lmaopml wrote: » Zombrex, who said EVERYBODY in this particular case IS disregarding 'important scientific principles' ? The only person that says that happens is YOU, not he, not I, not very many people. YOU are making a judgement call on everybody that believes in God and uses a toaster - The problem here is that YOU only value with your 'Worldview' one type of reasoning 'deductive' and YOU are the one that is disposing of a key type of reasoning, (but only when it suits) that contributes to the 'Scientific Method' and that's called 'inductive' reasoning, pattern, abstract forms and thoughts etc. - there would be no theoretical physics and multiverse interpretations of scientific data without it. BOTH are rational types of reasoning - it's you that have limited yourself, not anybody else. I will grant that if people start twisting or misreprenting scientific test data in order to establish their worldview, and package, rap it, and sell it as fact, than they are and should be refuted - the example you mentioned was Deepak Chopra who is a con artist imo. However, you have NOT now, or ever shown that God cannot be known by inductive reasoning, and that a 'Creator' exists, and a beginning exists, with unbelievably massive fine tuning - and that indeed science with it's many fields has actually only 'contributed' to the understanding of the astonishing fine tuned faboulous universe we actually live in. That's a mathematic 'FACT'. You have decided in the chance of such an existence, a Goldilocks room, and that's fine, but you don't like the idea being put back on you that 'chance' has BECOME your God and it's merely using the same logic that applies in the evidence for faith that is 'inductive' reasoning, which is patently unfair and a little dishonest of you.
Zombrex wrote: » I imagine you think that is some sort of gotcha, but yes you actually can. An example would be one of my common sayings in this forum, 1 theory of electromagnetism 40,000 religions.
I'm curious myself Fanny, why do you think it necessary to rely on empirical measurement in some areas but not others. I imagine you are a Christian because of something along the lines of it makes sense to you. Would you be happy if the engineers building a bridge worked on the same principle? Making the bridge as the went along based on what made sense to them, rather than empirically measuring the requirements?
If you wouldn't be happy with that, because they would probably get it wrong and the bridge would collapse, why are you happy with what ever method you used to be a Christian? Is it simple a case that you dont really know if you are right it just doesn't matter if you are wrong, a bridge is not going to fall over.
Zombrex wrote: » You keep not answering the question I've put to you. Why, if these other methods of discerning accurate information about the reality around us work just as well, does science not incorporate them?
lmaopml wrote: » Very simply, because science is in search for the 'truth' of the nature of our universe, follows the leads where they go, and so it should, and so it does and has positively nothing to 'say' about God. It just gives us a better understanding and appreciation for the intricate beauty around us......and Christians CAN and do appreciate that, and can and are and always have been scientists. God is not now, and never will be under a microscope, or telescope.
Zombrex wrote: » What? God's existence isn't true? Are you secretly any atheist. Whether God exists or not is a true or false question about reality. Whether the universe was created is a true or false question about reality. Whether that creator is the Christian god is a true or false question about reality. Whether Jesus rose from the dead is a true or false question about reality. Some how you and other Christians have decided the answers to those questions is true and you, I imagine, have confidence in that answer. So again why can science not use this or the method you used to arrive at these conclusions, given that all science is interested in is an accurate concept of how reality really is. Edit: And just to clarify 'Science' doesn't use anything, it's not a 'thing' in and of itself, it's a LOT of diverse people working together in order to seek truth. A method, a tool, and it's for everybody to get excited about. If you can have confidence in the truth of these things, why can't science?
lmaopml wrote: » You really don't get it. Science 'DOES' use that kind of thought, people CAN think in the abstract, something CAN be both ON and OFF, and not only in the binary, otherwise there would be no progress using the 'Scentific' Method. Patterns, spacial awareness, the abstract, the math, what's observable lead to research etc. that leads to more research....
lmaopml wrote: » One more time. Science doesn't make any claims whatsoever in relation to God. Secondly, Science is not a 'thing' or a 'person' that says something - it's a method a tool for understanding the nature of the universe, a field of discovery, nobody owns it, they use it to find out information. Thirdly, the 'people' that make up the scientific community have 'worldviews' that they have arrived at using their 'reason', and they are not all Atheists like your good self. Fourthly the methods for using our 'reason' that ALL of these people use, including yourself, are used both in relation to discovery when using a scientific method as they are in arriving at our 'worldviews'. Your worldview seems to be an odd type of scientism - that almost personifies it in some strange God like fashion that needs to be defended from the strawman God that you have created in your head. Which quite frankly I find abrasive as it is odd, it's like Spock gone wrong with a keyboard.
Zombrex wrote: » Again you ignore the question. Let me put it to you in a way hopefully you cannot avoid. In science there is a set of things we are confident exist, based on are collective scientific knowledge. God is not found in that. God appears no where in a list of things we thing exist based on scientific discovery. But you know he exists. Millions of Christians know he exists. Many of them are scientists. You all know he exists. So why is he not found in scientific lists of things that exist. Just explain that, rather than waffling on about worldviews.
nagirrac wrote: » The answer to your question is surprisingly simple zombrex. Science can only examine what it can observe, it is limited to the observed reality we can measure with our senses and our instruments. All the major religions and those who have spiritual beliefs but belong to no religion believe that God exists outside of this observed reality. Nobody truly understands what this "outside" reality is, it's in your "I don't know" category.
lmaopml wrote: » Um, 'lists' of things...where is this 'list' of things? Is your philosophy on it too as the only way of arriving at any knowledge is the Zombrex way? I'd love to see that list.
lmaopml wrote: » You don't get to tell God what to do.
lmaopml wrote: » You've been debating Christians long enough, at least twenty keyboards later, for to at least realise that we can't make him 'materialise' for you.
lmaopml wrote: » You see Zombrex, the God I believe in as Christian never said that he would pop up under your microscope one day and say 'Hi'
lmaopml wrote: » However, one way he did claim to be obvious to anybody who has eyes, is in his creation and it's awesome understandablility, reasonableness and beauty. This is his work, and it's beautiful - evolution is beautiful.
lmaopml wrote: » So therefore, you won't find God where you are looking for him
lmaopml wrote: » - but you don't get to stifle 'thought', because you don't own it, and you haven't got the monopoly, and you don't own science either. It's a group of 'people' studying, not machines.
nagirrac wrote: » Science can only examine what it can observe, it is limited to the observed reality we can measure with our senses and our instruments.
nagirrac wrote: » All the major religions and those who have spiritual beliefs but belong to no religion believe that God exists outside of this observed reality. Nobody truly understands what this "outside" reality is, it's in your "I don't know" category.
Zombrex wrote: » It is contained within all the current scientific theories. You know this, stop trying to stall.
Telling God what to do is irrelevant to the question I asked you.
I don't tell electrons what to do, we can still gain information about their existences using science.
Why is science not using your methods to gain information about God, even just that he exists and is as Christians claim. If it is possible for you to know this and have confidence in this knowledge, why can scientists not use your methods to gain this information and incorporate it into the theory of everything (ie the physical theories that describe all known elements of reality, ie everything that exists)
Well yes, because it seems to take an age to get a straight answer out of a Christian.
Surely you know by the lengths you go to avoid answering these questions, that there is some valid point being made here.
And yet some how you know he exists, and you have confidence in that knowledge.
How do you know he exists, and why can science not use the method you used in order to also have confidence in his existences, or the existence of anything else for that matter.
Ok, why does science not use that, the obviousness of nature? Why are scientists across the world not using the obvious of nature to draw conclusions about how reality is, conclusions that they can be confident in?
Science will look where ever there is an ability to gain confident knowledge about the truth of reality. If they are looking in the wrong place, just tell them and me where to look in order to gain further knowledge, and explain how if science looks there it can continue to have the same confidence in the conclusions it draws as it always has.
Very true. But again "God exists and is X" is not found in any scientific theory or list of parts of reality that science knows exists. Why is that?
Zombrex wrote: » Science is simply a methodology for discovering knowledge about reality and having confidence in that knowledge. If believers such as lmaopml are able to know God exists, and have confidence in that knowledge, why is science not also able to do the same and know with confidence that God exists, and is as he is. Or use this methodology to discover other knowable information about reality?
Zombrex wrote: » Contribution to life, what ever that means, is not the issue. We are discussing contribution to knowledge, specifically knowledge about the true nature of reality, what exists and does exist and how things are.You have the freedom to disregard important scientific principles in order to speculate about the existence of God, Jesus or what ever safe in the knowledge that while you are disregarding or ignoring these principles the guy building your bridge, or the doctor operating on you, or the engineer building your computer wont be. Yet you never seem to ask yourself if it is ok for you why is it not ok for him. Well cause the bridge would fall down. It's the hypocracy I can't stand
tommy2bad wrote: » Nice of you to grant that! What hypocrisy? I might be the guy building the bridge, I promise I wont disregard engineering principals when doing so. Sorry but are you actually saying that anything not included in your set of science facts is to be disregarded? WTF? Get real, some of us want to live not just function and if you don't get that then I feel sorry for you.
Zombrex wrote: » Why do you promise to stick to scientific principles when making the bridge if these other principles of yours that allow you to know things with confidence work just as well at determine accurately details of our world. Or is it the case that actually they don't? And if you attempted to gain knowledge via these methods about say a bridge rather than God, you would have so little confidence in the accuracy of that knowledge that you would not risk the bridge or the people on it?
lmaopml wrote: » Within all scientific theories? So there's a list in there somewhere that says something about God eh? I don't think so Zombrex.
It is relevant - You have decided to prove God doesn't exist, a strawman version of him that should be on a list somewhere abouts, and there is only 'your' way of thinking that is the right way, and you are going to somehow set us free with this superior worldview you have - Yet, yet.....science hasn't got anything to say about what you do or do not think about God.
Again with the personification of science. Science is made up of people who ARE theists Zombrex, and they can function quite rationally without restricting themselves to your narrow philosophy. By all means go ahead, but I don't have to think it's clever do I?
No, you DID get a straight answer, and you choose to ignore it. Also, Fanny asked you a straight question which you danced around like a hot coal - I don't blame people dusting their shoes, when you don't hold your own philosophy to your own standards.
Yes, of course that you've spent ten odd years trying to refute that God exists based on science that says nothing about him. Nice reasoning.
Because science is not a person Zombrex. It's a tool to study nature and a group of people with various different worldviews, some Christian, some not. No biggy.
Zombrex wrote: » I am, but then so did you just now. Why do you promise to stick to scientific principles when making the bridge if these other principles of yours that allow you to know things with confidence work just as well at determine accurately details of our world. Or is it the case that actually they don't? And if you attempted to gain knowledge via these methods about say a bridge rather than God, you would have so little confidence in the accuracy of that knowledge that you would not risk the bridge or the people on it?
tommy2bad wrote: » Ahh, I think I'm getting your point now, or at least hope I am. I use scientific principals when dealing with physics and theological principals when dealing with metaphysics, see how it works?
Zombrex wrote: » How is God's existence a metaphysical question. God either exists or he doesn't exist. God is either the Christian notion of God, some other notion of a god, or doesn't exist at all. The question of "Does God exist" is no different to "Do electrons exist", or "Does the illuminous ether exist". Not that these things are the same type of things, but the question of their existence (which is either true or false), is the same. God either exists and this is a fact of reality, or he doesn't exist, and this is also a fact of reality. The question at hand is how do you have confidence in one belief rather than the other, and why does that method of confidence not apply when turned to a question of whether electrons exist, or anything else.
Zombrex wrote: » How is God's existence a metaphysical question. God either exists or he doesn't exist. God is either the Christian notion of God, some other notion of a god, or doesn't exist at all.
tommy2bad wrote: » Narrow definition of exists!
tommy2bad wrote: » , remember one time electrons didn't exist by your arrow definition as their was no evidence of them.
tommy2bad wrote: » We call it faith for a reason, in case you hadn't noticed.
Zombrex wrote: » Er, what? When did I ever say electrons didn't exist because there was no evidence of them? You can appreciate I hope that this is not in anyway satisfactory for any question that actually matters.
nagirrac wrote: » Out of curiosity, why would whether God exists or not be a question that matters much to an atheist?
Zombrex wrote: » Yes that is precisely the point. In the set of all things science currently considers to exist, from bacteria to black holes, not a word about God. Why is that if it is possible to accurately know God exists and have confidence in that knowledge? I didn't ask you anything about what I believe. You are still ignoring the question. So why, if they can know with confidence the existence of God, is God not found in any theory or scientific set of things which are considered scientifically to exist? I did not get an answer and you know it. I asked a straight forward question, about 7 times now, and you instead dance around it. How do you not know what that means? Why does science say nothing about him if you can confidently know he exists and confidential know things about him. You said science has nothing to say about God, so this silliness that you don't understand what I am referring to when I say that is rather childish. More stalling and avoiding. You know exactly what I mean, and surely you also know when you refuse to answer the question.
Since you clear are never going to ill answer it for you.
Science says nothing about God because based on scientific principles it cannot discover anything about God that one can have any confidence in.
There is no method to gain confident knowledge about God, if there was it would be part of the scientific method already. Science does not limited itself to particular areas and methods out of fun, it does this because it is the only way we, humans, can arrive at knowledge we can have confidence in.
You know this, you just don't want to admit it to me. Just remember it the next time you state there are other ways to know things, and state why, if they work, are they not part of the scientific method.
tommy2bad wrote: » I use scientific principals when dealing with physics and theological principals when dealing with metaphysics, see how it works?
Brian Shanahan wrote: » So you use proper inquiry (sci meth) for reality (physics) and use your prejudices (theology) for stuff you're not sure is real (metaphysics)? Glad to see that you finally admit it.
Zombrex wrote: » Really? What would be a "wider" definition of "exists". Er, what? When did I ever say electrons didn't exist because there was no evidence of them? You seem to be really missing the point here tommy. "God" (the Christian notion of a god) is either something that does exist or doesn't exist. If he does exist then he exists. If he doesn't exist then the concept is just something made up by humans. I can't really tell if you care all that much which of those statements is true. You seem to subscribe to the notion that it doesn't matter if the belief is actually a true representation of reality or not, what matters is that it brings people happiness. I would imagine you wouldn't take such a view for something that actually has consequences, ie you wouldn't care how happy it made some engineers that they believed the bridge would stay up, what actually mattered is if the bridge will or won't stay up. You wouldn't care about hurting the feelings of some engineers by pointing out that they actually don't know the bridge will stay up. What does that mean? Do you have faith that bridges hold up and that your plane will fly. Or would you rather have confidence, which I personally fine much more valuable than faith for anything that matters. This seems to go back to the point I made earlier, that really it doesn't matter if what you believe is true or not. A bridge won't fall down, a plane won't fall out of the sky, if you are wrong. Therefore your belief doesn't require confidence. You can appreciate I hope that this is not in anyway satisfactory for any question that actually matters.