Bubonic
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you asked... and you shall receive... definitive proof
[YT]pvF64F3AjKY[/YT]
next time... try to have some evidence...

you asked... and you shall receive... definitive proof
[YT]pvF64F3AjKY[/YT]
next time... try to have some evidence...
There is no real difference between a religious nut and an atheist in reality.Neither one will shut up about what they believe in and how much better off they are because of it. yes I am saying that a hardcore atheists religion is preaching and believing in "not believing" for xy reason.
In my own and very humble opinion, people can believe what they want and others should respect that as long as their beliefs are not physically harmful to others.
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If atheism is a religion... then not collecting stamps is a hobby.![]()
I can't really think of anything more intellectually lazy than to assume that God did everything simply because you can't fathom how it happened.
It is as if you go to a magic show and, not knowing how the magician achieves the illusion, assume that he/she really does have magical powers. Instead of investigating, studying sleight of hand, learning how optical illusions can be produced with mirrors and extremely thin string, etc., you just leave it at that and go around thinking that people have magical abilities for the rest of your life.
The average person just takes scientists' words for it. They don't question it. They're told that X is the truth because of Y, and they just accept it. They don't attempt to recreate the experiment themselves (mainly because the average person doesn't have the equipment or knowledge to do so with certain experiments). They just trust that they're being told the truth.
And really, religion is the same way. You get religious leaders saying Z is the truth, and the average person doesn't question it. They don't bother checking their religious texts. They just trust that they're being told the truth.
Unless you're a scientist or a religious scholar of some sort, all you're doing is arguing something that someone else told you and you assume is true.
Emotion is the complex psychophysiological experience of an individual's state of mind as interacting with biochemical (internal) and environmental (external) influences. In humans, emotion fundamentally involves "physiological arousal, expressive behaviors, and conscious experience." Emotion is associated with mood, temperament, personality and disposition, and motivation. Motivations direct and energize behavior, while emotions provide the affective component to motivation, positive or negative.
No definitive taxonomy of emotions exists, though numerous taxonomies have been proposed. Some categorizations include:
"Cognitive" versus "non-cognitive" emotions
Instinctual emotions (from the amygdala), versus cognitive emotions (from the prefrontal cortex).
Categorization based on duration: Some emotions occur over a period of seconds (for example, surprise), whereas others can last years (for example, love).
A related distinction is between the emotion and the results of the emotion, principally behaviors and emotional expressions. People often behave in certain ways as a direct result of their emotional state, such as crying, fighting or fleeing. If one can have the emotion without the corresponding behavior, then we may consider the behavior not to be essential to the emotion.
The JamesLange theory posits that emotional experience is largely due to the experience of bodily changes. The "functionalist" approach to emotions (for example, Nico Frijda and Freitas-Magalhaes) holds that emotions have evolved for a particular function, such as to keep the subject safe.
Well... To say you don't believe in God, suggests that he actually exists.
Food for thought.
It's best to agree to disagree here. I feel that there are a lot of problems with the current scientific method of "it needs to be repeatable", especially since it doesn't have the tools to recognize certain aspects of reality. I really don't want to continue the "arguing in circles" theme here.
I'm sure I don't understand your meaning. 0 = No.![]()
I have a question for European atheists from countries that used to have empires like Britain, France, Belgium etc. Here it is. Do you think that the reason agnosticism and atheism has spread so rapidly since the 1950s is because in part at least it was due to imperialism and its decline after World War II?
I thought horizontal lines were "no slope" and "0 slope," but vertical lines are "undefined slope."
I think it's more a case of people just being tired of religious extremism than anything else. If you look at all the war religion caused in Europe. Most Europeans aren't atheist, they're just tired of organized religion. Most are deists.
That's mostly what I was getting at with imperialism, I understand it is too violent. I think in the coming decades America will finally go to a similar direction.
That's mostly what I was getting at with imperialism, I understand it is too violent. I think in the coming decades America will finally go to a similar direction.
But IMO religion IS physically harmful to people, in all sorts of situations and circumstances all over the world.
In terms of the general belief in God, I have nothing against people who choose to believe. What bothers me is that I think a lot of people only believe because they are afraid of going against something they have been brought up with their whole life. It's the social conditioning that I have something against. People who went to church and sunday school, whose families have drummed God into their brains, and who have never once looked at other explanations or options for fear of being 'sinful' to question it.
That IMO is a harmful thing.
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I have A LOT of hobbies then!
Love this post.
Actually had a situation like this the other day.
I was argueing with a rather naive workmate about this magician called Dynamo. I come in in the morning and she's talking about how this guy ACTUALLY walked on water.
I immediately said 'Well, no he didn't really, it's a trick'
And people actually argued with me!
'No seriously, there were loads of people watching and there was no way he could have faked it.'
At this point, I just shook my head and left it. No point argueing.
Then they start talking about this other trick he did, were he got a mobile phone into a glass bottle.
And I said 'Well there's only three options really. 1. He has a bottle that already has a mobile phone in it, and produces that at the end 2. There is something special about the bottle. 3. There is something special about the phone.
And they were still argueing...
At this point I just got so frustrated I nearly fell out with people. I said 'Seriously, it is IMPOSSIBLE to squeeze a mobile phone into a glass bottle... so unless you believe the guy is actually magical, there MUST have been a trick.'
At which point they reluctantly agreed. Because believing in actual magic is considered ridiculous.
But it felt exactly the same to me as argueing with a religious person. The blatant disregard of the facts, and defending things with only what you have been TOLD. So infuriating.
With science, I don't assume it's true because one person has 'suggested' it, unlike with religion.
I assume it's true because one person has suggested it, then a lot more people have tested it and found evidence to support it, then even more people have tried to disprove it and failed.
Yes, the 'average' person would probably believe that the world is round and blood pumps through our veins etc. But that doesn't mean that the 'truth' of it doesn't go beyond that average persons acceptance.
The difference is, if the average person suddenly becomes 'more than average' and begins to question what their told, with Science, you will find the proof, you will find the answers to the questions and you will come out going 'okay, so that IS right.'
Whereas with religion, if you start questioning what you've been told, the further you dig and explore, the less you can accept it as truth... because there is no basis for it being fact.
Thank you for that
And what great example of why science is an incredible thing that I am very grateful for.
Someone asks a question, and the answer can be more than just 'because that's how God made us'.
It can actually make sense.
Yeah, your gonna have to explain that one to me... cause it makes no sense whatsoever.
We're not nearly as complex and our "millions of natural systems" don't work as cohesive as you'd like to suggest. If a "superior system" is guiding it, then it needs to do a better job.
You can trace most every trait we have in other organisms from it's most simplest form to some that are superior to ours. There is nothing all that spectacular about how it came together. The only thing one has to wonder about is why some don't bother learning about Evolutionary Biology which explains how all those "incredible coincidences" manage to fit together instead of making an argument from incredulity.
But IMO religion IS physically harmful to people, in all sorts of situations and circumstances all over the world.
In terms of the general belief in God, I have nothing against people who choose to believe. What bothers me is that I think a lot of people only believe because they are afraid of going against something they have been brought up with their whole life. It's the social conditioning that I have something against. People who went to church and sunday school, whose families have drummed God into their brains, and who have never once looked at other explanations or options for fear of being 'sinful' to question it.
That IMO is a harmful thing.
Try to be respectful if that isnt too hard. The cohesiveness and harmony of this planet in particular is unique in the universe as far as we know today in our limited perspective. Einstein himself, a non believer of a personal god, and a not very complex being as you also believe did see such harmony and perfection in trying to explain the universe in his relativity theory:
"I believe in Spinoza's God who reveals himself in the orderly harmony of what exists, not in a God who concerns himself with fates and actions of human beings."
"I'm not an atheist and I don't think I can call myself a pantheist. We are in the position of a little child entering a huge library filled with books in many languages. The child knows someone must have written those books. It does not know how. It does not understand the languages in which they are written. The child dimly suspects a mysterious order in the arrangements of the books, but doesn't know what it is. That, it seems to me, is the attitude of even the most intelligent human being toward God."
But what does that Einstein nut know about anything? What a fool he was for believing any intelligent being could take the position of suspecting the posibility of an unexplicable mysterious order in the universe manifesting in a ridiculous level of perfect harmony. What a disgrace of a scientist he is. He should have bothered learning something that does not disprove what he states, like Evolutionary Biology, instead of making an argument from incredulity.
As a side note, would it interest you to know that Einstein may be wrong about some of those laws dealing with the Universe?
But what does that Einstein nut know about anything? What a fool he was for believing any intelligent being could take the position of suspecting the possibility of an inexplicable mysterious order in the universe manifesting in a ridiculous level of perfect harmony. What a disgrace of a scientist he is. He should have bothered learning something that does not disprove what he states, like Evolutionary Biology, instead of making an argument from incredulity.
Of course he might be wrong. He was a physicist not a prophet. You'd be hard pressed to find a physicist or mathematician who isn't trying to PROVE that he is wrong. Nothing is taken for granted. It is only because so many have failed to improve upon Einstein's findings that he so respected, as opposed to say Stephen Hawking in recent years, who though while famous and certainly still personally respected, his theories have fallen out of favor due to conflicting evidence.
Whoa, folks. I'm not trying to spit on the altar of Einstein. Just illustrating that he is falliable, especially when dealing with subjects outside his expertise.
He made a a huge error in saying there was no cosmological constant force, which there is, which left cosmology sort of baffled, which he admitted was his greatest blunder.
Was talking to a recovering heroin addict yesterday, who said he was struggling with religion because he couldn't see it was possible.
So I asked him why he struggled at all? If you don't believe, you don't believe (cause that's how I see my atheism having come about).
He said he struggled because he WANTED to believe.
I couldn't really respond to that. I just said 'fair enough'.
I have absolutely no problem with that form of spiritual belief. The kind that really helps people get through the day.