Definition of Marriage gets Debated in California
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BoneSoft wrote:
We'll save the question of whether or not it should be restricted to people for later
We talking about T'Pol and B'Elanna here?
Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
Oakman wrote:
T'Pol and B'Elanna
:laugh: I had to look them up on Wikipedia. Until we have sexy aliens, I was referring to camels and turtles and dogs and the like. What about marrying inanimate objects? Should we be able to marry sex dolls? And if so, what about blow-up sheep dolls? What about marrying dead people? That could be handy. I guess my point is, that if it really is an arbitrary line, who decides how far we move it? And if we're willing to move it for one group, can we say no to the next group?
Try code model generation tools at BoneSoft.com.
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Richard A. Abbott wrote:
Do we really need another "monkey trial"?
Remember this and be afraid: Scopes was found guilty.
Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
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Matthew Faithfull wrote:
That's the problem with logic, if you believe in it you just can't stop using it and if you don't it's just meaningless to you.
Actually the "problem" with logic is that it is a tool not a way of life (Spock notwithstanding.) Logic is always based on a priori assumptions. Your seem to include that there is a God and that He has so much time on His hands that He sticks His nose into every aspect of every human's existence - presumably down to whether or not you use a tissue or your finger to get rid of your boogers.
Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
Oakman wrote:
Logic is always based on a priori assumptions.
Absolutely, hear, hear. Hence my earlier comments in this thread. I assume that there is a God and that he is who he says he is and has the characteristics he has revealed. The evidence of history is that these assumptions are sound, lead to the best outcomes and have no long term negative consequences. Right down to the sub atomic infrastructrure of the universe. :-D
Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.
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Oakman wrote:
T'Pol and B'Elanna
:laugh: I had to look them up on Wikipedia. Until we have sexy aliens, I was referring to camels and turtles and dogs and the like. What about marrying inanimate objects? Should we be able to marry sex dolls? And if so, what about blow-up sheep dolls? What about marrying dead people? That could be handy. I guess my point is, that if it really is an arbitrary line, who decides how far we move it? And if we're willing to move it for one group, can we say no to the next group?
Try code model generation tools at BoneSoft.com.
BoneSoft wrote:
I guess my point is, that if it really is an arbitrary line, who decides how far we move it? And if we're willing to move it for one group, can we say no to the next group?
The slippery slope argument can pretty much be used to argue against anything - If we have the death penalty for convicted serial rapist-killers today who is to say that we won't impose it on people who don't pay their cable bill tomorrow? I think in this case society could continue to require informed consent, exsanguinity, and breathing as prerequisites to marriage without stepping on too many toes.
Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
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I do not loath Matthew's point of view. It is right and proper that he should display his beliefs. Equally, it is right and proper for others to display differing/alternative/complementary/conflicting points of view. In terms of education, I want my children to be taught facts as presently understood not fantasies and not fables where relevance is perhaps questionable. Do we really need another "monkey trial"? [^]
Richard A. Abbott wrote:
It is right and proper that he should display his beliefs. Equally, it is right and proper for others to display differing/alternative/complementary/conflicting points of view.
But he just said he rejected that. Are you saying that you accept with you find unacceptable? I trully do not understand.
Richard A. Abbott wrote:
In terms of education, I want my children to be taught facts as presently understood not fantasies and not fables where relevance is perhaps questionable.
Do you want them to be taught that Christianity is acceptable or unacceptable? What do the facts say?
Richard A. Abbott wrote:
Do we really need another "monkey trial"? [^]
Did you know that Clarence Darrow was a supporter of fascism?
Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization
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Any outcome of such a system is bound to be at best a reflection of public opinion. The question then becomes what is the more trustworthy measure of truth, what God says about himself or what public opinion thinks about God. Which is more consistent is will certainly be obvious to anyone who's lived long enough. No such argument can of course make any impact on the minds of the majority of under 25s in the UK today who do not believe in the existence of truth. Presumably they're not entirely confidant of their own existence either or able to see problems with holding such an opinion. This, not terrorism or GW or Bird Flu or even the Shrubbery themselves and all their friends is the biggest threat to society today and civilization tomorrow.
Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.
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Oakman wrote:
Logic is always based on a priori assumptions.
Absolutely, hear, hear. Hence my earlier comments in this thread. I assume that there is a God and that he is who he says he is and has the characteristics he has revealed. The evidence of history is that these assumptions are sound, lead to the best outcomes and have no long term negative consequences. Right down to the sub atomic infrastructrure of the universe. :-D
Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.
Matthew Faithfull wrote:
he is who he says he is and has the characteristics he has revealed.
You are taking the word of men for this. They tell you they are inspired - or worse, other men tell you that the writers were inspired -- by God, but unless you are telling us you have been up on Arrarat and seen the Burning Bush, you may be deeply deceived and in the snares of the antiChrist.
Matthew Faithfull wrote:
The evidence of history is that these assumptions are sound, lead to the best outcomes and have no long term negative consequences. Right down to the sub atomic infrastructrure of the universe
That's an opinion. Not a verifiable fact. You have to separate the two. Even if you think your opinion is the only valid one.
Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
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Richard A. Abbott wrote:
It is right and proper that he should display his beliefs. Equally, it is right and proper for others to display differing/alternative/complementary/conflicting points of view.
But he just said he rejected that. Are you saying that you accept with you find unacceptable? I trully do not understand.
Richard A. Abbott wrote:
In terms of education, I want my children to be taught facts as presently understood not fantasies and not fables where relevance is perhaps questionable.
Do you want them to be taught that Christianity is acceptable or unacceptable? What do the facts say?
Richard A. Abbott wrote:
Do we really need another "monkey trial"? [^]
Did you know that Clarence Darrow was a supporter of fascism?
Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization
Stan Shannon wrote:
Are you saying that you accept with(sic) you find unacceptable?
That is the very tyranny of post modernism, that nothing is allowed to be unacceptable, except unacceptability itself. Tollerance of everything except intollerance. It is a philosophy of madness and unreason that is corrupting the minds of my generation and those younger, putting the entire future of science itself at risk and undermining our society and culture. It's not the only problem but it is one that stands in the way of fixing all the others becuase it prevents the recognition of the unacceptable as unacceptable.
Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.
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Richard A. Abbott wrote:
Yes he was, but in the here and now of year 2008, do you expect the same result?
Depends on what town the trial is held in. Overturned on appeal, probably - at least on the Federal level.
Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
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Matthew Faithfull wrote:
he is who he says he is and has the characteristics he has revealed.
You are taking the word of men for this. They tell you they are inspired - or worse, other men tell you that the writers were inspired -- by God, but unless you are telling us you have been up on Arrarat and seen the Burning Bush, you may be deeply deceived and in the snares of the antiChrist.
Matthew Faithfull wrote:
The evidence of history is that these assumptions are sound, lead to the best outcomes and have no long term negative consequences. Right down to the sub atomic infrastructrure of the universe
That's an opinion. Not a verifiable fact. You have to separate the two. Even if you think your opinion is the only valid one.
Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
Oakman wrote:
That's an opinion. Not a verifiable fact.
As you have already admitted, when it comes to matters of the unprovable there is no way to separate the two. You have to make fundamental assumptions in order to reason. If you make them then you have to accept the logical consequences of those assumptions or you aren't capable of reason.
Oakman wrote:
Even if you think your opinion is the only valid one.
What if I think that God's opinion is the only valid one?
Oakman wrote:
unless you are telling us you have been up on Arrarat and seen the Burning Bush
If you're asking have I had direct experience of the presence of God then the answer is yes.
Oakman wrote:
you may be deeply deceived and in the snares of the antiChrist.
This is always a theoretical possibility but it is not my belief. I could go around prefacing every statement I make with 'I believe' but all that would imply is that actually I don't. As I said to Richard earlier it is only current culture that tries to insist that we all go around pretending not to really believe what we believe and that is not something I believe in.
Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.
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Richard A. Abbott wrote:
It is right and proper that he should display his beliefs. Equally, it is right and proper for others to display differing/alternative/complementary/conflicting points of view.
But he just said he rejected that. Are you saying that you accept with you find unacceptable? I trully do not understand.
Richard A. Abbott wrote:
In terms of education, I want my children to be taught facts as presently understood not fantasies and not fables where relevance is perhaps questionable.
Do you want them to be taught that Christianity is acceptable or unacceptable? What do the facts say?
Richard A. Abbott wrote:
Do we really need another "monkey trial"? [^]
Did you know that Clarence Darrow was a supporter of fascism?
Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization
-
Stan Shannon wrote:
Are you saying that you accept with(sic) you find unacceptable?
That is the very tyranny of post modernism, that nothing is allowed to be unacceptable, except unacceptability itself. Tollerance of everything except intollerance. It is a philosophy of madness and unreason that is corrupting the minds of my generation and those younger, putting the entire future of science itself at risk and undermining our society and culture. It's not the only problem but it is one that stands in the way of fixing all the others becuase it prevents the recognition of the unacceptable as unacceptable.
Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.
Matthew Faithfull wrote:
That is the very tyranny of post modernism, that nothing is allowed to be unacceptable, except unacceptability itself. Tollerance of everything except intollerance. It is a philosophy of madness and unreason that is corrupting the minds of my generation and those younger, putting the entire future of science itself at risk and undermining our society and culture. It's not the only problem but it is one that stands in the way of fixing all the others becuase it prevents the recognition of the unacceptable as unacceptable.
Matthew, your arguments have been used to kill so many, many people. Remember who the poster boys for Christian intolerance are. "Exactly! We need to burn all those damned Jews at the stake unless they convert today, right, Torquemada?"
Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
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Oakman wrote:
That's an opinion. Not a verifiable fact.
As you have already admitted, when it comes to matters of the unprovable there is no way to separate the two. You have to make fundamental assumptions in order to reason. If you make them then you have to accept the logical consequences of those assumptions or you aren't capable of reason.
Oakman wrote:
Even if you think your opinion is the only valid one.
What if I think that God's opinion is the only valid one?
Oakman wrote:
unless you are telling us you have been up on Arrarat and seen the Burning Bush
If you're asking have I had direct experience of the presence of God then the answer is yes.
Oakman wrote:
you may be deeply deceived and in the snares of the antiChrist.
This is always a theoretical possibility but it is not my belief. I could go around prefacing every statement I make with 'I believe' but all that would imply is that actually I don't. As I said to Richard earlier it is only current culture that tries to insist that we all go around pretending not to really believe what we believe and that is not something I believe in.
Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.
Matthew Faithfull wrote:
As you have already admitted, when it comes to matters of the unprovable there is no way to separate the two.
No, I never "admitted" any such thing. Pretty much by definition. Facts are provable; Opinions are not.
Matthew Faithfull wrote:
What if I think that God's opinion is the only valid one?
You are extremely presumptious to speak for Him.
Matthew Faithfull wrote:
If you're asking have I had direct experience of the presence of God then the answer is yes.
High endorphins are not the presence of God. If you saw a Burning Bush create tablets of stone that codify the laws or some other equally physical object then the answer is yes.
Matthew Faithfull wrote:
This is always a theoretical possibility but it is not my belief
Good for you. With that admission you are on the road to understanding.
Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
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You are of course welcome to have an opinion even if, as in this case, it has no apparent basis in fact or reason. :)
Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.
You're mixing facts and belief.
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Stan Shannon wrote:
But he just said he rejected that. Are you saying that you accept with you find unacceptable? I trully do not understand.
Which part of [^] did you not understand.
The part where you tolerate precisely the opposite point of view. Such a position is logically indefensible. You simply cannot be tolerant of Matthew's overt intellectual rejection of your tolerance. He boldly rejects your tolerance.
Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization
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Matthew Faithfull wrote:
As you have already admitted, when it comes to matters of the unprovable there is no way to separate the two.
No, I never "admitted" any such thing. Pretty much by definition. Facts are provable; Opinions are not.
Matthew Faithfull wrote:
What if I think that God's opinion is the only valid one?
You are extremely presumptious to speak for Him.
Matthew Faithfull wrote:
If you're asking have I had direct experience of the presence of God then the answer is yes.
High endorphins are not the presence of God. If you saw a Burning Bush create tablets of stone that codify the laws or some other equally physical object then the answer is yes.
Matthew Faithfull wrote:
This is always a theoretical possibility but it is not my belief
Good for you. With that admission you are on the road to understanding.
Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
Oakman wrote:
Facts are provable
Not all facts are provable that's precisely the point. If it's a fact that God doesn't exist then it's still not provable. If it's a fact that he does exist it isn't provable but one or the other must be a fact.
Oakman wrote:
You are extremely presumptious to speak for Him.
Whay would say that? He speaks for himself and if he speaks through me then it is because he chooses to. Will you place yourself between me and God as judge?
Oakman wrote:
High endorphins are not the presence of God. If you saw a Burning Bush create tablets of stone that codify the laws or some other equally physical object then the answer is yes.
So you are the judge of what is and is not an experience of God? I never said anything about the nature of my experience and yet you presume to know something about it.
Oakman wrote:
With that admission you are on the road to understanding.
:laugh: No my friend we are on very different roads you and I and 'understanding' is not the destination of either of them.
Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.
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Matthew Faithfull wrote:
That is the very tyranny of post modernism, that nothing is allowed to be unacceptable, except unacceptability itself. Tollerance of everything except intollerance. It is a philosophy of madness and unreason that is corrupting the minds of my generation and those younger, putting the entire future of science itself at risk and undermining our society and culture. It's not the only problem but it is one that stands in the way of fixing all the others becuase it prevents the recognition of the unacceptable as unacceptable.
Matthew, your arguments have been used to kill so many, many people. Remember who the poster boys for Christian intolerance are. "Exactly! We need to burn all those damned Jews at the stake unless they convert today, right, Torquemada?"
Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
Oakman wrote:
Matthew, your arguments have been used to kill so many, many people. Remember who the poster boys for Christian intolerance are.
Is the goal to eliminate all beliefs and traditions which can be somehow associated with people being killed?
Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization
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You're mixing facts and belief.
Any you are claiming to know which is which. Are you the final arbiter of truth?
Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.
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Stan Shannon wrote:
Are you saying that you accept with(sic) you find unacceptable?
That is the very tyranny of post modernism, that nothing is allowed to be unacceptable, except unacceptability itself. Tollerance of everything except intollerance. It is a philosophy of madness and unreason that is corrupting the minds of my generation and those younger, putting the entire future of science itself at risk and undermining our society and culture. It's not the only problem but it is one that stands in the way of fixing all the others becuase it prevents the recognition of the unacceptable as unacceptable.
Nothing is exactly what it seems but everything with seems can be unpicked.
I agree completely with you to that extent. The very notion of discrimination of any type is the only thing our society any longer has the moral fortitude to discriminate against. It is not merely an inherently ignorant intellectual position to assume, it is simply not sustainable culturally. Any other culture could easily kick our asses as long as they ain't us. It is ultimately a belief in nothingness altogether.
Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization
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Tim Craig wrote:
States just get out of the marriage business altogether
Back when Romney and I both lived in Massachusetts and he was trying to amend the state Constitution to make gay marriage illegal, I proposed much the same thing. There is certainly no reason to tell some old parish priest that he has to marry two men, or two divorced heteros or whatever makes him think he'll burn in hellfire forever. (Why any God worth the name would give a damn is a thread in its own right, but there are plenty of well-meaning folk who have convinced themselves they know He would.) All that has to happen is that we remove any "power invested in me by the state" from the windup of his spiel and he can marry only those he feels like doing. But, as you say, the state would consider them shacking up until they registered at City Hall - which wouldn't be all that different than getting a license today, except that it would immediately convey all the benefits that right now are associated with the word "Marriage" without benefit of clergy: bada-bing, bada-bang. Funny thing is that is exactly the way I got married. My blushing, beautiful and buxom bride-to-be and I were supposed to take a plane from Boston to Orlando on a Tuesday night and get the marriage license on Wednesday so we could be married on Saturday (3 day waiting period). Unfortunately, Boston got snowed in and we didn't arrive until Friday. :omg: Since about half the retired air force colonels and generals in the state of Florida were planning on attending, the schedule did not change. We were still "married" by her parents' favorite Baptist minister on Saturday, still went to Disneyworld for our "honeymoon," but then, when we came back, we went through a quickie ceremony with same minister who this time added the words about "invested by the state," thus making us legal. As far as I know, God did not strike him dead for faking it earlier. Essentially we got married one week and contracted a civil union the following week.
Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface