Phi for All Posted August 13, 2013 Posted August 13, 2013 But is the troll label appropriate if they are sincere and genuinely think that way? I suspect not. If you think about the whole "Let go and let God" approach to Christianity, it must feel great to trade worship for being allowed to be human, to be forgiven for all those nasty things we do like having unmarried sex and envying your neighbor's jet ski. On the other hand, you have to be taught that those things are sins (if you're oh so lucky enough to live in a place where they preach one of the 9000 sects of Christianity), and I think it's very powerful when someone teaches you that you're basically bad and also teaches you how to be forgiven. Classic stick/carrot. Genuine belief based on feelings, which some call faith, can make people seem a bit like trolls because they offer nothing but wishful thinking and supernatural explanations. The books this faith is based on show no knowledge of the world greater than that of the people of the time who wrote them. But I think being absolved for all those sins you were taught that you committed is such a pleasurable release that many overlook how their religion often ignores reality. I think zorro misplaced an apostrophe in the title. "Science Is An Amazing Work Whose Purpose Is To Explain Gods Creation" at least shows that science is in the business of reality. If you're looking to create gods, religion has many tricks, and science can explain an ever-increasing number of them. 2
iNow Posted August 13, 2013 Posted August 13, 2013 If you're looking to create gods, religion has many tricks, and science can explain an ever-increasing number of them.Indeed, and with each new thing we learn about this vast universe through science the need for some vague god conjecture becomes smaller and smaller. The gaps previously filled by god are becoming smaller each day and each moment. "Goddidit" is a hollow placeholder until we find out what actually happened. One problem, of course, is that saying "goddidit" assumes the answer has been found and often tends to end the search for enhanced understanding. I'd much prefer to just honestly stipulate that we don't know... yet... Instead of saying "goddidit," but YMMV.
zorro Posted August 13, 2013 Author Posted August 13, 2013 If you think about the whole "Let go and let God" approach to Christianity, it must feel great to trade worship for being allowed to be human, to be forgiven for all those nasty things we do like having unmarried sex and envying your neighbor's jet ski. On the other hand, you have to be taught that those things are sins (if you're oh so lucky enough to live in a place where they preach one of the 9000 sects of Christianity), and I think it's very powerful when someone teaches you that you're basically bad and also teaches you how to be forgiven. Classic stick/carrot. Genuine belief based on feelings, which some call faith, can make people seem a bit like trolls because they offer nothing but wishful thinking and supernatural explanations. The books this faith is based on show no knowledge of the world greater than that of the people of the time who wrote them. But I think being absolved for all those sins you were taught that you committed is such a pleasurable release that many overlook how their religion often ignores reality. I think zorro misplaced an apostrophe in the title. "Science Is An Amazing Work Whose Purpose Is To Explain Gods Creation" at least shows that science is in the business of reality. If you're looking to create gods, religion has many tricks, and science can explain an ever-increasing number of them. Your post is off topic. ....but thanx, the Thiest (not religious) Scientists among us appreciate support in this dogma infested world. -2
swansont Posted August 13, 2013 Posted August 13, 2013 ! Moderator Note Discussion on theistic scientists has been split http://www.scienceforums.net/topic/78072-theistic-scientists/
Moontanman Posted August 13, 2013 Posted August 13, 2013 What astonishes me is the arrogance of the theist to argue something they really know nothing about. "I've read most or some of the bible" "I know my god doesn't promote violence" and yet there are passages where god demands the deaths of not only armies but the women children and babies of the enemy, god demands the deaths of witches, homosexuals and unruly children. In one passage god tells his people to kill all the men women and male children but to keep the female children for their own pleasure. Another passage tells of god calling two she bears out of the woods to kill several children because they made fun of his prophets bald head... If you are going to argue for theism you should do much more that just read some of it... and then there is the arrogance of assuming your particular god is the only god and having no evidence what so ever to confirm that train of thought. Theism is the height of arrogance based on nothing... 1
zorro Posted August 13, 2013 Author Posted August 13, 2013 What astonishes me is the arrogance of the theist to argue something they really know nothing about. "I've read most or some of the bible" "I know my god doesn't promote violence" and yet there are passages where god demands the deaths of not only armies but the women children and babies of the enemy, god demands the deaths of witches, homosexuals and unruly children. In one passage god tells his people to kill all the men women and male children but to keep the female children for their own pleasure. Another passage tells of god calling two she bears out of the woods to kill several children because they made fun of his prophets bald head... If you are going to argue for theism you should do much more that just read some of it... and then there is the arrogance of assuming your particular god is the only god and having no evidence what so ever to confirm that train of thought. Theism is the height of arrogance based on nothing... You are way off topic now. Theist or not, Science is Clarifying God's nature but hasn't fully discovered or not God yet. -1
Mike Smith Cosmos Posted August 13, 2013 Posted August 13, 2013 (edited) You are way off topic now. Theist or not, Science is Clarifying God's nature but hasn't fully discovered or not God yet. Do you believe they ( " some scientists, or science as a composite institution " ) are converging on or diverging from " Clarifying God's nature " ? mike Edited August 13, 2013 by Mike Smith Cosmos
zorro Posted August 13, 2013 Author Posted August 13, 2013 (edited) Do you believe they ( " some scientists, or science as a composite institution " ) are converging on or diverging from mike Converging slowly. ....We have just begun. And little time in which to do it. IMHO ..... I think that natured starts in a simple form for what its worth : 1. Spherical mass and Gravitational fields and 2. Spinning Mass and Electoral / Magnetic forces (or a spinning gravitational field) ....... and then everything is built from there as energies flow into masses and vice versa; and distances are shared as the Universes expands. Edited August 13, 2013 by zorro
Mike Smith Cosmos Posted August 13, 2013 Posted August 13, 2013 (edited) Converging slowly. ....We have just begun. And little time in which to do it. IMHO ..... I think that natured starts in a simple form for what its worth : 1. Spherical mass and Gravitational fields and 2. Spinning Mass and Electoral / Magnetic forces (or a spinning gravitational field) ....... and then everything is built from there as energies flow into masses and vice versa; and distances are shared as the Universes expands. How do you see DARK MATTER and DARK ENERGY fitting in to all this ? What proportion of scientists do you think are currently Theistic Scientists worldwide ( even if secretly , not openly) ? 1 % 5 % 10 % 25 % 50 % ? . Edited August 13, 2013 by Mike Smith Cosmos
dimreepr Posted August 13, 2013 Posted August 13, 2013 Converging slowly. ....We have just begun. And little time in which to do it. IMHO ..... I think that natured starts in a simple form for what its worth : 1. Spherical mass and Gravitational fields and 2. Spinning Mass and Electoral / Magnetic forces (or a spinning gravitational field) ....... and then everything is built from there as energies flow into masses and vice versa; and distances are shared as the Universes expands. Assuming God doesn’t make him any more likely to exist; there probably won’t be any convergence, but why the time limit? Your clumsy attempts at explaining nature is worth nothing, BTW, nature is what it is and depends on no-one’s belief. P.S. No more red please...
zorro Posted August 14, 2013 Author Posted August 14, 2013 How do you see DARK MATTER and DARK ENERGY fitting in to all this ? What proportion of scientists do you think are currently Theistic Scientists worldwide ( even if secretly , not openly) ? 1 % 5 % 10 % 25 % 50 % ? . hello mike: This is not my fields of expertise. Maybe you could OP new threads. .... I would like to know also. << zorro
Moontanman Posted August 14, 2013 Posted August 14, 2013 (edited) You are way off topic now. Theist or not, Science is Clarifying God's nature but hasn't fully discovered or not God yet. Quite the contrary I think i am dead on topic, the idea of presupposing that science is discovering god is arrogant beyond belief. If Science is discovering anything it is discovering that god is irrelevant to any discussion of science and has no place in the natural world. You have every right to your own beliefs but you do not have any right to your own reality, God is not an answer to anything, the concept of god has no evidence much less the concept of any particular god. If science is revealing god then which god? Krishna? Adrianna, Allah? Xenu? Why assume something that has no detectable effect on anything and is functionally no different than assuming angels push the planets around the sun... If science is revealing or explaining anything it is explaining why god is not necessary to existence, and that god serves no purpose other than allowing a few to control many with lies and deceit... Edited August 14, 2013 by Moontanman 1
zorro Posted August 14, 2013 Author Posted August 14, 2013 (edited) Assuming God doesn’t make him any more likely to exist; there probably won’t be any convergence, but why the time limit? Your clumsy attempts at explaining nature is worth nothing, BTW, nature is what it is and depends on no-one’s belief. P.S. No more red please... thanx for the extraneous waste of our time. Edited August 14, 2013 by zorro
dimreepr Posted August 14, 2013 Posted August 14, 2013 The fact that you’ve fallaciously attempted to divert/subvert any meaningful discourse, throughout this thread, shows you to be little more than a town center preacher shouting his/her self deluded message to an un-listening, unwilling and, somewhat, fearful audience. As such this thread deserves nothing but the trash IMHO.
Moontanman Posted August 14, 2013 Posted August 14, 2013 What astonishes me is the arrogance of the theist to argue something they really know nothing about. "I've read most or some of the bible" "I know my god doesn't promote violence" and yet there are passages where god demands the deaths of not only armies but the women children and babies of the enemy, god demands the deaths of witches, homosexuals and unruly children. In one passage god tells his people to kill all the men women and male children but to keep the female children for their own pleasure. Another passage tells of god calling two she bears out of the woods to kill several children because they made fun of his prophets bald head... If you are going to argue for theism you should do much more that just read some of it... and then there is the arrogance of assuming your particular god is the only god and having no evidence what so ever to confirm that train of thought. Theism is the height of arrogance based on nothing... Embarrassing as it is i have to apologize, I posted this in the wrong thread, amazingly it is still relevant to this thread, so I stand by my post number 37 but this post was a mistake and i apologize for it...
zorro Posted August 14, 2013 Author Posted August 14, 2013 Quite the contrary I think i am dead on topic, the idea of presupposing that science is discovering god is arrogant beyond belief. If Science is discovering anything it is discovering that god is irrelevant to any discussion of science and has no place in the natural world. You have every right to your own beliefs but you do not have any right to your own reality, God is not an answer to anything, the concept of god has no evidence much less the concept of any particular god. If science is revealing god then which god? Krishna? Adrianna, Allah? Xenu? Why assume something that has no detectable effect on anything and is functionally no different than assuming angels push the planets around the sun... If science is revealing or explaining anything it is explaining why god is not necessary to existence, and that god serves no purpose other than allowing a few to control many with lies and deceit... Thanx for another melancholy lecture. Your kind named it the God Particle and the Big Bang. I suggest that you not Blaspheme. I am sure that your God has instituted the First Commandment also. Let us know when you hear of an A-thiestismo Particle. Good Science will always consult God; not religions as the Jim Jones, A=theists. Lost Christianity, Wikkka ...... -5
Moontanman Posted August 14, 2013 Posted August 14, 2013 (edited) Thanx for another melancholy lecture. Your kind named it the God Particle and the Big Bang. I suggest that you not Blaspheme. I am sure that your God has instituted the First Commandment also. Let us know when you hear of an A-thiestismo Particle. Good Science will always consult God; not religions as the Jim Jones, A=theists. Lost Christianity, Wikkka ...... What part of the Higgs was so difficult to find they called it the god damned particle did you not understand? You suggest I not blaspheme? I suggest you get a clue... Good science will always ignore god and the no true Scotsman argument is silly no matter how hard you try to hide it... and since I hold no belief in any god the first commandment is irrelevant to me... btw the word you were looking for was wicca... Edited August 14, 2013 by Moontanman 1
Arete Posted August 14, 2013 Posted August 14, 2013 hello mike: This is not my fields of expertise. Maybe you could OP new threads. .... I would like to know also. << zorro A post of mine from an old thread: 97% of Royal society members and 93% of National academy of sciences members answer "No" to the question "Do you believe in a personal god?" http://www.humanreli...telligence.html www.stephenjaygould.org/ctrl/news/file002.html. So a rough estimate in the UK and the US puts the number of scientists who believe in some form of personal God at 3% and 7% respectively.
zorro Posted August 14, 2013 Author Posted August 14, 2013 A post of mine from an old thread: So a rough estimate in the UK and the US puts the number of scientists who believe in some form of personal God at 3% and 7% respectively. That is an unreliable Source. The LA Times found around 40% Theist Scientists. http://articles.latimes.com/2009/nov/24/opinion/la-oe-masci24-2009nov24
Arete Posted August 14, 2013 Posted August 14, 2013 That is an unreliable Source. The LA Times found around 40% Theist Scientists. http://articles.latimes.com/2009/nov/24/opinion/la-oe-masci24-2009nov24 The 7% figure comes from a peer reviewed article in the Publication Nature. http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v394/n6691/full/394313a0.html The 3% figure comes from a peer reviewed artilce in the journal Intelligence. http://fringe.davesource.com/Fringe/Religion/Average-intelligence-predicts-atheism-rates-across-137-nations-Lynn-et-al.pdf The sources are fine.
zorro Posted August 14, 2013 Author Posted August 14, 2013 (edited) The 7% figure comes from a peer reviewed article in the Publication Nature. http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v394/n6691/full/394313a0.html The 3% figure comes from a peer reviewed artilce in the journal Intelligence. http://fringe.davesource.com/Fringe/Religion/Average-intelligence-predicts-atheism-rates-across-137-nations-Lynn-et-al.pdf The sources are fine. Hello Bio. NO No, they are unreliable also. in that clicking on the links goes dead thus hidden Rev 1 http://articles.latimes.com/2009/nov/24/opinion/la-oe-masci24-2009nov24 According to a survey of members of the American Assn. for the Advancement of Science, conducted by the Pew Research Center in May and June this year, a majority of scientists (51%) say they believe in God or a higher power, while 41% say they do not. ....... Edited August 14, 2013 by zorro
Fuzzwood Posted August 14, 2013 Posted August 14, 2013 thanx for the extraneous waste of our time. Aaaaaand that's the end of the discussion. To me you are one of those whiny kids that go "LaLaLa I can't hear you" while putting their fingers in their ears like some.... let's stay civilized...
swansont Posted August 14, 2013 Posted August 14, 2013 Thanx for another melancholy lecture. Your kind named it the God Particle and the Big Bang. I suggest that you not Blaspheme. I am sure that your God has instituted the First Commandment also. Let us know when you hear of an A-thiestismo Particle. Good Science will always consult God; not religions as the Jim Jones, A=theists. Lost Christianity, Wikkka ...... ! Moderator Note I thought we had dealt with this: it was named the God particle by the publishing industry, not scientists. Straw-man arguments, especially repeated, are against the rules. thanx for the extraneous waste of our time. ! Moderator Note Being dismissive of a legitimate question that was posed is also not going to fly. NO No, they are unreliable also. ! Moderator Note Explain why the numbers are unreliable. Bald assertions are not evidence.
Strange Posted August 14, 2013 Posted August 14, 2013 (edited) That is an unreliable Source. The LA Times found around 40% Theist Scientists. http://articles.latimes.com/2009/nov/24/opinion/la-oe-masci24-2009nov24 They appear to be based on different questions: a "personal god" (whatver that means) versus "a higher power". The latter concept is so warm and fuzzy that I am not surprised a larger proportion supported it. I have seen various figures between these extremes. I'm not sure why it is important, though. <shrug> Edited August 14, 2013 by Strange
Arete Posted August 14, 2013 Posted August 14, 2013 NO No, they are unreliable also. Peer reviewed science is wrong because you found a newspaper article in which a survey asked a different group of people a different question, which discovered a different result. Rightio then.
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