i know this is of topic but this is to piper.
piper you havet been on the IOSA forum latley what you doin
pm'ed
i know this is of topic but this is to piper.
piper you havet been on the IOSA forum latley what you doin
so what your sayin to piper is that why not belive in god just in case he is real (wich i would like to add i believe he is)
Belief and Knowing a completly different, i believe in a God it doesnt mean hes there, i believe my cat is going to sleep all day, it proabply will but it might come out to eat her food. Lazy dam cats.
A belief doesnt need evidence.
Any evidence that is proposed to support the notion of God is largely ignored or down-played by people who don't believe in a God.besides even though god is a believe wich as you said dosent need evidence there is plenty of evidence that he exists.
Any evidence that is proposed to support the notion of God is largely ignored or down-played by people who don't believe in a God.
The theory of intelligent design puts forth some compelling evidence, such as the anthropic principal. It all depends on how you interpret it.That's hardly true. Not only did I use to be very religious, I put a lot of study into the idea of God. I even went as far as to learn Koine Greek (the language of the New Testament) so as to know it better (albeit my Koine is terribly rusty). I've heard all the arguments, and weighed them very carefully. In the end I was forced to concede there was no good evidence for a god, and that in all likely-hood there isn't one.
The theory of intelligent design puts forth some compelling evidence, such as the anthropic principal. It all depends on how you interpret it.
Besides, God is by definition a supernatural being, and while there may be evidence for Him in his creation, science cannot study the supernatural. It's "above nature".
I will take my belief of life elswhere in the universe to the grave with me, but the odds of it becoming intelligent seem slightly small, so I believe most life in the universe will be primative life like reptiles
Well, on that argument I have to say that it stands mostly on PoV.Now of course, a person who is a deist and just believes that a god created the universe, and didn't touch it afterwards, then yes, their would be no way to prove or disprove it, but if you believe in a God that we can communicate with, and who can effect our lives (ie, the God of the bible, quran, and most religions), then we can study its effects.
Well, the problem you run nto with such statements is "why didn't god save the people instead of the tape?"![]()
also if god isent real how did the universe even start how did anything start.
In the minds of atheists, the anthropic principal basically means, "If the universe wasn't like this, we wouldn't be here to study it."Intelligent design is utter nonsense, and the anthropic principal does not support God (indeed, it is used to disprove intelligent design). All the anthropic principle states is that any universe that we exist in, has to by definition support intelligent life. That's it.
Hold on there bronco, I never said we couldn't prove or disprove God. I meant that we can't use science to prove or disprove God. Believe it or not, there is more to life than science, although most everything else has taken a back seat to science in recent times.We can't disprove God because he's supernatural, so he exists? We can't disprove leprechauns, Thor, Quetzalcoatl or the tooth fairy, does that mean they exist? Of course not, and same for God.
Yes.Besides, if God exists, and he does things like answer prayers, perform miracles, etc, then he will produce effects in our natural world. Even if we can't measure he's supernatural properties, we should be able to measure what he does on the world, for example, prayer.
Studies can be so manipulated that I don't trust any of them anymore, even if they are in support of my beliefs.There's been tons of studies on prayer, and they virtually all show the same thing, prayer doesn't work. Take for an example this study: http://www.beliefnet.com/story/188/story_18848_1.html . In the study it should that people who were prayed for (and didn't know about it) and those who weren't did equally good. However, those who were prayed for and did know it, did worse.
I agree completely.Now of course, a person who is a deist and just believes that a god created the universe, and didn't touch it afterwards, then yes, their would be no way to prove or disprove it, but if you believe in a God that we can communicate with, and who can effect our lives (ie, the God of the bible, quran, and most religions), then we can study its effects.
"I don't know, so therefore abiogenesis must have done it." Sounds awfully familiar...This is called the "argument from ignorance". In other words, "I don't know, so therefore God must have done it".
Doesn't hold any water, unfortunately.
I suppose it could also be the "argument from first cause", which is also flawed on the basis of the following logic:
If everything needs a first cause, then God also needs a first cause. So what caused God? What? You say that God doesn't need a cause? Then that blows apart your argument that everything needs a cause. If that's the case, how do you know that the universe needs a cause?