all over his car he pulls him over for being an idiot.
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Admin
Director
Posts: 13014
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Message 72 of 123 (482830)
09-18-2008 8:16 AM
Reply to: Message 55 by Watson75
09-17-2008 4:03 AM


Hi Watson75,
This is Percy, I run the website and the server it runs on, and I pay the bills. Please stop reregistering and sending emails to moderators or I will report you to your ISP, which is apparently Cox Communications in Atlanta. You are permanently suspended, there is no appeal.

--Percy
EvC Forum Director

This message is a reply to:
 Message 55 by Watson75, posted 09-17-2008 4:03 AM Watson75 has not replied

  
Syamsu 
Suspended Member (Idle past 5611 days)
Posts: 1914
From: amsterdam
Joined: 05-19-2002


Message 73 of 123 (482898)
09-18-2008 6:06 PM
Reply to: Message 69 by kongstad
09-17-2008 6:37 PM


There goes another one, must be a million of them. Where is that love-o-meter that when you point it at the universe and it clicks to zero. Im sure scientists must have such a thing since countless sciencefans positively assert as objective fact that there is no love in the universe. Can you please point any paper on it that establishes this as fact.
Or else, without evidence, arent you the pseudoscientists of the worst kind. Why is the stupid scientific method not reacting against this pseudoscience. Why would the science beast allow it to pass and seemingly encourage pseudoscience. Perhaps the scientific method is telling us that it does know love. For in terms of information theory even the scientific method is a thing in itself. It computes its next state from information of past present and future by decision, just as gravity does. So the science beast is trying to have its love be acknowledged.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 69 by kongstad, posted 09-17-2008 6:37 PM kongstad has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 74 by bluescat48, posted 09-18-2008 6:57 PM Syamsu has not replied
 Message 75 by subbie, posted 09-19-2008 2:54 AM Syamsu has not replied
 Message 76 by kongstad, posted 09-19-2008 9:06 AM Syamsu has replied

  
bluescat48
Member (Idle past 4210 days)
Posts: 2347
From: United States
Joined: 10-06-2007


Message 74 of 123 (482905)
09-18-2008 6:57 PM
Reply to: Message 73 by Syamsu
09-18-2008 6:06 PM


Im sure scientists must have such a thing since countless sciencefans positively assert as objective fact that there is no love
Love? Only a living being with a nervous system & brain is capable of emotions such as love. Rocks, air, the moon, stars, dark matter, galaxies etc. do not have such, thus they are incapable of love, hate or any other emotion.

There is no better love between 2 people than mutual respect for each other WT Young, 2002
Who gave anyone the authority to call me an authority on anything. WT Young, 1969

This message is a reply to:
 Message 73 by Syamsu, posted 09-18-2008 6:06 PM Syamsu has not replied

  
subbie
Member (Idle past 1275 days)
Posts: 3509
Joined: 02-26-2006


Message 75 of 123 (482936)
09-19-2008 2:54 AM
Reply to: Message 73 by Syamsu
09-18-2008 6:06 PM


quote:
Im sure scientists must have such a thing since countless sciencefans positively assert as objective fact that there is no love in the universe. Can you please point any paper on it that establishes this as fact.
I'd be more than happy to look for one for you. Just as soon as you find for me one single scientific paper that tries to prove that there is no love. You see, I'm pretty sure that you can't, and that your ridiculous claim has no more factual support than any of your other silly claims.

Those who would sacrifice an essential liberty for a temporary security will lose both, and deserve neither. -- Benjamin Franklin
We see monsters where science shows us windmills. -- Phat

This message is a reply to:
 Message 73 by Syamsu, posted 09-18-2008 6:06 PM Syamsu has not replied

  
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