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Atheism , religion , ID etc

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  • R Offline
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    Roger Alsing 0
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    Ok, Im gonna give this religious stuff a shot here :P Im a true beleiver of evolution, evolution is proved every day when you use genetic algorithms to fine tune systems , or when bacterias become resistent versus some medicines.. so in my mind I "know" evolution works. but in order for evolution to work , you need an environment where things can evolve under fixed or slowly changing rules , prefferably fixed rules. eg a simulated evolution can only work if you provide some sort of rules in which something can evolve. and the same goes for our universe , we know we have certain natural laws etc , which makes things act a certain way.. which in turn allows evolution.. so far so good. now Id like to know what other atheists or determinists think sustain those rules? (in our universe) can a rule exist w/o anything sustaining it? where did such rules come from? why doesnt the law of gravity suddenly start acting different, whats stopping it from doing so? if those rules didnt exist , everything would be truly random and no evolution would work. (just a thought in the spirit of atheism vs ID vs whatever :-) ) //Roger

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    • R Roger Alsing 0

      Ok, Im gonna give this religious stuff a shot here :P Im a true beleiver of evolution, evolution is proved every day when you use genetic algorithms to fine tune systems , or when bacterias become resistent versus some medicines.. so in my mind I "know" evolution works. but in order for evolution to work , you need an environment where things can evolve under fixed or slowly changing rules , prefferably fixed rules. eg a simulated evolution can only work if you provide some sort of rules in which something can evolve. and the same goes for our universe , we know we have certain natural laws etc , which makes things act a certain way.. which in turn allows evolution.. so far so good. now Id like to know what other atheists or determinists think sustain those rules? (in our universe) can a rule exist w/o anything sustaining it? where did such rules come from? why doesnt the law of gravity suddenly start acting different, whats stopping it from doing so? if those rules didnt exist , everything would be truly random and no evolution would work. (just a thought in the spirit of atheism vs ID vs whatever :-) ) //Roger

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      Chris Losinger
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      Roger J wrote:

      now Id like to know what other atheists or determinists think sustain those rules?

      the "rules" are the laws of physics. they exist independently of life, evolution or any '-theism'. we know about them because a universe that relies on them exists. if that's seems circular it's only because you've hit the very rock-bottom foundation of the universe: there's simply nothing more fundamental: they are what determines everything. without them, there is nothing. in a sense, they are the universe. they don't need sustaining. Cleek | Image Toolkits | Thumbnail maker

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      • R Roger Alsing 0

        Ok, Im gonna give this religious stuff a shot here :P Im a true beleiver of evolution, evolution is proved every day when you use genetic algorithms to fine tune systems , or when bacterias become resistent versus some medicines.. so in my mind I "know" evolution works. but in order for evolution to work , you need an environment where things can evolve under fixed or slowly changing rules , prefferably fixed rules. eg a simulated evolution can only work if you provide some sort of rules in which something can evolve. and the same goes for our universe , we know we have certain natural laws etc , which makes things act a certain way.. which in turn allows evolution.. so far so good. now Id like to know what other atheists or determinists think sustain those rules? (in our universe) can a rule exist w/o anything sustaining it? where did such rules come from? why doesnt the law of gravity suddenly start acting different, whats stopping it from doing so? if those rules didnt exist , everything would be truly random and no evolution would work. (just a thought in the spirit of atheism vs ID vs whatever :-) ) //Roger

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        Marc Clifton
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        Well, there's also the rule that rules will behave consistently over large periods of time. Marc Pensieve Functional Entanglement vs. Code Entanglement Static Classes Make For Rigid Architectures Some people believe what the bible says. Literally. At least [with Wikipedia] you have the chance to correct the wiki -- Jörgen Sigvardsson

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        • R Roger Alsing 0

          Ok, Im gonna give this religious stuff a shot here :P Im a true beleiver of evolution, evolution is proved every day when you use genetic algorithms to fine tune systems , or when bacterias become resistent versus some medicines.. so in my mind I "know" evolution works. but in order for evolution to work , you need an environment where things can evolve under fixed or slowly changing rules , prefferably fixed rules. eg a simulated evolution can only work if you provide some sort of rules in which something can evolve. and the same goes for our universe , we know we have certain natural laws etc , which makes things act a certain way.. which in turn allows evolution.. so far so good. now Id like to know what other atheists or determinists think sustain those rules? (in our universe) can a rule exist w/o anything sustaining it? where did such rules come from? why doesnt the law of gravity suddenly start acting different, whats stopping it from doing so? if those rules didnt exist , everything would be truly random and no evolution would work. (just a thought in the spirit of atheism vs ID vs whatever :-) ) //Roger

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          Stan Shannon
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          I agree with you. But even more than that, we live in a univese of emergent properties. Properties, which did not exist before, appear to emerge quite effortlessly from the underlieing rules of the universe as it conforms to the processes which we currently describe as 'evolution'. For example, the properties of life and consciousness have emerged from the underlieing mechanisms of the universe. Was such emergence accidental? Or inevitable? Do the underlieing mechanisms merely allow for or do they mandate the emergency of such properties. We live in a universe which we can directly confirm has the potential to generate consciousness. In fact, it is the one property of the universe with which we are the most intimately familiar. What separates the potential from the fact? Was the universe ever not conscious? Is the universe anything more (as some scientists are beginning to ask) than a vast quantum computer. Why would a universe posses such bizarre capabilities? Obvoiusly the the necessary answer to that question is not 'because God willed it so'. But it is difficult to avoid a conclusion that something was 'built into' the emergent potential of the universe for some reason. "You get that which you tolerate" -- modified at 8:51 Friday 7th April, 2006

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          • C Chris Losinger

            Roger J wrote:

            now Id like to know what other atheists or determinists think sustain those rules?

            the "rules" are the laws of physics. they exist independently of life, evolution or any '-theism'. we know about them because a universe that relies on them exists. if that's seems circular it's only because you've hit the very rock-bottom foundation of the universe: there's simply nothing more fundamental: they are what determines everything. without them, there is nothing. in a sense, they are the universe. they don't need sustaining. Cleek | Image Toolkits | Thumbnail maker

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            Roger Alsing 0
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            >>we know about them because a universe that relies on them exists. well, that doesnt prove they dont need to be sustained in some way, does it? humans relies on air to live, that doesnt mean that air can exist just by itself (w/o rules deciding how atoms bind together etc). >>there's simply nothing more fundamental: they are what determines everything. yes , I fully agree. however, that feels just as weak as the religious arguments "it has always been that way , tehre is no reason to question it , nor what it comes from" with that logic you can defend any beleif.. "donald duck has existed forever and he created everything ,its fundamental" , how do one know that or verify it?

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            • C Chris Losinger

              Roger J wrote:

              now Id like to know what other atheists or determinists think sustain those rules?

              the "rules" are the laws of physics. they exist independently of life, evolution or any '-theism'. we know about them because a universe that relies on them exists. if that's seems circular it's only because you've hit the very rock-bottom foundation of the universe: there's simply nothing more fundamental: they are what determines everything. without them, there is nothing. in a sense, they are the universe. they don't need sustaining. Cleek | Image Toolkits | Thumbnail maker

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              El Corazon
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              Chris Losinger wrote:

              the "rules" are the laws of physics.

              Exactly. although our measurements of gravity have improved, the "rule" remains the same. Gravity does not require the continual focus of supreme being. The "rule" exists because matter exists, and the rule is simply "measured" by man because it is a base "rule" of existance. The law of gravity and the laws or thermal dynamics are so basic they form a foundation of the world we live in, but they neither prove, nor disprove, the existance of a supreme being, they simply are. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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              • R Roger Alsing 0

                Ok, Im gonna give this religious stuff a shot here :P Im a true beleiver of evolution, evolution is proved every day when you use genetic algorithms to fine tune systems , or when bacterias become resistent versus some medicines.. so in my mind I "know" evolution works. but in order for evolution to work , you need an environment where things can evolve under fixed or slowly changing rules , prefferably fixed rules. eg a simulated evolution can only work if you provide some sort of rules in which something can evolve. and the same goes for our universe , we know we have certain natural laws etc , which makes things act a certain way.. which in turn allows evolution.. so far so good. now Id like to know what other atheists or determinists think sustain those rules? (in our universe) can a rule exist w/o anything sustaining it? where did such rules come from? why doesnt the law of gravity suddenly start acting different, whats stopping it from doing so? if those rules didnt exist , everything would be truly random and no evolution would work. (just a thought in the spirit of atheism vs ID vs whatever :-) ) //Roger

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                Ryan Roberts
                wrote on last edited by
                #7

                Roger J wrote:

                but in order for evolution to work , you need an environment where things can evolve under fixed or slowly changing rules , prefferably fixed rules.

                Thats the big difference between simulated and actual evolution. This planet would not have oxygen in the atmosphere if it was not for early life. Real evolution is a process involving staggering complexity of interaction between organisms and their environment (which both consists of other organisms and can be affected by them).

                Roger J wrote:

                can a rule exist w/o anything sustaining it? where did such rules come from? why doesnt the law of gravity suddenly start acting different, whats stopping it from doing so?

                Don't know, Don't know, Don't know :) I'm not sure I would describe myself as a determinist - certainly not in the sense of us living in a clockwork universe, modern physics tells us that is not the case. Ryan

                "Michael Moore and Mel Gibson are the same person, except for a few sit-ups. Moore thought his cheesy political blooper reel was going to tell people how to vote. Mel thought that his little gay SM movie about his imaginary friend was going to help him get to heaven." - Penn Jillette

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                • E El Corazon

                  Chris Losinger wrote:

                  the "rules" are the laws of physics.

                  Exactly. although our measurements of gravity have improved, the "rule" remains the same. Gravity does not require the continual focus of supreme being. The "rule" exists because matter exists, and the rule is simply "measured" by man because it is a base "rule" of existance. The law of gravity and the laws or thermal dynamics are so basic they form a foundation of the world we live in, but they neither prove, nor disprove, the existance of a supreme being, they simply are. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                  Roger Alsing 0
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  >>they simply are. so , why , in a space of possibilities does only _those rules_ exist? why arnt there infinite different rules? what made exactly those rules apply to our universe? Im not saying there is a supreme being nor that there is not. I just find it interesting and this is an area where atheist normally just close their eyes and cover their ears and say "but thats just how it is" for me, that is just as naive as beleiving in a christian god.

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                  • R Roger Alsing 0

                    >>they simply are. so , why , in a space of possibilities does only _those rules_ exist? why arnt there infinite different rules? what made exactly those rules apply to our universe? Im not saying there is a supreme being nor that there is not. I just find it interesting and this is an area where atheist normally just close their eyes and cover their ears and say "but thats just how it is" for me, that is just as naive as beleiving in a christian god.

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                    Richard Northedge
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #9

                    Roger J wrote:

                    I just find it interesting and this is an area where atheist normally just close their eyes and cover their ears and say "but thats just how it is" for me, that is just as naive as beleiving in a christian god.

                    I would say that "naive" is the wrong word here. What you seem to be recognising is the fact that everyone has faith in *something*. Some atheist scientist types will tell you that they don't need faith at all, and that everything can be explained by the scientific method. I would disagree - science cannot answer these kinds of "why" questions. I am fond of pointing out that it requires a lot of faith to be an atheist. You have to believe, without any evidence either way, that life and matter and the laws of the universe *just somehow* exist. You are putting your faith in Chance, or Randomness, as the basis of the universe.

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                    • M Marc Clifton

                      Well, there's also the rule that rules will behave consistently over large periods of time. Marc Pensieve Functional Entanglement vs. Code Entanglement Static Classes Make For Rigid Architectures Some people believe what the bible says. Literally. At least [with Wikipedia] you have the chance to correct the wiki -- Jörgen Sigvardsson

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                      hairy_hats
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #10

                      Consistently perhaps, but not necessarily identically. There are suggestions that some of the cosmological "constants" have changed subtly through the life of the universe.

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                      • R Roger Alsing 0

                        Ok, Im gonna give this religious stuff a shot here :P Im a true beleiver of evolution, evolution is proved every day when you use genetic algorithms to fine tune systems , or when bacterias become resistent versus some medicines.. so in my mind I "know" evolution works. but in order for evolution to work , you need an environment where things can evolve under fixed or slowly changing rules , prefferably fixed rules. eg a simulated evolution can only work if you provide some sort of rules in which something can evolve. and the same goes for our universe , we know we have certain natural laws etc , which makes things act a certain way.. which in turn allows evolution.. so far so good. now Id like to know what other atheists or determinists think sustain those rules? (in our universe) can a rule exist w/o anything sustaining it? where did such rules come from? why doesnt the law of gravity suddenly start acting different, whats stopping it from doing so? if those rules didnt exist , everything would be truly random and no evolution would work. (just a thought in the spirit of atheism vs ID vs whatever :-) ) //Roger

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                        hairy_hats
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #11

                        Roger J wrote:

                        we know we have certain natural laws etc , which makes things act a certain way.. which in turn allows evolution..

                        The only "rule" you need for evolution is that the "fitter" organisms (in the sense of "better-suited to living in their current environment") survive and pass their traits on to their offspring, while the less-well-adapted die off. As this will happen anyway there doesn't need to be any external being enforcing the "rules" of evolution. As soon as life appears evolution and adaptation will occur automatically.

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                        • R Richard Northedge

                          Roger J wrote:

                          I just find it interesting and this is an area where atheist normally just close their eyes and cover their ears and say "but thats just how it is" for me, that is just as naive as beleiving in a christian god.

                          I would say that "naive" is the wrong word here. What you seem to be recognising is the fact that everyone has faith in *something*. Some atheist scientist types will tell you that they don't need faith at all, and that everything can be explained by the scientific method. I would disagree - science cannot answer these kinds of "why" questions. I am fond of pointing out that it requires a lot of faith to be an atheist. You have to believe, without any evidence either way, that life and matter and the laws of the universe *just somehow* exist. You are putting your faith in Chance, or Randomness, as the basis of the universe.

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                          Roger Alsing 0
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #12

                          yes but isnt that beleif ("*just somehow* exist") pretty weak? if the atheist main argument against other beleifs is that you cant prove or test them , and in the end atheism turns out the same way if we look at this aspect. "i beleive the rules just somehow exists" dont seem more valid to me than "i beleive that god created everything" everything was so much simple as an atheist when I just ignored/didnt think of that part :P now I just feel like a confused darwinist :P

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                          • H hairy_hats

                            Roger J wrote:

                            we know we have certain natural laws etc , which makes things act a certain way.. which in turn allows evolution..

                            The only "rule" you need for evolution is that the "fitter" organisms (in the sense of "better-suited to living in their current environment") survive and pass their traits on to their offspring, while the less-well-adapted die off. As this will happen anyway there doesn't need to be any external being enforcing the "rules" of evolution. As soon as life appears evolution and adaptation will occur automatically.

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                            Roger Alsing 0
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #13

                            wrong... "As soon as life appears evolution and adaptation will occur automatically" cannot happen without any rules.. thus, no evolution.. you have to have an environment with rules in order for evolution work..

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                            • R Roger Alsing 0

                              Ok, Im gonna give this religious stuff a shot here :P Im a true beleiver of evolution, evolution is proved every day when you use genetic algorithms to fine tune systems , or when bacterias become resistent versus some medicines.. so in my mind I "know" evolution works. but in order for evolution to work , you need an environment where things can evolve under fixed or slowly changing rules , prefferably fixed rules. eg a simulated evolution can only work if you provide some sort of rules in which something can evolve. and the same goes for our universe , we know we have certain natural laws etc , which makes things act a certain way.. which in turn allows evolution.. so far so good. now Id like to know what other atheists or determinists think sustain those rules? (in our universe) can a rule exist w/o anything sustaining it? where did such rules come from? why doesnt the law of gravity suddenly start acting different, whats stopping it from doing so? if those rules didnt exist , everything would be truly random and no evolution would work. (just a thought in the spirit of atheism vs ID vs whatever :-) ) //Roger

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                              Bassam Abdul Baki
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #14

                              One article I've read (in Discover magazine I think) was why was the speed of light that speed. Some researchers believe that a billion years ago, the speed of light had a much faster speed than what it is today in order for the universe to have a big bang. The four "rules" of the universe (i.e., gravity, electromagnetism) are based on observations we have of them. For all we know, there is some other form of measurement or sense that we're not "seeing" that may give us a better understanding of it. An atheist tells you that since bacteria evolves, evolution is it. A religious person tells you that it can only be the work of God. Those of us in between believe that God created evolution so that we can better direct ourselves and our lives and not leave everything up to faith and Him/Her. "If only one person knows the truth, it is still the truth." - Mahatma Gandhi Web - Blog - RSS - Math

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                              • R Roger Alsing 0

                                >>they simply are. so , why , in a space of possibilities does only _those rules_ exist? why arnt there infinite different rules? what made exactly those rules apply to our universe? Im not saying there is a supreme being nor that there is not. I just find it interesting and this is an area where atheist normally just close their eyes and cover their ears and say "but thats just how it is" for me, that is just as naive as beleiving in a christian god.

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                                Alvaro Mendez
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #15

                                Roger J wrote:

                                so , why , in a space of possibilities does only _those rules_ exist?

                                No one has said that those are the only rules.

                                Roger J wrote:

                                why arnt there infinite different rules?

                                Maybe there are. We only know of the ones we've observed.

                                Roger J wrote:

                                what made exactly those rules apply to our universe?

                                We observed the universe and concluded that it was conforming to those rules.

                                Roger J wrote:

                                I just find it interesting and this is an area where atheist normally just close their eyes and cover their ears and say "but thats just how it is"

                                It's actually the opposite. It's because they have opened their eyes that they know that that's how it is. When more things become evident, their eyes will be open for them too.


                                The bible was written when people were even more stupid than they are today. Can you imagine that? - David Cross

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                                • R Roger Alsing 0

                                  wrong... "As soon as life appears evolution and adaptation will occur automatically" cannot happen without any rules.. thus, no evolution.. you have to have an environment with rules in order for evolution work..

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                                  Red Stateler
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #16

                                  Rules are for conformists, man! I don't follow no stinkin' rules! link[^]

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                                  • R Roger Alsing 0

                                    >>we know about them because a universe that relies on them exists. well, that doesnt prove they dont need to be sustained in some way, does it? humans relies on air to live, that doesnt mean that air can exist just by itself (w/o rules deciding how atoms bind together etc). >>there's simply nothing more fundamental: they are what determines everything. yes , I fully agree. however, that feels just as weak as the religious arguments "it has always been that way , tehre is no reason to question it , nor what it comes from" with that logic you can defend any beleif.. "donald duck has existed forever and he created everything ,its fundamental" , how do one know that or verify it?

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                                    Chris Losinger
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #17

                                    Roger J wrote:

                                    humans relies on air to live, that doesnt mean that air can exist just by itself

                                    i don't know what you're trying to say here.

                                    Roger J wrote:

                                    however, that feels just as weak as the religious arguments "it has always been that way , tehre is no reason to question it , nor what it comes from"

                                    i would never say "don't question it". but, either one accepts that the (possibly as yet unknown) laws of physics govern the universe or one doesn't. thus far, the entirety of the evidence is against those who choose to disbelieve. and there is simply no evidence that the universe is controlled by any kind of anthrophomorphic intelligence or 'will'. so, maybe the religious argument 'feels' like the scientific one, and maybe they attempt to describe the same processes and events, but the religious argument is based in pure fantasy - it's a pure figment of imagination. of course, some will disagree with that last sentence. i invite them to provide actual conclusive physical proof to the contrary. and, yes, i admit that it's possible that one day we could find that the universe is controlled by a consciousness of some kind (assuming we could recognize it as a consciousness and that such a powerful entity would allow itself to be discovered, etc). but as of yet, nobody has done that, and pretending that's where science will inevitably, or even probably, lead us is just dishonest.

                                    Roger J wrote:

                                    with that logic you can defend any beleif.

                                    i'm familiar with the problems with the religious argument. ;) Cleek | Image Toolkits | Thumbnail maker

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                                    • R Roger Alsing 0

                                      Ok, Im gonna give this religious stuff a shot here :P Im a true beleiver of evolution, evolution is proved every day when you use genetic algorithms to fine tune systems , or when bacterias become resistent versus some medicines.. so in my mind I "know" evolution works. but in order for evolution to work , you need an environment where things can evolve under fixed or slowly changing rules , prefferably fixed rules. eg a simulated evolution can only work if you provide some sort of rules in which something can evolve. and the same goes for our universe , we know we have certain natural laws etc , which makes things act a certain way.. which in turn allows evolution.. so far so good. now Id like to know what other atheists or determinists think sustain those rules? (in our universe) can a rule exist w/o anything sustaining it? where did such rules come from? why doesnt the law of gravity suddenly start acting different, whats stopping it from doing so? if those rules didnt exist , everything would be truly random and no evolution would work. (just a thought in the spirit of atheism vs ID vs whatever :-) ) //Roger

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                                      Andy Brummer
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #18

                                      As much as scientists hate it because it smacks of everything that ID does, this is the best reason that cosmology has come up with for us having the laws of physics that we do. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthropic_principle[^] Essentially we can only exist in a universe with the laws of physics that we have. Almost any other set of laws would not allow life as we know it. I personally think it is crap because I suspect there are plenty of possibilities for life as we don't know it.

                                      Using the GridView is like trying to explain to someone else how to move a third person's hands in order to tie your shoelaces for you. -Chris Maunder

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                                      • C Chris Losinger

                                        Roger J wrote:

                                        humans relies on air to live, that doesnt mean that air can exist just by itself

                                        i don't know what you're trying to say here.

                                        Roger J wrote:

                                        however, that feels just as weak as the religious arguments "it has always been that way , tehre is no reason to question it , nor what it comes from"

                                        i would never say "don't question it". but, either one accepts that the (possibly as yet unknown) laws of physics govern the universe or one doesn't. thus far, the entirety of the evidence is against those who choose to disbelieve. and there is simply no evidence that the universe is controlled by any kind of anthrophomorphic intelligence or 'will'. so, maybe the religious argument 'feels' like the scientific one, and maybe they attempt to describe the same processes and events, but the religious argument is based in pure fantasy - it's a pure figment of imagination. of course, some will disagree with that last sentence. i invite them to provide actual conclusive physical proof to the contrary. and, yes, i admit that it's possible that one day we could find that the universe is controlled by a consciousness of some kind (assuming we could recognize it as a consciousness and that such a powerful entity would allow itself to be discovered, etc). but as of yet, nobody has done that, and pretending that's where science will inevitably, or even probably, lead us is just dishonest.

                                        Roger J wrote:

                                        with that logic you can defend any beleif.

                                        i'm familiar with the problems with the religious argument. ;) Cleek | Image Toolkits | Thumbnail maker

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                                        Red Stateler
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #19

                                        Chris Losinger wrote:

                                        i'm familiar with the problems with the religious argument.

                                        I'm curious why would you reference that? It was just a pretty weak argument that you made attempting to deny that atheism was a religious belief system that displayed your lack of understanding about religion.

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                                        • R Red Stateler

                                          Chris Losinger wrote:

                                          i'm familiar with the problems with the religious argument.

                                          I'm curious why would you reference that? It was just a pretty weak argument that you made attempting to deny that atheism was a religious belief system that displayed your lack of understanding about religion.

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                                          Chris Losinger
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #20

                                          espeir wrote:

                                          I'm curious why would you reference that?

                                          because his "donald duck" line reminded me of my Flying Spaghetti Monster line.

                                          espeir wrote:

                                          It was just a pretty weak argument that you made attempting to deny that atheism was a religious belief system that displayed your lack of understanding about religion.

                                          please, i beg you: quit trying to break the English language. Cleek | Image Toolkits | Thumbnail maker

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