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2011 Dec 7, 12:04pm   40,050 views  127 comments

by Dan8267   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  

Comedy for Atheists: Creationism

The Best Atheist Posters

Take some with a grain of salt. I don't think Franklin was an atheist. A secularist, yes, but not an atheist.

Dawkins is the one true god!

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14   Dan8267   2011 Dec 15, 5:02am  

uomo_senza_nome says

The concept where I disagree is that atheists think that they know the definition of God. They don't, nobody does. I cannot define God. I admit it freely.

The word god is just a word. It ain't special. You can most certainly know the definition of god. It's in the dictionary. When I disproved the monotheist gods, I used the definition that the three major religions use.

Can anyone redefine the word at will. Sure, but that doesn't change any arguments. You can define the word god all you want. As soon as you define it, we can have a meaningful discussion about whether or not that entity exist.

What I can say honestly and meaningfully, is that by every definition for god ever proposed, I can show either that the entity can't exist or that the entity isn't what people mean when they tell you to believe in god.

The fact is, what human beings want in a god, cannot exist. And those artsy fatsy definitions of god used to avoid being cornered, aren't what people base their religious, moral, and political beliefs around.

Now, if you want to define god as anything that has mass. I believe in god. In fact, you and I are gods. But I don't see anyone worshiping us, and I certainly didn't tell Bush to invade Iraq.

15   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Dec 15, 5:24am  

Dan8267 says

No. Netwon's laws are not only provable/disprovable in principle, but they are also verifiable/contradictable in practice. In fact, it turns out that Newton's laws are a correct limiting case of a more general theory. Einstein's laws did not contradict Newtons, but rather subsumed them.

Dan - I don't think you got my point. The physicists at the time of Newton, simply did not know about space-time concept. At very high speeds, Newton's laws don't hold true. They hold true for everyday life speeds, but not at very high speeds. What I'm trying to say is we are limited by what we know. There are lots of things humans don't know.

Dan8267 says

There's a huge difference between learning new things in science that we never imagined before and arguing that you should be open to a hypothesis because you'll never be able to confirm or contradict the hypothesis.

Actually my point is -- what is the hypothesis? :)

Atheists assume there is a hyopthesis to disprove and that they have done it. What I'm saying is atheists can easily disprove modern religion's definition of God (let's just say it is unicorns, not really God), but atheists absolutely know for a fact that something that cannot even be defined does not exist .

I think of God as an Undecidable problem. Similar to the Halting problem.

16   Dan8267   2011 Dec 15, 5:28am  

uomo_senza_nome says

What I'm trying to say is we are limited by what we know. There are lots of things humans don't know.

And I would agree with that. However, I do not see any reason why having limited knowledge means we should be open to the bullshit idea of god any more than the bullshit idea of bigfoot. What is so special about god that you have to be omnipotent in order to tell whether or not it's bullshit?

17   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Dec 15, 5:35am  

Dan8267 says

What is so special about god that you have to be omnipotent in order to tell whether or not it's bullshit?

I can't even define God. You are assuming God is omnipotent. I think it is an unknowable problem, that's all.

We can easily falsify modern religion, because for the most part - as you argue - it is crap. We cannot falsify something we don't even know.

Dan8267 says

However, I do not see any reason why having limited knowledge means we should be open to the bullshit idea of god any more than the bullshit idea of bigfoot.

I am not saying you should be open to the bullshit idea of God. I am open to the fact that I don't even know what God is. It is an undecidable problem (I cannot tell for sure if the answer is yes or no, because it is impossible).

18   Dan8267   2011 Dec 15, 5:41am  

uomo_senza_nome says

absolutely know for a fact that something that cannot even be defined does not exist

Something that cannot be defined is not some thing at all. Just replace the word god with umghawa. Umghawa is something I can't define, but it might exist. And if it does, you should contribute 10 percent of your earnings to the Church of Umghawa and follow all the laws I write on behalf of umghawa who inspires me. And even if you don't think that it's likely to believe in umghawa, you should do this just to be safe.

I have a strong feeling that umghawa exists and is the way, the truth, and the light. Of course, I can't define what umghawa is or what kinds of properties it has, but that doesn't make it less real. By the way, umghawa doesn't have anything to do with god. It's actually even more important. Umghawa explains why everything even god exists, but you have to take it on faith.

Umghawa likes it when people believe in it. I know that even though I don't know how I know that or even anything about umghawa. I do know that it is a violation of my rights that any property used in service of umghawa is taxed by the state. After all, umghawa is very important to me and I must live a life that umghawa would approve of. Somehow I know exactly what umghawa approves of even though you cannot know anything about umghawa. Evidently, some tribal people 10,000 years ago spoke with umghawa at great length, but for some reason umghawa doesn't do that anymore.

Geeze, I guess speaking with people would offer evidence about umghawa existence. And umghawa seemed ok with that in the Bronze Age, but now he wants everyone to be agnostic about his existence. So evidently umghawa has a mind and can reason, but wait, that implies a certain adherence to the laws of logic and obviously umghawa isn't bound by those. He's outside of logic.

Again, I emphasize that umghawa isn't god. He's a totally different entity. In fact, he's a Buddhist. We know that from some oral history passed down from those Bronze Age people who spoke with him. Of course, Buddhism didn't exist 10,000 years ago, but umghawa is outside of time as well.

Now I'm not asking you to believe in umghawa, but you have to admit that I've made a pretty good case that umghawa might exist. All I ask is that you accept the possibility of umghawa and cover your immortal soul's ass by giving 10% of your income to the Church of Umghawa.

19   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Dec 16, 3:03am  

Dan8267 says

Something that cannot be defined is not some thing at all. Just replace the word god with umghawa.

See, here's the problem. You don't see the distinction between something that's unknowable vs. something that is known not to exist. Atheists have this constant urge to keep proving that God doesn't exist. Atheists accept whatever humans have defined as God over the course of history as the right definition and then, they go ahead and disprove it.

I'm saying God is unknowable. It does not mean that I know God doesn't exist .

Dan8267 says

Something that cannot be defined is not some thing at all.

No, not really. From a worm's perspective, the world may as well just be 2-D. That does not mean that the world is always 2-D, it can have more than 3 dimensions also. Just because we don't perceive it (therefore we can't define it), does not mean that shouldn't exist.

It is a logical fallacy to disprove that something doesn't exist, when we don't even know what that thing is.

I don't expect you to fully understand me, which is fine -- because you're staunchly dogmatic about your anti-dogmatism.

Here's the other thing: Dawkins has this spectrum of theistic probability right? He places himself at the probability of 1.00 that God doesn't exist.

It’s a question I do not concern myself with because I believe that the pursuit of it is irrelevant for my life since God, should He exist, will by definition not be in our observational or even our sensory world.

20   Dan8267   2011 Dec 16, 3:45am  

uomo_senza_nome says

we don't perceive it (therefore we can't define it),

Sounds like we're arguing about semantics, but in case that's not so...

We can certainly define some that we cannot perceive. It is believed that our universe has 10 dimensions of space and 1 dimension of time. But we certainly don't perceive more than three dimensions of space.

Nevertheless, we can and have mathematically defined what those other seven dimensions of space are and how different strings like photons and gravitons behave materially differently along those other dimensions. Furthermore, we've used this understanding to explain why gravity is far weaker than the electromagnetic force.

Perception and definition are not the same thing. Definitions are completely a matter of fiat. So, no, I don't get how you can talk about something that is undefinable even in principle. Undefinable is synonymous with nonsensical.

Now a given person might have a hard time defining an abstract idea, but that does not mean the idea itself is undefinable. That is why I used the phrase "undefinable even in principle".

21   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Dec 16, 9:59am  

Dan8267 says

I don't get how you can talk about something that is undefinable even in principle. Undefinable is synonymous with nonsensical.

Not really.

The questions we are both arguing on: What is God? Does God exist?

The questions are the problem.

Your answer to the first question: nonsense
Your answer to the second question: No (without any negation proof, because you don't need any -- as your answer to the first question is nonsense).

You pose the same question to me.

My answer is "undecidable" for both.

I don't consider the problem to be nonsensical, because the problem of the nature of God has existed since humans had the ability to self-reflect. Sure modern religions have really screwed up on this and caused a lot of havoc. But humans have existed much longer than the existence of modern religions and they have wondered about the nature of God, way back then as well.

It's not just me, there are lot of eminent scientists that couldn't positively conclude that God as a concept is nonsense - Einstein for one.

I can't decide whether God exists or not, because it is impossible.

There are lots of problems in computing and mathematical logic, where the solution is undecidable.

Here's a list of undecidable problems: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_undecidable_problems

Halting problem is quite famous. Turing proved that no algorithm can ever exist that can solve the halting problem. So the problem is undecidable, not that the problem doesn't exist .

I don't think we're arguing on semantics. My issue is that I haven't concluded the concept of God to be totally nonsense :).

22   Dan8267   2011 Dec 16, 11:48pm  

uomo_senza_nome says

Here's a list of undecidable problems: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_undecidable_problems

Have I not made it clear in all my postings that Wikipedia carries no weight with me? It's like poison, best to avoid all together.

uomo_senza_nome says

Turing proved that no algorithm can ever exist that can solve the halting problem. So the problem is undecidable, not that the problem doesn't exist .

Remember, you're talking to someone who studied Turing and Gödel in detailed in graduate school. I assure you that the Halting problem and the God problem have nothing to do with each other and the concept of computability and def inability are not the same thing by a long shot. And you don't have to distinguish between first and second order infinities to understand that.

That said, if you want to know what Turing's thoughts about god, it's this. A person is his mind, not his body. The mind reduces to the brain. The brain is a physical structure that ceases to function after death. Therefore, there is no god or afterlife, and when you die you simply cease to exist. That's Turing's spiritual philosophy in a nutshell.

Alan Turing, although raised religious, was a hardcore gay atheist. By the way, I'm a huge Turing fan. He's the number one guy I'd like to meet if I could travel through time. The number two guy would be Democritus and then Carl Sagan, and then Nikola Tesla. And my philosophies are pretty much the same as these guys.

23   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Dec 17, 6:51am  

Dan8267 says

Have I not made it clear in all my postings that Wikipedia carries no weight with me? It's like poison, best to avoid all together.

Nope. Are we arguing over an academic paper where I need to give citations or what? :)
This is just a forum, and Wikipedia is good enough to convey the point. You still seem dogmatic to even see my point.

Dan8267 says

A person is his mind, not his body. The mind reduces to the brain. The brain is a physical structure that ceases to function after death. Therefore, there is no god or afterlife, and when you die you simply cease to exist. That's Turing's spiritual philosophy in a nutshell.

What is mind? some abstract concept that gives life to the brain or what? That does not make sense. I would say the person is his connectome. Without the complex neural network, there is no person. The neural network is very much physical, not some abstract concept.

Dan8267 says

Remember, you're talking to someone who studied Turing and Gödel in detailed in graduate school. I assure you that the Halting problem and the God problem have nothing to do with each other and the concept of computability and def inability are not the same thing by a long shot. And you don't have to distinguish between first and second order infinities to understand that.

What I was trying to suggest was: I don't think the concept of God is nonsense, whereas you do. There are many eminent scientists (Carl Sagan, Einstein) who thought it was not a nonsense concept. My inclination is more towards them as opposed to Richard Dawkins.

I view atheism as advocated by Dawkins as dogmatic anti-dogmatism, which is what you portray as well.

24   Dan8267   2011 Dec 17, 7:41am  

uomo_senza_nome says

This is just a forum, and Wikipedia is good enough to convey the point.

I know I'm fighting against accepted culture, but given what I know about Wikipedia, I consider it evil, revisionist history. And since I consider misinformation to be far worse than the lack of information, I will never accept a Wikipedia quote as "good enough to convey a point".

But that's a whole other issue. I've blogged extensively about why Wikipedia is bad, so there's no point in reiterating that. If you're interested in my justification just click here and then use Repaginator, a Firefox plugin, to see all the pages of my comments. From that you can do a text search for Wikipedia.

uomo_senza_nome says

What is mind? some abstract concept that gives life to the brain or what? That does not make sense. I would say the person is his connectome. Without the complex neural network, there is no person. The neural network is very much physical, not some abstract concept.

Mind is software. Brain is hardware. The two are the same in a neural network. A neural network is the industry standard term. "Connectome" is something that guy made up to rhyme with genome, but it means the exact same thing as neural network. So essentially what you just said above is exactly the same as what I said about Turing's philosophy of the mind and soul just using different words.

uomo_senza_nome says

There are many eminent scientists (Carl Sagan, Einstein) who thought it was not a nonsense concept. My inclination is more towards them as opposed to Richard Dawkins.

Carl Sagan was an atheist. At the most liberal interpretation of his quotes, he went through an agnostic phase, but then solidify as an atheist. More likely however, he simply was being as cordial as possible to theists during a time when atheism was taboo like homosexuality and interracial marriages were at the time.

Richard Dawkins isn't more atheistic than Carl Sagan. Dawkins is just more outspoken. Atheists have finally become as outspoken about religion as the religious and that is what causes the backlash in our society. The theists preferred it when the atheists were on in the closet because it turns out that atheists are much better at reasoning and not contradicting themselves. It makes the theists look bad.

But as I stated previously in this thread, we atheists have 8 damn good reasons why we need to stop being silent. But perhaps, Martin Luther King, Jr. said it better when discussing the same issue during the civil rights movement. A time comes when silence is betrayal.

And no, the irony of an atheist quoting a reverend to explain why atheists need to speak up is not lost on me. Nevertheless, the parallels among the civil rights movement, the gay rights movement, and the atheist rights movement are astonishing.

25   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Dec 17, 11:55pm  

Dan,

your point on Wikipedia is noted.

Dan8267 says

Mind is software. Brain is hardware

That is too simplistic. Brain is a highly adaptive, complex, extremely fast parallel processing entity. To reduce it to just "hardware" is ridiculous. Brain research is quite nascent, if it was "just hardware", why haven't humans figured out all the mysteries?

Dan8267 says

Carl Sagan was an atheist. At the most liberal interpretation of his quotes, he went through an agnostic phase, but then solidify as an atheist. More likely however, he simply was being as cordial as possible to theists during a time when atheism was taboo like homosexuality and interracial marriages were at the time.

Carl Sagan recognized the dogmatism of atheism very well and he never announced himself to be an atheist. I won't accept your statement purely because Sagan never stated it. Whether your possibility that Sagan was just being cordial has no proof whatsoever, you simply presume it to be so.

Sagan recognizes the danger of "believing" that God doesn't exist as well. He recognized the difficulty of science in proving or disproving God as he stated the only scientific discovery that can positively disprove God is an infinitely old universe. (See his book, the Demon Haunted World: Science as a candle in the dark p.278 for proof).

Dan8267 says

The theists preferred it when the atheists were on in the closet because it turns out that atheists are much better at reasoning and not contradicting themselves. It makes the theists look bad.

LOL, I don't have any problem with the outspoken nature of atheists, that is basic freedom of speech. What I do recognize is that atheists take their "no God" theory too far to the point where it is truth. It is not well-established truth by science yet, so I refuse to accept the dogmatic position of atheism. In fact, atheists are as outspoken about their belief in 'no God' as the religious are about their own version of God.

26   upisdown   2011 Dec 18, 12:52am  

I finally registered so that I could chime in about this topic.

What about people like me that just don't give a shit about religion and/or god at all??? I'll try to give an example of what I mean:

When I fart it smells like roses, and when I crap- out comes 100 dollar bills! A(non)believer will say that I can't, or that those things can't and/or won't happen. But, I've already set the tone and parameters of the topic and now you are in an either/or position in regards to that.
That's why I (don't....or do I)believe in don't-give-a-fuck-ism. I don't have to prove or diprove anything and the big kicker is that I live my life by MY terms and rules, not some that are determined or even predetermined by somebody(a church or religion?)else.
Christopher Hitchens said that ALL theists are also atheists, because there's more than just ONE god. So, for anybody to accept that their god is THE only and true one, they therefore have to deny the existence of all the others. Muslims probably think that catholics or baptists are wrong or just plain full of crap as much as christians think that muslims are full of crap. So which group is right? Both base their assumptions that the others are wrong, but that same criteria must also then apply to their own religion then.

27   Dan8267   2011 Dec 18, 3:14am  

uomo_senza_nome says

Brain is a highly adaptive, complex, extremely fast parallel processing entity. To reduce it to just "hardware" is ridiculous.

You have too low an opinion of hardware. The brain perfectly meets the definition of hardware, mussy hardware, but hardware nonetheless. Instead of thinking that the statement "brain is hardware" somehow diminishes the beauty of the brain, you should recognize that some hardware is truly spectacular. By hardware, I didn't mean it was an Apple product.

There's no reason why hardware can't be "a highly adaptive, complex, extremely fast parallel processing entity".

uomo_senza_nome says

Carl Sagan recognized the dogmatism of atheism very well and he never announced himself to be an atheist.

You know what? It doesn't matter. Why is it that we humans keep trying to say "this guy is on my team and that guy is on yours"? And I'm guilty of doing that as much as everyone else. But it's stupid to try to justify or denounce an idea simply by counting out the well-respected and well-hated historical figures associated with the idea. Let's not play that game.

Whether or not Carl Sagan or any other particular person was a polytheist, monotheist, agnostic, or atheist is irrelevant to the merits of those position, as I'm sure we both agree. So let's withdraw this issue as it's just a distraction anyway.

uomo_senza_nome says

What I do recognize is that atheists take their "no God" theory too far to the point where it is truth.

Yeah, because we believe it's the cold, hard truth. We don't consider it to be an opinion, like the Patriots are better than the Mets or some crap like that. We consider it to be the inescapable logical conclusion from all the facts and analysis. And it's a truth whose acceptance has pragmatic and important consequences.

To us atheists, the question of whether any gods exist is as settled as the question of whether the Lock Ness Monster or Bigfoot or unicorns exist. However, not too many wars are started because of the Lock Ness Monster, and the bills passed by the House and Senate aren't influence by the unicorn lobby. If they were, I'd totally would be popping a cap in any pro-unicorn argument, despite the fact that I really like unicorns.

Mythology is fine as long as it's acknowledged as fiction. But when laws are passed based on it, things start going real bad.

uomo_senza_nome says

What I do recognize is that atheists take their "no God" theory too far to the point where it is truth. It is not well-established truth by science yet

As the "God Hypothesis" does not make any testable predictions by design, it is, by definition, not a scientific issue. Science only addresses testable ideas. Science would no more address the question of god's existence than it would in settle the debate: Kirk vs. Picard, Better Captain? And you'd get about as rational a discussion on theology as you would in the StarTrek debate.

upisdown says

What about people like me that just don't give a shit about religion and/or god at all???

You and I are still affected by the laws passed by various religious lobbyists as well as the brain-dead politicians like Bush who are elected, at least in part, due to religion. That's a very material effect on your day to day life. It affects the economy, financial reform, whether or not you have a job, whether or not we go to war, whether or not the draft is reinstituted, what civil rights you have, what protection against criminal cops you have, environmental protection, and whether or not some idiot hastens Armageddon by launching the nukes. Whether you like it or not, your safety and the quality of your life is greatly affected by the dumbing down of America by religion.

28   upisdown   2011 Dec 18, 3:51am  

How very true, unfortunately. But, I firmly beleive that politicians use religion and their supposed participation of any, mainly for electabiltity reasons. It enhances the size of their audience or voters. They pander to the weak-minded and overall meek people that need and use religion as a crutch, either just to exist or to explain things that they can't/don't understand.

Someday, hopefully in my and your lifetimes, we'll be rid of religion and it's use/justification for various peoples' actions. You make a very good argument but it's also because you have facts and reality behind you too. I usually refrain from the tail-chasing of whether or not god exists or doesn't exist because once you get on that merry-go-round you're stuck there dealing with and trying to make the irrational people on it suddenly become rational, which if they really were to begin with, you wouldn't have to try and convince them.
Ever heard.......he works in mysterious ways? If and when we no longer hear that phrase in explanation of some horrific event not only will our lives be a better, but the world as a whole will be too.

29   MisdemeanorRebel   2011 Dec 18, 4:44am  

upisdown says

Ever heard.......he works in mysterious ways? If and when we no longer hear that phrase in explanation of some horrific event not only will our lives be a better, but the world as a whole will be too.

+1.

Tsunamis are caused by geological activity, not some Canaanite sky god.

30   ReasonNotFaith   2011 Dec 18, 6:00am  

Cloud says

Who is this prancing Oxford don again and what has he done other than demonstrate he can verbally assault a curious female college student?

He provides society the same type of service Aristotle did. A brief moment of independent thought meant to break up the monotony of of the herd following their religious leaders blindly to their slaughter.

Something tells me that girl doesn't need you as her knight in shining armor. If you're going to go to the big game, you have to be prepared to play, and if you leave with your tail between your legs, you can't hope that our tendency toward chivalry will be a weapon you can now wield against your opponent, having already been failed by wit and reason. Women are equal now, remember? They don't need you to rescue them if they happen to be on the losing end of an intellectual discussion. Their breasts don't give them permission to be stupid or ignorant anymore, so instead of flying to her defense because she's a woman, why don't you defend her arguments, or at least oppose his, and forget the gender war bullshit.

uomo_senza_nome says

I don't think Carl Sagan was an atheist either.

""An atheist has to know a lot more than I know. An atheist is someone who knows there is no god. By some definitions atheism is very stupid." - A quote by Carl Sagan.

As an atheist, I totally disagree with Sagan on that point. I don't think it's stupid to suggest something doesn't exist, when it obviously exists only in the unproven claims of the zealots making the claims.

uomo_senza_nome says

What I'm saying is 'God' as a word has been abused way too much. We can't even define God. So how can we really prove something doesn't exist, if we can't even define it?

you're arguing semantics. You know when Dan uses the term God, he'stalking about a the islamic-judeo-christian god. You cant redefine the term he's using to base his arguments on, and then try to persuade him his arguments are wrong. What you're talking about is simply a different discussion than the one Dan is having at the moment.

uomo_senza_nome says

The questions are the problem.

no, dear uomo, the problem is semantics. You're using the term god in such an abstract way it could include aliens from other planets that at one time, interacted with us (which inspired the bible) but have decided we're so dangerous they shouldn't meddle in what happens here, choosing to observe us instead.

Dan's comments are in direct response to the islamic-judeo-christian god of the bible, torah, and koran, which is not an abstract concept of what god potentially might be if it existed somewhere. It's a very specific claim as to what god is, what it is in relation to us, and exactly how we're supposed to respond to that information.

Love your neighbor, unless he is a fag, in which case, murder him, is a pretty specific claim of dogma.

If you suggested Santa Clause was about to pay us all a visit, you would have the burden to prove that claim. I don't have the burden to disprove and unproven claim. if only their superstitious claims were as harmless as santa claus.

uomo_senza_nome says

Brain research is quite nascent, if it was "just hardware", why haven't humans figured out all the mysteries?

We will, we've just spent too much of our history distracted by religion, and have only recently gotten back on track to learning to understand it.

31   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Dec 18, 7:42am  

ReasonNotFaith says

You cant redefine the term he's using to base his arguments on, and then try to persuade him his arguments are wrong.

Actually you're spot on. I agree.

ReasonNotFaith says

You're using the term god in such an abstract way

Yes I am using it in an abstract way. If Dan was purely talking just about islamic-judeo-christian (some kind of personal) God, then I am as atheistic as he is.

Dan8267 says

And it's a truth whose acceptance has pragmatic and important consequences.

You're right. In this day and age, religion is frightening and dangerous. Acceptance that there is no heavenly Father has pragmatic consequences which is important.

32   Dan8267   2011 Dec 18, 10:19am  

The Christian/Jewish/Islamic god is what I call the standard monotheist god (SMG). It incorporates three properties: it is all powerful, all knowing, and all good. Now, the SMG occurs in other religions besides Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, but it is essentially the same in all monotheistic religions. So yes, that is the god I've disproved.

However, as a generalization of SMG, we can disprove any god that contradicts the known laws of physics or contradicts itself. Naturally, we can admit that there are physics which makes things possible that we don't yet understand, so we don't know everything that is possible. But we do understand enough about physics and the other sciences to know that reindeer can't fly. So we can disprove any god that does something ridiculous like eluding all attempts to detect him because he leaves no effect. Furthermore, his miracles should be repeatable.

In fact any god that has no effect on the universe is hardly worthy of the title god. I am willing to entertain ideas for gods that don't strictly meet the SMG definition as long as those gods are actually believed in by the masses.

But the masses pretty much just believe in some powerful sky daddy god that thinks like a human and grants us eternal life. Those kinds of gods are disprovable. The best the sky daddy can do is make a backup copy of you at the moment of death and give that copy eternal life. But then again, he could also then make 1 million copies of you, none of them would be you though.

I haven't disproven all possible polytheistic gods. But no one is ever interested in disproving them anyway. Besides, a polytheistic god is just some powerful being. By most criteria, Joe the Plumber meets the criteria for godhood in those religions. If immortality is a requirement for godhood, I believe the Second Law of Thermodynamics pretty much takes care of those gods as well since eventually the universe itself dies.

The only thing I cannot disprove is such a vague notion of god that it is not definable. But in sincerity, no one worships or prays to such an entity. And such entities are not used as justifications for strict and specific moral codes. So why call such ambiguous entities gods when they are not treated as such by anyone?

I've observed that when believers find themselves backed into a corner by contradictions, they revert to their "emergency definition" of god that is too vague to make any statements about. Of course, once released back into the wild, the believers will go right back to their fire-and-brimstone, white guy with a beard on a cloud god who has a very specific set of do's and don'ts. As such, I cannot find such momentary vagueness to be sincere. Your definition of god should not change when you get cornered by a contradiction.

33   upisdown   2011 Dec 18, 11:55am  

Taaa-daaaaaaa! Enter the default position and it's obligatory and intentionally vague non-answer, answer:

He works in mysterious ways

34   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Dec 19, 1:50am  

Cloud says

in this day and age religion is frightening and dangerous?

I think this should be obvious, given we wage wars in the name of religion.

Do you know how many innocent iraqi/afghan civiilans, children are dead because of wars fought under ideological pretext but the actual intent being confiscation of natural resources?


Cloud says

Shall we start with AIDS or starvation?

What does this have anything to do with religion? AIDS is a disease and starvation is a human condition. I don't know how religion helps in either case. Faith in the invisible man is not going to solve any problem.

35   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Dec 19, 1:56am  

Dan8267 says

I believe the Second Law of Thermodynamics pretty much takes care of those gods as well since eventually the universe itself dies.

Why does the universe die Dan? I thought law of conservation of energy meant that energy can neither be created nor be destroyed. Entropy increase only makes the energy more diffuse, as opposed to concentrated. It does not in anyway destroy energy.

36   Bap33   2011 Dec 19, 2:48am  

uomo_senza_nome says

Faith is not going to solve any problem.

I humbly disagree. Unless you can prove that mental conditioning does not solve problems.

37   MisdemeanorRebel   2011 Dec 19, 3:20am  

Cloud says

Danny, let's ask Dawkin's big player if love is a sexual chemical human response why is it that a human being, like a firefigher or a police office will give their live for another.

Right, Russian or Chinese or French or Norwegian firefighters and cops never put their lives on the line.

And it doesn't make sense that social animals like humans have wiring for empathy for others. I mean, what kind of advantage to the survival of the species would Altruism bring?

Cloud says

Danny you gonna deny love exists? Where is love? Show me love? Oh yeah, the big player will help you call it chemicals as if this is an answer. Like putting leaches on people back in the day.

"Not a religion, just a Personal Relationship With Jesus" types/Evangelicals and Baptists have the highest divorce rates in the USA.

Or, if you prefer, NJ and NY are the top two "least divorce" states in the Union. Highest in the South and Alaska, where one also finds the largest rates of church attendance, religious belief, and skepticism of evolution.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/28/new-jersey-has-the-lowest-divorce-rate-in-america_n_985583.html

38   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Dec 19, 4:11am  

Bap33 says

Unless you can prove that mental conditioning does not solve problems.

I meant faith in the invisible man.

http://www.youtube.com/embed/ClV7B2xofVk

I believe in the vastness of the universe, I believe in family, friends, I believe we are all made of the same stuff ~ Genius.

39   Dan8267   2011 Dec 19, 4:42am  

uomo_senza_nome says

I thought law of conservation of energy meant that energy can neither be created nor be destroyed. Entropy increase only makes the energy more diffuse, as opposed to concentrated.

The Second Law of Thermodynamics means that the amount of "usable" energy, i.e, energy that can be used to perform work including the functions of life, decreases even though the total amount of energy in the closed system is a constant. That is why it is impossible to create a perpetual motion machine.

Eventually, since the universe will not be able to support life. Star formation will stop. Black holes will evaporate. And there will be no usable energy left to support life. All particles will eventually decay to their most stable parts, even protons. And all that will be left is a ever thinning soup of low-frequency electromagnetic waves. This will take trillions upon trillions of years though.

40   Bap33   2011 Dec 19, 4:43am  

well, you have now taken it upon yourself to qualify and quantify "faith". It seems odd that faith in science bothers you not, while faith in God bothers you much. Why is the two faiths not the same to you?

It has been my personal life experience that those who most dislike God are those who feel they are not living the life God has told mankind to live. Their next position is to point out how those who do beleive in God are not perfect and commit all crimes known to mankind. I submit that God made it very clear - all mankind falls short of God's metering stick - so stop looking for an "AHHH HA!!". We all have an ahh-ha. No need to look.

I know there is God. Not a doubt in my mind. And, with enough time and guidence, science might prove God enough for analytical minds to embrace God too. Right? Isn't that a possible outcome?

God made you who you are .... he just gave you free choice ... so he understands that you want to see the chicken or the egg before you take a stand on which came first. By the way, it was the chicken that came first.

We all exersize faith when we ponder anything beyond the present, beyond the horizon, beyond the next breath.

41   Dan8267   2011 Dec 19, 4:45am  

thunderlips11 says

Cloud says

Danny, let's ask Dawkin's big player if love is a sexual chemical human response why is it that a human being, like a firefigher or a police office will give their live for another.

I've ignored Cloud, so I don't see his messages unless someone quotes him. But to discredit this nonsense, one could ask why a squirrel or a meerkat is willing to sacrifice its life for another. Does this imply that squirrels have souls?

The only difference between humans and non-human animals is a matter of degree.

42   Bap33   2011 Dec 19, 4:57am  

Dan8267 says

That is why it is impossible to create a perpetual motion machine.

Dan, I humbly submit that gravity, and the frictions it creates, are the only things that stop perp-mot. Without gravity, and wind, and debris, and all other forms of friction, something should keep on moving for ever. So, in a vaccuum, with no gravity, matter will move and keep moving. Ofcourse, the instigator of the motion does not fit in the mathmatics, but you know what I'm getting at. If you add in the instigator, the energy factors out. Kinda. lol

43   Dan8267   2011 Dec 19, 4:57am  

Bap33 says

It seems odd that faith in science bothers you not,

Faith in science does bother me, quite a lot. In particular, the use of "junk science" that juries believe because they are scientifically illiterate and think they are experts because they watch CSI and other Hollywood bullshit representation of science.

Remember, an innocent human being was put to death in Texas on the basis of junk science. That's is offensive to me on many levels. "Faith" in science is bad. It can be manipulated by unethical prosecutors.

Science is built on skepticism and verification. Experiments must be repeatable. Everything is questionable, but you don't get to ignore evidence that doesn't support your ideas. There are no authority figures and no dogma.

Throughout the history of science, rich and poor men alike have contributed, regardless of race, nationality, or politics. Science knows no social or political boundaries. It is the great uniter of man. As a process, mankind has never created anything nearly as great. As for results, science has consistently produce more than we could imagine. It is the only human endeavour that has a near perfect track record, and whose few mistakes were quickly and definitively corrected. It is a self-correcting, constantly refining process. Yet, the people who dislike it are persuaded by 9-9-9.

44   ReasonNotFaith   2011 Dec 19, 5:05am  

Cloud says

Dawkins is more angry, dogmatic and arrogant about his mission to convert believers than any preacher I have ever seen trying to convert non-believers.

If that's the truth, then you obviously have never run across Pat Robertson or Jerry Falwell. If that is indeed the case, count yourself lucky.

Cloud says

That's quite a God-like quality to got their sNotFaith; reading people's minds and intentions.

That must be what christians don't understand about logic. You dont have to be like god or a mind reader to read what a person writes, and develop logical conclusions about what they are saying. it works well, you should try it sometime.

Cloud says

Then goes on like a knight in shinning armor to rescue DAN because Clint is taking him to the woodshed :

I wasn't defending Dan, being more educated and more articulate then I am, he doesn't need anything from me.

Infact, I wasn't defending anyone... I was challenging what I saw was a flaw in an argument in a discussion I'm apart of. That's what I meant about logic... Christians seem to be at a loss for it. Maybe that explains their dogmatic need for a spiteful, angry, godhead who treats them all like dogs...

Cloud says

Many homosexuals dying and suffering from aids
died and were helped by Catholic and chrisitan charities, a fact that will piss of Dan and No Faith.

Doesn't piss me off at all. Doesn't even bother me a little. See how you talk about stuff like you know what you are talking about when you really have no idea at all what you're talking about? it seems to be a trend with you.

Cloud says

Ok waiting for you to respond to me.

If I missed something interesting or important, it wasn't intentional. Please point it out and I'll do my best to respond to it.

Cloud says

You laugh at me like a typical arrogant atheist, telling me I shouldn't find Dawkin's abuse on a 21 year old digusting and THAT I have no business defending her.

1. Please explain how he abused her?
2. I didn't say you had no business defending her. i said, you sound like you think she should be treated differently because of her age, or her sex, when in reality her sex is totally irrelevant, and she is old enough to attend college, which is where people go to be educated and to have their biases challenged, so I still don't see the need to defend her.

Of course, I understand why you do, and from the sound of it, I wouldn't be surprised if you also thought instead of being educated/challenged in college, that she should instead be at home, barefoot and pregnant with a baby in one hand and a bible in the other.

Cloud says

But like a gay lover you help Danny boy out?

Unlike you, I am neither a closeted homosexual ashamed of my sexual preferences, nor am I a closed minded biggot who hates people based on nothing other than their sexuality, so calling me gay has absolutely no affect on my attitude or my self esteem. I just laugh at you, because I'm an arrogant atheist.... which is much better than an arrogant christian, in my opinion.

Cloud says

Also, wierd and kinda game is calling yourself a player in the "big game."

I did no such thing... That proves your lack of reading comprehension skills. We were talking about her, a student at a university, standing up infront of her peers and professors, some of the most educated and intelligent people in our country, and asking a question to one of the most celebrated and respected humanist philosophers of our time. That is what I was calling the big game.

Cloud says

So strange you and Dan adopt the same zealot qualities that the most obnoxious God pushers do.

So you admit you are a zealot... That's very interesting. And you're not ashamed of being a religious zealot? How does that work for you?

Cloud says

Most believers are quiet about their faith. All the jAtheist I've meet and have debated on the internet are savage.

You truly have no idea how many atheists you've met, or which people you have met may be atheists.

And you know nothing about me... So your attempted provocations have no impact on me. You'll have to go find someone else to ridicule, because it's not having your intended effect on me.

45   Bap33   2011 Dec 19, 5:15am  

@Dan,
good post, but I was responding to a comment about faith by another.

You have defended and established your position in a fine manner, and I knew already that you challenge all things - science and religion - with the same fever. It is your focus expessed on this site that leads me to have no doubt that God has an amazing plan for revealing himself to you ... your fire was put there by Him, so I bet He has a pretty cool plan for you. Even if your rle is to force those who profess belief to defend and reflect -- that's for the better good too. In my opinion.

46   upisdown   2011 Dec 19, 5:25am  

Man, I was waiting for it as the religious fanatics always go to the next level with their yes-we-have-no-bananas type of logic and right on cue it's the advanced version of: he works in mysterious ways.

Dan, you're smart and that's because of god only you just haven't noticed or even acknowledged it ...............yet.

Same old bs just a different method of delivery.

47   MisdemeanorRebel   2011 Dec 19, 5:27am  

Cloud says

Thunder Lips, honestly not following you?

Cloud, in the countries I mentioned, atheists are a substantial portion of the population. About a third of Frenchmen are atheists; about 3/4 of Scandinavians are atheists.

Yet in those countries, the people who are Firemen or Police routinely risk their lives to enter burning buildings to save people or apprehend crazy people wielding clubs or knives and threatening those nearby.

48   Dan8267   2011 Dec 19, 5:33am  

Bap33 says

Dan, I humbly submit that gravity, and the frictions it creates, are the only things that stop perp-mot. Without gravity, and wind, and debris, and all other forms of friction, something should keep on moving for ever.

Gravity does not "create" friction. For example, there is no friction between the Earth and the sun. Friction is the result of two separate objects being connected by pressure on some common surface area. This pressure can be due to gravity or any other force (mechanical, magnetic, etc.). The force exerting the pressure does not matter.

"Gravity, wind, and debris" are not "forms of friction". The equations for effects of fluid viscosity (including air) are completely different from the equation for the force of friction, and they are derived from different entities.

Also, it is best not to think of "motion" per se, but rather acceleration, as motion is a relative phenomenon anyway. Consider the orbit of the Earth. This orbit does require gravity, but it does not have friction. The Earth does, however, accelerate. Even if the Earth's orbit were circular and its speed constant, the Earth would be accelerating towards the sun as it orbits around the sun. In fact, this acceleration is necessary to maintain orbit almost by definition.

A planet orbiting a star is pretty much the closest you can get to the situation you describe as "without friction or debris". Nevertheless, even a planet orbiting a star will not stay in orbit forever due to gravitational tidal forces and frame dragging. No orbit can be stable over eternity.

[And please don't ask about frame dragging. It involves relativity and you are not ready for that. It would just confuse and mislead you. Stick to classical physics until you master that.]

49   Dan8267   2011 Dec 19, 5:46am  

ReasonNotFaith says

Cloud says

But like a gay lover you help Danny boy out?

Cloud is clearly a troll. He fakes outrage at minor jokes and then gay bashes. Ironically, meeting Cloud would probably turn any gay guy straight.

ReasonNotFaith says

Cloud says

Many homosexuals dying and suffering from aids
died and were helped by Catholic and chrisitan charities, a fact that will piss of Dan and No Faith.

Like all trolls, Cloud likes putting words into people's mouths.

Yes, many homosexuals did die from AIDS when it first appeared. This is less true today, now that we have treatments for the disease. Today, poor people, particularly Africans, are most in jeopardy of AIDS because

1. The medication is not readily available to them.
2. The pope has convinced many not to use condoms, which are extremely effective in preventing the spread of the disease.

Conclusion: science does good, religion does bad.

Now it does upset me that many young gay men died of AIDS. It also upsets me that many people die of cancer, starvation, lack of clean drinking water, etc. I'd try to explain that to Cloud, but how do you explain the human emotions of empathy and compassion to something like Cloud?

What does not upset me is the acknowledgement that AIDS spread fastest through the homosexual male community because

1. They did not use condoms until AIDS. For some reason, gay men don't worry about impregnating other gay men. I'd explain this to Cloud, but I don't think he'd understand.

2. Gay men were having sex with many partners which allows for STDs to spread more rapidly.

3. The mechanics of gay male sex allow for easier transference of the virus as oppose to heterosexual sex or lesbian sex.

Acknowledging these truths is not offensive to me. In fact, not acknowledging these truths is offense. The first step to solving a problem, any problem, is acknowledging it's existence. The second step is understanding the problem. Knowing the above information allows us to curtail the spread of AIDS including in the homosexual community. Why would we not want this?

Finally, have you ever noticed that only men who are insecure in their own sexuality feel the need to gay bash?

50   Dan8267   2011 Dec 19, 5:47am  

Bap33 says

It is your focus expessed on this site that leads me to have no doubt that God has an amazing plan for revealing himself to you ... your fire was put there by Him, so I bet He has a pretty cool plan for you.

If it involves hooking up with Taylor Swift, I'm all for it.

51   Dan8267   2011 Dec 19, 5:54am  

upisdown says

Dan, you're smart and that's because of god only you just haven't noticed or even acknowledged it ...............yet.

If I'm smart because of god, why did he make so many other people stupid?

I'm more incline to believe the brain behaves like a muscle in one particular way: the more you use it, the stronger it becomes.

52   uomo_senza_nome   2011 Dec 19, 6:12am  

Bap33 says

It seems odd that faith in science bothers you not, while faith in God bothers you much. Why is the two faiths not the same to you?

Bap- it sometimes takes a leap of faith for scientists to make a discovery, but science cannot rely on faith alone; if it did, it won't be called science - it will be religion.

For even a leap-of-faith type speculative theory, you need adequate empirical / observational evidence that's independently verifiable and repeatable as well.

Bap33 says

And, with enough time and guidence, science might prove God enough for analytical minds to embrace God too. Right? Isn't that a possible outcome?

If the use of the word God as you have meant above, means anything super-natural or meta-physical (outside the laws of physics), science can never concern itself anything like that because it is not even in science's domain. Science can clearly separate BS from facts.

53   upisdown   2011 Dec 19, 6:14am  

Dan,

Heh, heh, but what he wrote and directed towards you was still personal albeit not derogatory though, so he's exhausted every dogmatic excuse or out and out fairy tale answer he can pull out of his ass.

Ya ever notice that the religious flacks only try to claim and relate to all positive or good things that happen in life? But, when some really disgusting and violent thing like an earthquake, tsunami, or even that woman in NYC that burned to death in an elevator...............out comes the benign bullshit non-answer, answer: he works in mysterious ways

Where's all the hoopla and fanatical desrciptions then for when any of of those things happen???? Then it's crickets.

If they would take the same credit or acknowledge all the bad things the exact same way that they do all the good stuff maybe people would give thier thoughts and theories a little more attention.

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