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-- Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by Krypton I believe there is a super-intelligence outside of our own reality that could have "designed" the laws of nature. But, we'll never scientifically know because this "being" exists outside of space and time, unobservable to us, unmeasurable. I agree ID is not scientific. It is more of a philosophy more than a science. That's where I think the ID debate belongs, not science. IDer's go into their "research" already biased towards the existance of "god". Scientists really can't do that going into an experiment. But as a philosophy, it's something I believe. I also believe humans are sensitive a higher plane of existance, call it heaven, call it whatever you like.. I'm not a bible-thumping evangelical though.. |
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| Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN america is the only country that takes IDing seriously, and only because there's too many moronic christians in that country. |
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| Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN how can you "believe" in anything without the slimmest amount of evidence? |
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| Originally posted by Krypton I believe there is a super-intelligence outside of our own reality that could have "designed" the laws of nature. But, we'll never scientifically know because this "being" exists outside of space and time, unobservable to us, unmeasurable. I agree ID is not scientific. It is more of a philosophy more than a science. That's where I think the ID debate belongs, not science. IDer's go into their "research" already biased towards the existance of "god". Scientists really can't do that going into an experiment. But as a philosophy, it's something I believe. I also believe humans are sensitive a higher plane of existance, call it heaven, call it whatever you like.. I'm not a bible-thumping evangelical though.. |
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| Originally posted by Cipha Sounds Easy there atheist... generalize much? |
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If I said there's too many boomerang slinging, kangaroo chasing, crocodile wrestling idiots in Australia, I'd just sound stupid. |
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| Originally posted by Krypton Well, when I observe the universe and study how it works, I see mathematical design, sophistication from sub-quantum to cosmic scales, and perfection in its operation. Like clockwork every component of the universe, down from the smallest of energies/particles/waves to galaxy clusters and black holes, ticks and tocks towards the darkness of the future universe, as the Anthropic Principle takes its course. Listen, it's a philosophical view of the standard model of the universe. I'm not gonna shove it in anyones face, but it's just how I see the world. |
I will light a candle and chant a prayer for you Pkc. May god have mercy on your soul. 
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| Originally posted by Cipha Sounds If I said there's too many boomerang slinging, kangaroo chasing, crocodile wrestling idiots in Australia, I'd just sound stupid. |
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| Originally posted by Cipha Sounds I will light a candle and chant a prayer for you Pkc. May god have mercy on your soul. |
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| Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN its a tautology. of course the universe functions according to mathematic "design". can you ever envisage a universe that is both stable AND chaotic? of course not. a universe capable of sustaining itself (and life) would HAVE to be ordered. it doesn't follow that the order was created by some higher being. im not saying youre shoving anything in anybody's face, im just questioning the logic of believing in "out there" notions without any evidence. |
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| Originally posted by DJ Itchy Tits not really. you sound stupid most of the time and you don't even say that. Itchy |
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| Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN hahaha, you cheeky cvnt. |
Re: Re: Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by Boomer187 I cringed at this. We can never prove anything right, we can only prove that an opposing option is wrong (disproving a null hypothesis). |
Re: Re: Re: Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by Lira That's true, but quite often scientists naively behave as if it were possible. Notice that I said it was accepted (i.e. there's some kind of agreement), not proven. |
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| Originally posted by Krypton Well, I believe that the order you talk about is not a coincidence. I believe that order can not spontaneously exist, but had to be created. |
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Order requires and orderer.. |
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Your worldview seems 100% based on what our 5 senses can detect. What about all the stuff we have no idea about? Things we can't detect, realities beyond our comprehension, outside of our own dimensions. We know they exist, but the laws of physics limits our observations to inside our "container" we call the universe where we physically will remain isolated forever from the outside. |
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That's where philosophy and religion make their uses. |
Re: Re: Re: Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by Lira That's true, but quite often scientists naively behave as if it were possible. Notice that I said it was accepted (i.e. there's some kind of agreement), not proven. |
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| Originally posted by Krypton I believe there is a super-intelligence outside of our own reality that could have "designed" the laws of nature. But, we'll never scientifically know because this "being" exists outside of space and time, unobservable to us, unmeasurable. I agree ID is not scientific. It is more of a philosophy more than a science. That's where I think the ID debate belongs, not science. IDer's go into their "research" already biased towards the existance of "god". Scientists really can't do that going into an experiment. But as a philosophy, it's something I believe. I also believe humans are sensitive a higher plane of existance, call it heaven, call it whatever you like.. I'm not a bible-thumping evangelical though.. |
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN so again, how do you explain the advent of working technologies that are examples of scientific proof? |

Ellie Arroway: You want me to quote you? "lronically, the thing people are most hungry for; meaning,is the one thing science hasn't been able to give them."
Palmer Joss: Yeah.
Ellie Arroway: [humorously] Come on! lt's like you're saying that science killed God. What if science simply revealed that He never existed in the first place?
-- Contact
Re: Re: Re: Scientificity (and "intelligent design")
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| Originally posted by Boomer187 im also thinking of a something Ive learned whereas if a theory explains everything, it is useless. it was something along those lines, and I usually hear discussions involving religion and ID resort this this... god made it that way, or its because of god. I wish I could remember where and when I heard this though. |
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| Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN why do you believe this? |
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| why? who ordered the orderer then? |
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| In his lectures on cause and chance in physics, Max Born (1949) stated three assumptions: 1. "Causality postulates that there are laws by which the occurrence of an entity B of a certain class depends on the occurrence of an entity A of another class, where the word entity means any physical object, phenomenon, situation, or event. A is called the cause, B the effect." 2. "Antecedence postulates that the cause must be prior to, or at least simultaneous with, the effect." 3. "Contiguity postulates that cause and effect must be in spatial contact or connected by a chain of intermediate things in contact." |
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| very true, but im not about to entertain outlandish ideas simply because they might be true, that's just silly. i find the massive collection of things we don't know to be fascinating, but not reason enough to go inventing "god's unseen hand" into every little thing we don't know (which is what religion has done throughout history). |

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| religion has a use? |
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| Originally posted by Fledz I'm close in thinking to you. While I don't strictly 100% believe in a higher power, I am open to the idea of one. Like any good scientist I take into account all proof and base my judgements on that but when it comes to an issue such as that, I don't mind delving more into the philosophical side of things purely because it's impossible to explain it in a scientific way. Personally, I refuse to discredit the notion of a possible unexplained higher power which is why I'm so against atheism and consider it just as bad as religious zealotry. I believe in the big bang and evolution but why did it happen? Where did the necessary elements and rules come from? It really is fascinating stuff and definitely beyond our knowledge. Really makes you wonder what is truly out there but I guess we'll never know. All we can do is hypothesize. |
As an objective mind, one must understand this discrepancy. Most people who take this into account into their worldview tend to be more moderate, such as myself, where I fully admit there is no physical proof of a god, but philosophically speaking, we can still talk about god all day.
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| Originally posted by DJ Itchy Tits you know what would be really great? if I could find a way to go outside and play basketball when its raining and not get wet! |
Hey, guys, you should see on the bright side: IDers just want to bring God back to science. Here in Brazil we've got bloody kardecists asking scientists to recognise the existence of not just God, but all kinds of spirits and parallel worlds 
God could have created everything, and then accidentally blown himself up out of sheer overconfidence.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_o..._own_inventions
I noticed how nobody made any sly jokes about the spaghetti monster. wierd.
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