InFront wrote: Absolutely, yes. The universe is, quitecertainly at this moment (event!), larger than out comprehension, and supernatural life has a probability attached. But so equally has the idea that there is a God. Why should there be a little green man called an alien, and not a little green man called God/ Allah/ Yahweh/ Elah/ DaveMcG?
InFront wrote: What about the impossible evidence that cannot be used, but cannot be disregarded: life before the big bang? We believe that, in modern physical terms, there was no time and no space before the big bang, that all existence was contained in one infintely small dot . Bit what preceded the dot? Previous cycles of the universe? What preceded all that? Surely there is probability attached to the concept that "something" began everything. What began something? The Universe? What began the universe? How long can we go on for!?
InFront wrote: It all boils down to belief and personal faith. I love and respect Mathematics, bbut ultimately I have more faith in religion. Others may be atheists and respect Religion, but have more faith in Mathematics. Being the inverse of one another in that respect, doesn not make us absolutely dissimilar. No matter what we believe or disbelieve, we are all people of simple faith.
What does 'right in his opinion' mean? I really can't make out what you're trying to say or whether that phrase says anything at all. If its that he correctly thinks what his opinion is? If so, so what? It could still be wrong which is where the discussion should lie. Just because something is currently unprovable is no reason not to discuss the matter, especially one with such an influence on society. I really can't make out what you're trying to say or whether that phrase says anything at all.
andrew wrote: I think i just means that its all a matter of opinion, and since neither belief can be disproven then all you can have is an opinion which you both believe to be right.
UnHolyMoe wrote: I believe the universe is supported on the back of a turtle and it's turtles all the way down.
DaveMcG wrote: There's no reason to believe in god other than the fact that we don't know where the universe came from. I don't really see how you can create a "possibility" of god existing based on no evidence and no factors other than the fact that we are here.
Whereas when you're talking about life on other planets, you have to take into account the fact that life as we know requires certain environmental factors to begin. Evidentally earth possesses these factors as life began here and evolved into what you see today.
Yes indeed, that is the question -- where did it all come from? Unfortunately I don't have the answer! But neither do you. Neither of us has a shred of evidence on which to base a belief that "the universe came from X" (X being our respective answers).
So therefore I am comfortable saying "I don't know!" I wish more people were comfortable doing this. Why the need to project divine properties onto something simply because you don't understand it?
I wish more people were comfortable doing this. Why the need to project divine properties onto something
If you look back over all previous civilisations, you can see the same trend of people worshipping the sun, the moon, lightning, thunder, etc. etc., because they didn't understand it.
If I still worshipped Helios, god of the sun, you would say I'm silly
Sure religion and science both have simple and complex aspects to them, but at the end of the day one thinks they have all the answers, the other is still asking questions.
Sangre wrote: Well of course you have the right to any opinion you want. However some opinions are more educated than others (like belief in gravity), this is where the debate between atheists and theists come into play. Who has the more educated opinion is where the direction of this thread is going.
I also have the right to say your opinion is wrong based on observable facts and reason, this right becomes especially pertinent when your (the royal your) opinions affects soceity and others as a whole.
the Shades wrote: Religion is a psychological security blanket for those who have trouble dealing with their own mortality.
InFront wrote: No, it is not about who has the more educated opinion, I think you mean who has the more "probable" opinion.
And the degree to which opinion affects society does not make it more correct or less correct.
InFront wrote: And other the fact that we are here, and knowing that we have no evidence that aliens are here, why should there be alien life? Why should there be a phenomenon like Probability Theory and not the phenomenon of Allah? What qualifies a theory, how many times do you have to prove it before error becomes impossible? Remember, that when a mathmatician looks at a zebra grazing on a plain, he should remember "we only know that this zebra is striped on one side". No matter how many zebras are on that plain, millions maybe, you have to look at every one on both sides to be sure (as sure as you can be) that they are striped on both sides.
InFront wrote: Why should there be invisible things like theories at all, invisible things that seem to be confirmed by manifest reality? Probability itself, and Allah, are both mere theories. The scientific miracles of the Qur'an are theories that seem to be confirmed byh manifest reality, so is the case with probablility.
InFront wrote: Right, so there are two facets to this probability: Firstly, I am not claiming that God exists within the universe, personally I believe that he exists in a different dimension: that he is not answerable to the speed of light, because he is the one controlling it, here is where you have to go further into probability theory.etc.
InFront wrote: Saying I dont know is fine. I possibly don't know either, I am sure, except my faith clouds my judgement to a point where I dont know that I don't know, and I actually think that i do know! But do I really? Similarly, your faith in science/ physics (unproven things, really) cloud your own judgement to a point where you say.... Well here you are disregarding something that is known to have probability (or possibility) attached to it. You are assuming an opinion, which is all I am doing as well.
InFront wrote: And assuming that light travelled at unlimited (infinte) speed because they didn't understand it. And that's not the only thing that science got wrong... And if I suggested that life exists in ether, you would say I were silly, but it was even in the 20th century "common knowledge". It survives now only in our vocabulary, the stuff of some forgotten academics.
InFront wrote: Which is which?
InFront wrote: And if I suggested that life exists in ether, you would say I were silly, but it was even in the 20th century "common knowledge". It survives now only in our vocabulary, the stuff of some forgotten academics.
Now the second probability: Why is it more probable that the universe created itself than (a) something else created the universe or (b) the universe was created by a universe that was craeted by something else ad infinitum? Well it isn't, because you are really saying the same thing over and over again backwards into infinity. In this case, the probabilities are equal, because there were, according to theoretical physics, no obedience of the laws of physics, no time laws, and no space laws.
CerebralCortex wrote: I'm not a believer in Christian doctrine but how does the big bang prove beyond a reasonable doubt that some didn't create it(the big bang). You sound like a 14 year old how decided it was cool to be atheist.
DaveMcG wrote: It's also funny to note that 50% on here don't believe in "heaven and that stuff", yet 88% of the country are supposedly Roman Catholic!!!
Plug wrote: I was a catholic but changed, I did my communion and comfirmation for the money end of things.
DaveMcG wrote: A wise financial decision! BTW your next post is your 2000th -- use it wisely!
DaveMcG wrote: There could be alien life because:
We can only go by what we can observe and surmise, and that is that of the billions and trillions of things that have slid off of tables on earth, they've all fallen to the ground. There is of course still the possibility that someone will knock a cup off their table, and rather than fall to the floor as we might expect gravity to facilitate, it might float up to the roof. But do you believe that that will happen ever?
There is 'invisible things like theories' because humans are capable of observing their surroundings and based on evidence and repeated occurances, they are able to come to logical results!
I don't see how you can link belief in gravity with belief in god, since once is based on repeated observation and the other is based on faith!
I'm not really following this (and the related) part of your post, but from what I gather you're continuing down the Matrix-esque route of "how do you know this is all real?", and that science might be wrong and that allah might control everything, so there's not point in basing your belief on observation. Perhaps I'm misunderstanding you.
I don't have faith in the claims of the scientific community, I have faith in evidence and experimentation. I'd also like you to clarify how science/physics is "unproven, really"!!!
I disregard the possibility of a divine creator because of lack of evidence!!!
I don't think that it's an unreasonable stance to take! If there was no evidence behind Newton's claims that every action has an equal and opposite reaction, then I wouldn't get into a plane, but the fact is that there is.
Based on your posts your position seems to be based on the premise that we don't know anything, this could all be an illusion, we can't trust our senses, etc. Which is fair enough, there's no way for me to disprove that so I guess in that respect I will have to have an element of faith (fa-faith, fa-faith!) in everything that I do. I'll have to have faith that when I get into a plane, gravity won't have been tinkered with, and we won't plummet straight to the ground. But at the end of the day all we can go by is what we can observe.
Plug wrote: Who made the world then, the builders?
Sangre wrote: So science has been wrong before so it could be wrong now so why bother? What an admirable position. Why bother having an opinion on something at all then, you might be wrong.
The reason we have moved on from notions of ether is because we used previous scientific evidence even though there was the chance it was wrong.
By the way, the probabilities of a creator vs non-creator aren't equal.
Mirror wrote: Worst post EVAR. I don't believe in God/Heaven or any other supernatural beings or occurrances. We are biological instances of evolved bodies of cells blah blah blah... We exist simply to exist. To reproduce, continue our race. I don't believe in the Big Bang as such however. I believe that space is infinite, and in the same sense that a monkey and a typewriter with an infinite amount of time will write the entire works of Shakespeare (it will, don't question logic.), this instance of Earth as we know it, had to exist somewhere, sometime. There are probably other instances like ours, infinte amounts of time and space away from us and therefore irrelevant, but that is a purely academic point and thinking about infinite space makes my brain hurt a bit.