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Superstition

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  • I Ian Shlasko

    RichardM1 wrote:

    Science is about belief, it requires belief in observational validity*.

    That's a stretch... I mean, you can reproduce the experiments that prove scientific theories and laws... You can see the results with your own eyes. I think it's a bit of a stretch to equate that with just believing what you read in a book. Granted, the vast majority of people DO just believe the science they read in books, but they have the option to verify it for themselves. No such option exists in religion.

    RichardM1 wrote:

    There are bigoted scientists and believers, and there are open minded people, as we.

    Completely agreed... There are people on both ends of the spectrum in every category. Being theistic or atheistic doesn't automatically make someone more or less intelligent or open-minded.

    Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in?
    Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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    RichardM1
    wrote on last edited by
    #152

    Sorry I didn't respond earlier, I opened it in a firefox page, and lost track of it till now.

    Ian Shlasko wrote:

    That's a stretch... I mean, you can reproduce the experiments that prove scientific theories and laws... You can see the results with your own eyes.

    Not trusting observation is mainly about Eastern religions, and existential angsty new age relativistic there-is-no-truth crap. I believe in observation, math, physics, biology, responsibility, and a pays-your-money-and-takes-your-choice kind of philosophy.

    Ian Shlasko wrote:

    Granted, the vast majority of people DO just believe the science they read in books, but they have the option to verify it for themselves. No such option exists in religion.

    I agree about the vast majority of people, but I disagree about religion. I have made observations of what happens in my life. I can't do repeated experiments on my life, as all my data points are altered by all previous data points, so I can only watch it unfold and take the data as it comes. I'm not saying in a helpless-victim way. My choices change the scenario as I go along, part of why I can't reproduce any experiments. I have read books that attempt to give explanation of the possible bigger pictures. Science does not give that. It gives equations and theories that model the world to different levels of precision, but at the base, is describes what is, not why it is. Even if you could use QM to follow all particles back to the Big Bang (uncertainty be damned), why was the Big Bang? Something of the universe did not cause the universe, because it would not have been around to create it. Something outside the universe must have created it. That, by definition, is super-natural. Given all my experience, I have come to believe that Christ is the Lord, God is His Father, the Apostolic creed, yada yada, etc., etc. I'm sure you have heard it all before. I have verified it to the level of experimental certainty that I believe it, like I do the Big Bang and Quantum mechanics. Maybe more, as I have had direct experience in my life, and am willing to bet my life on it, in the short and long run. I have fewer first hand data points with, say, General Relativity and relativistic velocities and time dilation. :laugh: Seems nobody trusts me with the equipment! I just wanted that tac-nuke for the weekend (shaking head), I was gonna give it back!

    Opacity, th

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    • R RichardM1

      Sorry I didn't respond earlier, I opened it in a firefox page, and lost track of it till now.

      Ian Shlasko wrote:

      That's a stretch... I mean, you can reproduce the experiments that prove scientific theories and laws... You can see the results with your own eyes.

      Not trusting observation is mainly about Eastern religions, and existential angsty new age relativistic there-is-no-truth crap. I believe in observation, math, physics, biology, responsibility, and a pays-your-money-and-takes-your-choice kind of philosophy.

      Ian Shlasko wrote:

      Granted, the vast majority of people DO just believe the science they read in books, but they have the option to verify it for themselves. No such option exists in religion.

      I agree about the vast majority of people, but I disagree about religion. I have made observations of what happens in my life. I can't do repeated experiments on my life, as all my data points are altered by all previous data points, so I can only watch it unfold and take the data as it comes. I'm not saying in a helpless-victim way. My choices change the scenario as I go along, part of why I can't reproduce any experiments. I have read books that attempt to give explanation of the possible bigger pictures. Science does not give that. It gives equations and theories that model the world to different levels of precision, but at the base, is describes what is, not why it is. Even if you could use QM to follow all particles back to the Big Bang (uncertainty be damned), why was the Big Bang? Something of the universe did not cause the universe, because it would not have been around to create it. Something outside the universe must have created it. That, by definition, is super-natural. Given all my experience, I have come to believe that Christ is the Lord, God is His Father, the Apostolic creed, yada yada, etc., etc. I'm sure you have heard it all before. I have verified it to the level of experimental certainty that I believe it, like I do the Big Bang and Quantum mechanics. Maybe more, as I have had direct experience in my life, and am willing to bet my life on it, in the short and long run. I have fewer first hand data points with, say, General Relativity and relativistic velocities and time dilation. :laugh: Seems nobody trusts me with the equipment! I just wanted that tac-nuke for the weekend (shaking head), I was gonna give it back!

      Opacity, th

      I Offline
      I Offline
      Ian Shlasko
      wrote on last edited by
      #153

      RichardM1 wrote:

      Science does not give that. It gives equations and theories that model the world to different levels of precision, but at the base, is describes what is, not why it is.

      Partly agreed... Science tries to explain the cause and effect, which is in some sense the "why." Objects fall toward the Earth because the mass of the Earth (somehow) causes gravitational force... Of course, it doesn't have all of the answers yet. It doesn't, however, attempt to explain the greater purpose, true. Maybe it just tries to teach us that there doesn't have to be one. Why are we here, in the greater sense? Why is the Earth the Earth? Why are we what we are? The only answer science has is that there is no answer. It's a matter of statistics and chance. Out of the billions and billions of galaxies and stars, it's a statistical certainty that at least one would become capable of supporting life (Likely many). With the amount of elapsed time, and the sheer number of chemical reactions going on, just on this planet, it would have been statistically likely for some form of life to develop... Or maybe it was just a fluke. Personally, and I apologize if this offends, but personally I believe one of the real reasons for religion is that people have trouble dealing with the idea that there may NOT be a reason for being here, or a meaning of life, or any sort of purpose besides the mere continuation of life.

      RichardM1 wrote:

      Something of the universe did not cause the universe, because it would not have been around to create it. Something outside the universe must have created it. That, by definition, is super-natural.

      Now, this is a conversation I've had before. It usually goes something like this: Theist: "Well something must have created the universe. That's God." Atheist: "Well what created "god"?" Theist: "God has always been here." Atheist: "Maybe the universe has always been here." The point is, of course, that if everything has to be created by something, then why is "god" exempt? Science, of course, can't tell us where the universe came from. Maybe it always existed, and the "Big Crunch" theory is true, and it just keeps exploding and collapsing, forever. Maybe there are other dimensions, and this one just formed in some way similar to how the planets formed from the galaxy, in which case the question is how all of the dimensions came to be. We may never know the answer.

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      • I Ian Shlasko

        RichardM1 wrote:

        Science does not give that. It gives equations and theories that model the world to different levels of precision, but at the base, is describes what is, not why it is.

        Partly agreed... Science tries to explain the cause and effect, which is in some sense the "why." Objects fall toward the Earth because the mass of the Earth (somehow) causes gravitational force... Of course, it doesn't have all of the answers yet. It doesn't, however, attempt to explain the greater purpose, true. Maybe it just tries to teach us that there doesn't have to be one. Why are we here, in the greater sense? Why is the Earth the Earth? Why are we what we are? The only answer science has is that there is no answer. It's a matter of statistics and chance. Out of the billions and billions of galaxies and stars, it's a statistical certainty that at least one would become capable of supporting life (Likely many). With the amount of elapsed time, and the sheer number of chemical reactions going on, just on this planet, it would have been statistically likely for some form of life to develop... Or maybe it was just a fluke. Personally, and I apologize if this offends, but personally I believe one of the real reasons for religion is that people have trouble dealing with the idea that there may NOT be a reason for being here, or a meaning of life, or any sort of purpose besides the mere continuation of life.

        RichardM1 wrote:

        Something of the universe did not cause the universe, because it would not have been around to create it. Something outside the universe must have created it. That, by definition, is super-natural.

        Now, this is a conversation I've had before. It usually goes something like this: Theist: "Well something must have created the universe. That's God." Atheist: "Well what created "god"?" Theist: "God has always been here." Atheist: "Maybe the universe has always been here." The point is, of course, that if everything has to be created by something, then why is "god" exempt? Science, of course, can't tell us where the universe came from. Maybe it always existed, and the "Big Crunch" theory is true, and it just keeps exploding and collapsing, forever. Maybe there are other dimensions, and this one just formed in some way similar to how the planets formed from the galaxy, in which case the question is how all of the dimensions came to be. We may never know the answer.

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        RichardM1
        wrote on last edited by
        #154

        I will answer this in parts :)

        Ian Shlasko wrote:

        It doesn't, however, attempt to explain the greater purpose, true. Maybe it just tries to teach us that there doesn't have to be one.

        Science does not try to teach us anything. We discover things through science. 'Sciences' current answer to a greater purpose is that it has no data. This is like when people say evolution created something. 'Evolution', like 'scientific method' is the description of a process. The process described in evolution is random mutation, survival based on a fitness function. Not a directed process. If something else effected the fitness function, this does not change our description of the process, until we know about it.

        Ian Shlasko wrote:

        It's a matter of statistics and chance. Out of the billions and billions of galaxies and stars, it's a statistical certainty that at least one would become capable of supporting life

        Statistics and chance. I spent years in modeling and simulation. We would apply probabilistic outcomes to things that were too complex for us to model. Given our current physical constants, the probability approaches, but does not get to, one. If the constants differed by much, the current wisdom is that life would not be possible.

        Ian Shlasko wrote:

        Personally, and I apologize if this offends, but personally I believe one of the real reasons for religion is that people have trouble dealing with the idea that there may NOT be a reason for being here, or a meaning of life, or any sort of purpose besides the mere continuation of life.

        No offense taken, and none meant here: I personally believe that a lot of atheists disbelieve because they do not want to be responsible for their thoughts and actions, that if they thought they had a reason for being here, they would have to go out of their way to figure out what it was and accomplish it. I know I want to disbelieve for all those reasons. But for the same reason I won't accept 'above unity generators', I won't accept my disbelief. For me, the data does not support it.

        Opacity, the new Transparency.

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        • R RichardM1

          I will answer this in parts :)

          Ian Shlasko wrote:

          It doesn't, however, attempt to explain the greater purpose, true. Maybe it just tries to teach us that there doesn't have to be one.

          Science does not try to teach us anything. We discover things through science. 'Sciences' current answer to a greater purpose is that it has no data. This is like when people say evolution created something. 'Evolution', like 'scientific method' is the description of a process. The process described in evolution is random mutation, survival based on a fitness function. Not a directed process. If something else effected the fitness function, this does not change our description of the process, until we know about it.

          Ian Shlasko wrote:

          It's a matter of statistics and chance. Out of the billions and billions of galaxies and stars, it's a statistical certainty that at least one would become capable of supporting life

          Statistics and chance. I spent years in modeling and simulation. We would apply probabilistic outcomes to things that were too complex for us to model. Given our current physical constants, the probability approaches, but does not get to, one. If the constants differed by much, the current wisdom is that life would not be possible.

          Ian Shlasko wrote:

          Personally, and I apologize if this offends, but personally I believe one of the real reasons for religion is that people have trouble dealing with the idea that there may NOT be a reason for being here, or a meaning of life, or any sort of purpose besides the mere continuation of life.

          No offense taken, and none meant here: I personally believe that a lot of atheists disbelieve because they do not want to be responsible for their thoughts and actions, that if they thought they had a reason for being here, they would have to go out of their way to figure out what it was and accomplish it. I know I want to disbelieve for all those reasons. But for the same reason I won't accept 'above unity generators', I won't accept my disbelief. For me, the data does not support it.

          Opacity, the new Transparency.

          I Offline
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          Ian Shlasko
          wrote on last edited by
          #155

          RichardM1 wrote:

          Given our current physical constants, the probability approaches, but does not get to, one. If the constants differed by much, the current wisdom is that life would not be possible.

          Life as WE know it would not be possible. It's hard to imagine what the universe would be like with different constants... Maybe some other form of life would exist.

          RichardM1 wrote:

          No offense taken, and none meant here: I personally believe that a lot of atheists disbelieve because they do not want to be responsible for their thoughts and actions, that if they thought they had a reason for being here, they would have to go out of their way to figure out what it was and accomplish it.

          I'm sure there are some like that. Personally, I "disbelieve" because the idea of a deity just doesn't make sense to me, and I don't need a religion to give me a reason to live. As I mentioned in my previous post, I don't think there's a "reason" for humanity. Humans are just animals, and we live because our instincts drive us to live. Of course, everyone needs their own reason to persevere, and I think we each need to find our own. I've decided that my reason for living is to contribute to society as much as I can, in the short time I have. Right now, I do that with my novels, since my programming skills have so far just amounted to moving numbers around for rich people... Heh. My grandfather used to say, and I don't remember who he was quoting (Thomas Paine, I think, but not sure)... "I am a citizen of the world, and my religion is to do good." That's sufficient for me.

          RichardM1 wrote:

          But for the same reason I won't accept 'above unity generators', I won't accept my disbelief. For me, the data does not support it.

          Not familiar with that... I'll have to look that up.

          Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in?
          Author of the Guardians Saga (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novels)

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          • I Ian Shlasko

            RichardM1 wrote:

            Science does not give that. It gives equations and theories that model the world to different levels of precision, but at the base, is describes what is, not why it is.

            Partly agreed... Science tries to explain the cause and effect, which is in some sense the "why." Objects fall toward the Earth because the mass of the Earth (somehow) causes gravitational force... Of course, it doesn't have all of the answers yet. It doesn't, however, attempt to explain the greater purpose, true. Maybe it just tries to teach us that there doesn't have to be one. Why are we here, in the greater sense? Why is the Earth the Earth? Why are we what we are? The only answer science has is that there is no answer. It's a matter of statistics and chance. Out of the billions and billions of galaxies and stars, it's a statistical certainty that at least one would become capable of supporting life (Likely many). With the amount of elapsed time, and the sheer number of chemical reactions going on, just on this planet, it would have been statistically likely for some form of life to develop... Or maybe it was just a fluke. Personally, and I apologize if this offends, but personally I believe one of the real reasons for religion is that people have trouble dealing with the idea that there may NOT be a reason for being here, or a meaning of life, or any sort of purpose besides the mere continuation of life.

            RichardM1 wrote:

            Something of the universe did not cause the universe, because it would not have been around to create it. Something outside the universe must have created it. That, by definition, is super-natural.

            Now, this is a conversation I've had before. It usually goes something like this: Theist: "Well something must have created the universe. That's God." Atheist: "Well what created "god"?" Theist: "God has always been here." Atheist: "Maybe the universe has always been here." The point is, of course, that if everything has to be created by something, then why is "god" exempt? Science, of course, can't tell us where the universe came from. Maybe it always existed, and the "Big Crunch" theory is true, and it just keeps exploding and collapsing, forever. Maybe there are other dimensions, and this one just formed in some way similar to how the planets formed from the galaxy, in which case the question is how all of the dimensions came to be. We may never know the answer.

            R Offline
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            RichardM1
            wrote on last edited by
            #156

            Ian Shlasko wrote:

            Now, this is a conversation I've had before. It usually goes something like this: Theist: "Well something must have created the universe. That's God." Atheist: "Well what created "god"?" Theist: "God has always been here." Atheist: "Maybe the universe has always been here."

            Currrent theory does not support that. Maybe there was, but the atheist invoking this argument is going outside of nature, into the realm of the supernatural, which the atheist does not believe in.

            The point is, of course, that if everything has to be created by something, then why is "god" exempt?

            What we know is pertinent to the universe, it is all we can observe. God is clearly external to the universe, and does not have the same constraints. Christianity state there is a beginning and end to time. Current theory, says there is a beginning, and might define the end as heat death. Christianity says there is an 'eternity' outside of time. Current theory does not discuss it.

            Science, of course, can't tell us where the universe came from. Maybe it always existed, and the "Big Crunch" theory is true, and it just keeps exploding and collapsing, forever. Maybe there are other dimensions, and this one just formed in some way similar to how the planets formed from the galaxy, in which case the question is how all of the dimensions came to be. We may never know the answer.

            That is a lot of maybes, all of which fall outside of current theory. I don't mind if you speculate, but understand that it is either fantastic, or religious, speculation.

            I mean, at one point, we didn't know anything but the Earth, Moon, and Sun existed... Then we learned about the solar system... Then we learned about galaxies... Then about galactic clusters and the universe in general... Maybe there's another step beyond that. Science, of course, isn't afraid to say "I don't know" when faced with something currently unprovable. Religion tries to create an answer to everything.

            The best current theory on God is "I don't know", unprovable and all. Some religions may attempt to create an answer to everything, by which I take it you mean explain everything in detail. Christianity has the answer to the big picture, but does not attempt to override scientific answers. Some people who are running organized religions do, but I'm Protestant, and we are totally unorganized. If

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            • I Ian Shlasko

              RichardM1 wrote:

              Science does not give that. It gives equations and theories that model the world to different levels of precision, but at the base, is describes what is, not why it is.

              Partly agreed... Science tries to explain the cause and effect, which is in some sense the "why." Objects fall toward the Earth because the mass of the Earth (somehow) causes gravitational force... Of course, it doesn't have all of the answers yet. It doesn't, however, attempt to explain the greater purpose, true. Maybe it just tries to teach us that there doesn't have to be one. Why are we here, in the greater sense? Why is the Earth the Earth? Why are we what we are? The only answer science has is that there is no answer. It's a matter of statistics and chance. Out of the billions and billions of galaxies and stars, it's a statistical certainty that at least one would become capable of supporting life (Likely many). With the amount of elapsed time, and the sheer number of chemical reactions going on, just on this planet, it would have been statistically likely for some form of life to develop... Or maybe it was just a fluke. Personally, and I apologize if this offends, but personally I believe one of the real reasons for religion is that people have trouble dealing with the idea that there may NOT be a reason for being here, or a meaning of life, or any sort of purpose besides the mere continuation of life.

              RichardM1 wrote:

              Something of the universe did not cause the universe, because it would not have been around to create it. Something outside the universe must have created it. That, by definition, is super-natural.

              Now, this is a conversation I've had before. It usually goes something like this: Theist: "Well something must have created the universe. That's God." Atheist: "Well what created "god"?" Theist: "God has always been here." Atheist: "Maybe the universe has always been here." The point is, of course, that if everything has to be created by something, then why is "god" exempt? Science, of course, can't tell us where the universe came from. Maybe it always existed, and the "Big Crunch" theory is true, and it just keeps exploding and collapsing, forever. Maybe there are other dimensions, and this one just formed in some way similar to how the planets formed from the galaxy, in which case the question is how all of the dimensions came to be. We may never know the answer.

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              RichardM1
              wrote on last edited by
              #157

              Ian Shlasko wrote:

              Heh, I'm not too keen on general relativity... I forget whether I said it in this thread or another, but I think that's too complex and convoluted to be right... Nature tends to work in very simple ways, that are only complex through sheer magnitude. Molecular interactions are, at their core, incredibly simple... The four basic forces work in tandem with inertia... But the sheer speed and number of such interactions create an infinite variety of more complex situations. I think there's probably kind of force we haven't figured out how to measure yet, maybe related to the so-called "dark matter," that would explain the effects of "time dilation" and such. Of course, I have no proof, and I don't have the expertise to find proof, so right now, I'm comfortable just saying "I don't know."

              GR really has an elegance to it. It is tough to wrap your head around, and I only get pieces at a time, and some pieces never at all. Light turns, not because of gravity, but because time is going slower on the side closer to a massive object, so it turns in that direction. 'Gravitational' acceleration may be a manifestation of the same change in the rate of time flow. QM is another one that can't all fit in the brain at once, for me, but that the pieces I know are all pretty, and pretty weird. But yes, there is so much out more there than we know, or can know!

              Opacity, the new Transparency.

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              • R RichardM1

                Ian Shlasko wrote:

                Now, this is a conversation I've had before. It usually goes something like this: Theist: "Well something must have created the universe. That's God." Atheist: "Well what created "god"?" Theist: "God has always been here." Atheist: "Maybe the universe has always been here."

                Currrent theory does not support that. Maybe there was, but the atheist invoking this argument is going outside of nature, into the realm of the supernatural, which the atheist does not believe in.

                The point is, of course, that if everything has to be created by something, then why is "god" exempt?

                What we know is pertinent to the universe, it is all we can observe. God is clearly external to the universe, and does not have the same constraints. Christianity state there is a beginning and end to time. Current theory, says there is a beginning, and might define the end as heat death. Christianity says there is an 'eternity' outside of time. Current theory does not discuss it.

                Science, of course, can't tell us where the universe came from. Maybe it always existed, and the "Big Crunch" theory is true, and it just keeps exploding and collapsing, forever. Maybe there are other dimensions, and this one just formed in some way similar to how the planets formed from the galaxy, in which case the question is how all of the dimensions came to be. We may never know the answer.

                That is a lot of maybes, all of which fall outside of current theory. I don't mind if you speculate, but understand that it is either fantastic, or religious, speculation.

                I mean, at one point, we didn't know anything but the Earth, Moon, and Sun existed... Then we learned about the solar system... Then we learned about galaxies... Then about galactic clusters and the universe in general... Maybe there's another step beyond that. Science, of course, isn't afraid to say "I don't know" when faced with something currently unprovable. Religion tries to create an answer to everything.

                The best current theory on God is "I don't know", unprovable and all. Some religions may attempt to create an answer to everything, by which I take it you mean explain everything in detail. Christianity has the answer to the big picture, but does not attempt to override scientific answers. Some people who are running organized religions do, but I'm Protestant, and we are totally unorganized. If

                I Offline
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                Ian Shlasko
                wrote on last edited by
                #158

                RichardM1 wrote:

                Currrent theory does not support that. Maybe there was, but the atheist invoking this argument is going outside of nature, into the realm of the supernatural, which the atheist does not believe in.

                Current theory can't explain anything from before the big bang. All we can do is speculate.

                RichardM1 wrote:

                What we know is pertinent to the universe, it is all we can observe. God is clearly external to the universe, and does not have the same constraints.

                Or from the perspective of an atheist, "God" is whatever you define him to be.

                RichardM1 wrote:

                Current theory, says there is a beginning, and might define the end as heat death.

                Who says the big bang was the beginning, or that the "heat death" (I assume you mean the theorized big crunch) is the end? Maybe it just keeps imploding and exploding, and has been doing so infinitely in both directions. I'm not saying I believe this to be true, as I neither believe nor disbelieve it... I'm saying science simply can't give an answer to this, and may never be able to.

                RichardM1 wrote:

                That is a lot of maybes, all of which fall outside of current theory. I don't mind if you speculate, but understand that it is either fantastic, or religious, speculation.

                It's entirely speculation, as I have absolutely no evidence whatsoever... The point I'm trying to make is that we simply don't know what's "outside" the universe, if there is an "outside"... Claiming the existence of a "creator" is no more credible than claiming the existence of other dimensions or infinite time.

                RichardM1 wrote:

                The best current theory on God is "I don't know", unprovable and all.

                Agreed. I won't go as far to say that "god" definitely does not exist, as I don't think that statement is any more sensible than saying one definitely does exist. I just think it unlikely. I look at nature and physics and such, and it all seems simple and mechanical, even if I'm not very good with the equations... It seems like everything is just an extension of particle physics, and there's no room for any sort of "creator" pulling the strings. I'd welcome anyone to prove me wrong, but I don't think that likely to happen.

                RichardM1 wrote:

                Christian

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                • R RichardM1

                  Ian Shlasko wrote:

                  Heh, I'm not too keen on general relativity... I forget whether I said it in this thread or another, but I think that's too complex and convoluted to be right... Nature tends to work in very simple ways, that are only complex through sheer magnitude. Molecular interactions are, at their core, incredibly simple... The four basic forces work in tandem with inertia... But the sheer speed and number of such interactions create an infinite variety of more complex situations. I think there's probably kind of force we haven't figured out how to measure yet, maybe related to the so-called "dark matter," that would explain the effects of "time dilation" and such. Of course, I have no proof, and I don't have the expertise to find proof, so right now, I'm comfortable just saying "I don't know."

                  GR really has an elegance to it. It is tough to wrap your head around, and I only get pieces at a time, and some pieces never at all. Light turns, not because of gravity, but because time is going slower on the side closer to a massive object, so it turns in that direction. 'Gravitational' acceleration may be a manifestation of the same change in the rate of time flow. QM is another one that can't all fit in the brain at once, for me, but that the pieces I know are all pretty, and pretty weird. But yes, there is so much out more there than we know, or can know!

                  Opacity, the new Transparency.

                  I Offline
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                  Ian Shlasko
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #159

                  Yeah, it's a difficult theory, and maybe I have trouble with it because I can't quite wrap my head around it.

                  RichardM1 wrote:

                  Light turns, not because of gravity, but because time is going slower on the side closer to a massive object, so it turns in that direction.

                  See, that's what bugs me... I have trouble coming to terms with time dilation. I admit I don't really understand a lot of the research and theories, but the concept of time actually slowing down... Just doesn't sit right with me. Perception of time, sure, but not actual time... I start to wonder if the time dilation they've "seen" in experiments might have been the high speeds affecting the instrumentation... The ruler stretching, as opposed to the distance shrinking, if you get my drift. The trick is trying to measure something when we rely on that same thing to observe it. Sorry, after midnight, so not sure if that makes sense... I mean all of our observations take time, and everything we "see" is delayed by the time light takes to reach our eyes... Ugh, long weekend, and I can't really describe this coherently right now... Suffice it to say, I think time is constant, and that general relativity is trying to compensate for something we haven't actually discovered yet. Maybe it's something like the theoretical "tachyons," or maybe it's something to do with "dark matter," or something else entirely... I don't know, really... Something about it just doesn't sit right with me.

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                    Yeah, it's a difficult theory, and maybe I have trouble with it because I can't quite wrap my head around it.

                    RichardM1 wrote:

                    Light turns, not because of gravity, but because time is going slower on the side closer to a massive object, so it turns in that direction.

                    See, that's what bugs me... I have trouble coming to terms with time dilation. I admit I don't really understand a lot of the research and theories, but the concept of time actually slowing down... Just doesn't sit right with me. Perception of time, sure, but not actual time... I start to wonder if the time dilation they've "seen" in experiments might have been the high speeds affecting the instrumentation... The ruler stretching, as opposed to the distance shrinking, if you get my drift. The trick is trying to measure something when we rely on that same thing to observe it. Sorry, after midnight, so not sure if that makes sense... I mean all of our observations take time, and everything we "see" is delayed by the time light takes to reach our eyes... Ugh, long weekend, and I can't really describe this coherently right now... Suffice it to say, I think time is constant, and that general relativity is trying to compensate for something we haven't actually discovered yet. Maybe it's something like the theoretical "tachyons," or maybe it's something to do with "dark matter," or something else entirely... I don't know, really... Something about it just doesn't sit right with me.

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                    RichardM1
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #160

                    Ian Shlasko wrote:

                    See, that's what bugs me... I have trouble coming to terms with time dilation.

                    That is definitely one of the hard-to-get-your-head-around parts! Let me ask you, how do you slow down the perception of time? Time is the thing that makes perception possible. 'Time' seems to be a constant for all things in your frame of reference. I used to fall into the 'perception' trap - it 'looks' short coming at you, since it almost catches up with it's own light, or something. Here is the learning course on relativity! On sale! $35 download, 12 hours of lecture in MP3[^] The guy knows his stuff, and there are other good courses.

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                    • I Ian Shlasko

                      RichardM1 wrote:

                      Given our current physical constants, the probability approaches, but does not get to, one. If the constants differed by much, the current wisdom is that life would not be possible.

                      Life as WE know it would not be possible. It's hard to imagine what the universe would be like with different constants... Maybe some other form of life would exist.

                      RichardM1 wrote:

                      No offense taken, and none meant here: I personally believe that a lot of atheists disbelieve because they do not want to be responsible for their thoughts and actions, that if they thought they had a reason for being here, they would have to go out of their way to figure out what it was and accomplish it.

                      I'm sure there are some like that. Personally, I "disbelieve" because the idea of a deity just doesn't make sense to me, and I don't need a religion to give me a reason to live. As I mentioned in my previous post, I don't think there's a "reason" for humanity. Humans are just animals, and we live because our instincts drive us to live. Of course, everyone needs their own reason to persevere, and I think we each need to find our own. I've decided that my reason for living is to contribute to society as much as I can, in the short time I have. Right now, I do that with my novels, since my programming skills have so far just amounted to moving numbers around for rich people... Heh. My grandfather used to say, and I don't remember who he was quoting (Thomas Paine, I think, but not sure)... "I am a citizen of the world, and my religion is to do good." That's sufficient for me.

                      RichardM1 wrote:

                      But for the same reason I won't accept 'above unity generators', I won't accept my disbelief. For me, the data does not support it.

                      Not familiar with that... I'll have to look that up.

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                      RichardM1
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #161

                      Ian Shlasko wrote:

                      Not familiar with that... I'll have to look that up.

                      Above unity generator claims to produce more energy than is put into the system. The street name is perpetual motion machine.

                      Ian Shlasko wrote:

                      Life as WE know it would not be possible. It's hard to imagine what the universe would be like with different constants... Maybe some other form of life would exist.

                      There have been some simulations run using different sets 0f constants. IIRC, the majority don't survive very long, either burning out or unable to form complex particles that could form atoms

                      Ian Shlasko wrote:

                      My grandfather used to say, and I don't remember who he was quoting (Thomas Paine, I think, but not sure)... "I am a citizen of the world, and my religion is to do good." That's sufficient for me.

                      What country are you a citizen of? Because the world won't come to save you. No matter how much you claim its citizenship.

                      Opacity, the new Transparency.

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                      • R RichardM1

                        Ian Shlasko wrote:

                        See, that's what bugs me... I have trouble coming to terms with time dilation.

                        That is definitely one of the hard-to-get-your-head-around parts! Let me ask you, how do you slow down the perception of time? Time is the thing that makes perception possible. 'Time' seems to be a constant for all things in your frame of reference. I used to fall into the 'perception' trap - it 'looks' short coming at you, since it almost catches up with it's own light, or something. Here is the learning course on relativity! On sale! $35 download, 12 hours of lecture in MP3[^] The guy knows his stuff, and there are other good courses.

                        Opacity, the new Transparency.

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                        Ian Shlasko
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #162

                        RichardM1 wrote:

                        Let me ask you, how do you slow down the perception of time? Time is the thing that makes perception possible.

                        Something moving away from you at a significant fraction of the speed of light would appear to slow down... I wonder if measurement devices on-board would be affected in a similar way... Would the electronics on-board experience a similar effect, if the speed of light is limited? Like a chronometer might slow down, because the current slows... I don't know... Just random thoughts.

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                        • R RichardM1

                          Ian Shlasko wrote:

                          Not familiar with that... I'll have to look that up.

                          Above unity generator claims to produce more energy than is put into the system. The street name is perpetual motion machine.

                          Ian Shlasko wrote:

                          Life as WE know it would not be possible. It's hard to imagine what the universe would be like with different constants... Maybe some other form of life would exist.

                          There have been some simulations run using different sets 0f constants. IIRC, the majority don't survive very long, either burning out or unable to form complex particles that could form atoms

                          Ian Shlasko wrote:

                          My grandfather used to say, and I don't remember who he was quoting (Thomas Paine, I think, but not sure)... "I am a citizen of the world, and my religion is to do good." That's sufficient for me.

                          What country are you a citizen of? Because the world won't come to save you. No matter how much you claim its citizenship.

                          Opacity, the new Transparency.

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                          Ian Shlasko
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #163

                          RichardM1 wrote:

                          There have been some simulations run using different sets 0f constants. IIRC, the majority don't survive very long, either burning out or unable to form complex particles that could form atoms

                          I don't know... All we can do is speculate... Who knows how the basic laws of physics would be effected by a completely different universe?

                          RichardM1 wrote:

                          What country are you a citizen of? Because the world won't come to save you. No matter how much you claim its citizenship.

                          I think the point is more like, "I'm a member of the human race," as opposed to "I'm with these guys, and everyone else has to die" :)

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                          • I Ian Shlasko

                            RichardM1 wrote:

                            There have been some simulations run using different sets 0f constants. IIRC, the majority don't survive very long, either burning out or unable to form complex particles that could form atoms

                            I don't know... All we can do is speculate... Who knows how the basic laws of physics would be effected by a completely different universe?

                            RichardM1 wrote:

                            What country are you a citizen of? Because the world won't come to save you. No matter how much you claim its citizenship.

                            I think the point is more like, "I'm a member of the human race," as opposed to "I'm with these guys, and everyone else has to die" :)

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                            RichardM1
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #164

                            Ian Shlasko wrote:

                            I think the point is more like, "I'm a member of the human race," as opposed to "I'm with these guys, and everyone else has to die"

                            I think the point is more : "If I'm in trouble, who can I count on to help me?" I help people, as much as I can. US and foreign. Who can I count on to help me when I'm down? Everyone else doesn't need to die.

                            Opacity, the new Transparency.

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                            • I Ian Shlasko

                              RichardM1 wrote:

                              Let me ask you, how do you slow down the perception of time? Time is the thing that makes perception possible.

                              Something moving away from you at a significant fraction of the speed of light would appear to slow down... I wonder if measurement devices on-board would be affected in a similar way... Would the electronics on-board experience a similar effect, if the speed of light is limited? Like a chronometer might slow down, because the current slows... I don't know... Just random thoughts.

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                              RichardM1
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #165

                              Ian Shlasko wrote:

                              Something moving away from you at a significant fraction of the speed of light would appear to slow down

                              Yes, and something coming towards would appear to speed up. But if you take those illusions that into account, they both are still time dilated.

                              Ian Shlasko wrote:

                              Would the electronics on-board experience a similar effect, if the speed of light is limited? Like a chronometer might slow down, because the current slows

                              Nothing is an effect. No matter what your frame of reference, the speed of light, in all directions is c. If we do the experiment on Earth, it is c. If we do it in a frame of reference moving at .9_c_ wrt Earth, the speed of light in all directions is c. The only way this works is that time is not the same for all frames of reference.

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                              • I Ian Shlasko

                                RichardM1 wrote:

                                Currrent theory does not support that. Maybe there was, but the atheist invoking this argument is going outside of nature, into the realm of the supernatural, which the atheist does not believe in.

                                Current theory can't explain anything from before the big bang. All we can do is speculate.

                                RichardM1 wrote:

                                What we know is pertinent to the universe, it is all we can observe. God is clearly external to the universe, and does not have the same constraints.

                                Or from the perspective of an atheist, "God" is whatever you define him to be.

                                RichardM1 wrote:

                                Current theory, says there is a beginning, and might define the end as heat death.

                                Who says the big bang was the beginning, or that the "heat death" (I assume you mean the theorized big crunch) is the end? Maybe it just keeps imploding and exploding, and has been doing so infinitely in both directions. I'm not saying I believe this to be true, as I neither believe nor disbelieve it... I'm saying science simply can't give an answer to this, and may never be able to.

                                RichardM1 wrote:

                                That is a lot of maybes, all of which fall outside of current theory. I don't mind if you speculate, but understand that it is either fantastic, or religious, speculation.

                                It's entirely speculation, as I have absolutely no evidence whatsoever... The point I'm trying to make is that we simply don't know what's "outside" the universe, if there is an "outside"... Claiming the existence of a "creator" is no more credible than claiming the existence of other dimensions or infinite time.

                                RichardM1 wrote:

                                The best current theory on God is "I don't know", unprovable and all.

                                Agreed. I won't go as far to say that "god" definitely does not exist, as I don't think that statement is any more sensible than saying one definitely does exist. I just think it unlikely. I look at nature and physics and such, and it all seems simple and mechanical, even if I'm not very good with the equations... It seems like everything is just an extension of particle physics, and there's no room for any sort of "creator" pulling the strings. I'd welcome anyone to prove me wrong, but I don't think that likely to happen.

                                RichardM1 wrote:

                                Christian

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                                RichardM1
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #166

                                Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                Who says the big bang was the beginning, or that the "heat death" (I assume you mean the theorized big crunch) is the end?

                                "Heat death" is not big crunch. Big crunch is now much lower probability, as the discovery of negative energy makes it higher probably that the universe will continue to accelerate its expansion. Eventually, entropy will be maximized. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_death_of_the_universe[^]

                                Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                The point I'm trying to make is that we simply don't know what's "outside" the universe, if there is an "outside"... Claiming the existence of a "creator" is no more credible than claiming the existence of other dimensions or infinite time.

                                There is no evidence for anything outside of the universe. If photons got from it could get here, it would be would be in the universe, by definition. I understand you argument. I have personal observation that convinces me. YMMV.

                                Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                Claims to have it

                                I know it has it. You disbelieve, so YMMV. [shrug]

                                Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                I look at nature and physics and such, and it all seems simple and mechanical, even if I'm not very good with the equations... It seems like everything is just an extension of particle physics, and there's no room for any sort of "creator" pulling the strings

                                You think there is no room for a Creator because we understand stuff. I think that stuff you think fills up the room is the product of God. So is all the stuff we don't understand. Calculus is part of what convinced me that God exists.

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                                  Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                  I think the point is more like, "I'm a member of the human race," as opposed to "I'm with these guys, and everyone else has to die"

                                  I think the point is more : "If I'm in trouble, who can I count on to help me?" I help people, as much as I can. US and foreign. Who can I count on to help me when I'm down? Everyone else doesn't need to die.

                                  Opacity, the new Transparency.

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                                  Ian Shlasko
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #167

                                  Well I can't speak to the original quote, but the way my grandfather saw it, and the way I see it, is as I said.

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                                  • R RichardM1

                                    Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                    Who says the big bang was the beginning, or that the "heat death" (I assume you mean the theorized big crunch) is the end?

                                    "Heat death" is not big crunch. Big crunch is now much lower probability, as the discovery of negative energy makes it higher probably that the universe will continue to accelerate its expansion. Eventually, entropy will be maximized. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_death_of_the_universe[^]

                                    Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                    The point I'm trying to make is that we simply don't know what's "outside" the universe, if there is an "outside"... Claiming the existence of a "creator" is no more credible than claiming the existence of other dimensions or infinite time.

                                    There is no evidence for anything outside of the universe. If photons got from it could get here, it would be would be in the universe, by definition. I understand you argument. I have personal observation that convinces me. YMMV.

                                    Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                    Claims to have it

                                    I know it has it. You disbelieve, so YMMV. [shrug]

                                    Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                    I look at nature and physics and such, and it all seems simple and mechanical, even if I'm not very good with the equations... It seems like everything is just an extension of particle physics, and there's no room for any sort of "creator" pulling the strings

                                    You think there is no room for a Creator because we understand stuff. I think that stuff you think fills up the room is the product of God. So is all the stuff we don't understand. Calculus is part of what convinced me that God exists.

                                    Opacity, the new Transparency.

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                                    Ian Shlasko
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #168

                                    RichardM1 wrote:

                                    I understand you argument. I have personal observation that convinces me. YMMV.

                                    Fair enough.

                                    RichardM1 wrote:

                                    You think there is no room for a Creator because we understand stuff.

                                    Not quite. I think there's no room for a creator, because I look at what we do understand, and see the trend. I see nothing that would suggest any sort of thinking creator, and since no one has been able to present any real evidence of one, I discount it as improbable.

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                                    • R RichardM1

                                      Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                      Something moving away from you at a significant fraction of the speed of light would appear to slow down

                                      Yes, and something coming towards would appear to speed up. But if you take those illusions that into account, they both are still time dilated.

                                      Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                      Would the electronics on-board experience a similar effect, if the speed of light is limited? Like a chronometer might slow down, because the current slows

                                      Nothing is an effect. No matter what your frame of reference, the speed of light, in all directions is c. If we do the experiment on Earth, it is c. If we do it in a frame of reference moving at .9_c_ wrt Earth, the speed of light in all directions is c. The only way this works is that time is not the same for all frames of reference.

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                                      Ian Shlasko
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #169

                                      RichardM1 wrote:

                                      Yes, and something coming towards would appear to speed up. But if you take those illusions that into account, they both are still time dilated.

                                      But that's not time speeding up. That's our perception of time being altered. It seems to move slower or faster, because the light that we use to perceive its speed has a finite limit. The time in transit should still be the same...

                                      RichardM1 wrote:

                                      Nothing is an effect. No matter what your frame of reference, the speed of light, in all directions is c. If we do the experiment on Earth, it is c. If we do it in a frame of reference moving at .9c wrt Earth, the speed of light in all directions is c. The only way this works is that time is not the same for all frames of reference.

                                      That's another thing that bugs me... I understand the concept, but it just doesn't make sense to me that it should move the same speed, regardless of the frame of reference. I mean, nothing else in nature follows that rule, right? Everything else goes by simple forces and inertia... Apply a force vector, and you change the velocity... So I wonder why light should ALWAYS move at the same speed (Modified by the medium)... And faster-than-light travel... General relativity talks about how as an object approaches the speed of light, its mass approaches infinity, so it's impossible to add more velocity... I have a lot of trouble accepting that. Seems to me that no matter how fast you're going, if you shoot something out the back, it'll accelerate you. Again and again, I come back to the so-called "dark matter"... Maybe a vacuum isn't really a vacuum, and the speed of light is really just the terminal velocity of an EM wave. Maybe general relativity is just explaining how friction with this unseen material affects good ol' F=ma... Or maybe I'm completely wrong... *shrug*

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                                      • I Ian Shlasko

                                        RichardM1 wrote:

                                        Yes, and something coming towards would appear to speed up. But if you take those illusions that into account, they both are still time dilated.

                                        But that's not time speeding up. That's our perception of time being altered. It seems to move slower or faster, because the light that we use to perceive its speed has a finite limit. The time in transit should still be the same...

                                        RichardM1 wrote:

                                        Nothing is an effect. No matter what your frame of reference, the speed of light, in all directions is c. If we do the experiment on Earth, it is c. If we do it in a frame of reference moving at .9c wrt Earth, the speed of light in all directions is c. The only way this works is that time is not the same for all frames of reference.

                                        That's another thing that bugs me... I understand the concept, but it just doesn't make sense to me that it should move the same speed, regardless of the frame of reference. I mean, nothing else in nature follows that rule, right? Everything else goes by simple forces and inertia... Apply a force vector, and you change the velocity... So I wonder why light should ALWAYS move at the same speed (Modified by the medium)... And faster-than-light travel... General relativity talks about how as an object approaches the speed of light, its mass approaches infinity, so it's impossible to add more velocity... I have a lot of trouble accepting that. Seems to me that no matter how fast you're going, if you shoot something out the back, it'll accelerate you. Again and again, I come back to the so-called "dark matter"... Maybe a vacuum isn't really a vacuum, and the speed of light is really just the terminal velocity of an EM wave. Maybe general relativity is just explaining how friction with this unseen material affects good ol' F=ma... Or maybe I'm completely wrong... *shrug*

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                                        RichardM1
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #170

                                        Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                        it just doesn't make sense to me that it should move the same speed, regardless of the frame of reference. I mean, nothing else in nature follows that rule, right?

                                        Not that rule, because that is not the controlling rule. The controlling rule is that all the other rules, including f=ma, apply equally, regardless of your frame of reference. If I am going along at 0.9_c_, relative to you, all the rules apply to me, which means light goes at the speed of light in my frame of reference. Because I am not going 0.9c! I am going 0.9_c_ relative to you! You are going 0.9_c_ relative to ME!

                                        Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                        as an object approaches the speed of light, its mass approaches infinity, so it's impossible to add more velocity

                                        f=ma: 1 kg m/s^2 requires 1 newton. A kg approaches c relative to you At some point, for you, its time dilation reaches 10. You apply a newton to the 1 kg You expect its acceleration to be 1m/s^2. And it is. But it's time dilation is 10, so 10 seconds of your time pass for 1 sec to pass for it, and before its velocity has increased by 1m/s. Turn it around, you have to apply 10 newtons for 1 second of your time to get that same 1m/s change in v. So to you, it seems the mass has increased by a factor of 10, the same as the time dilation.

                                        Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                        So I wonder why light should ALWAYS move at the same speed (Modified by the medium)

                                        Careful, light does not require a medium. But yes, c, in a medium, varies.

                                        Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                        Maybe a vacuum isn't really a vacuum, and the speed of light is really just the terminal velocity of an EM wave.

                                        Light ALWAYS goes c, and never slower. c varies per above.

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                                          RichardM1 wrote:

                                          I understand you argument. I have personal observation that convinces me. YMMV.

                                          Fair enough.

                                          RichardM1 wrote:

                                          You think there is no room for a Creator because we understand stuff.

                                          Not quite. I think there's no room for a creator, because I look at what we do understand, and see the trend. I see nothing that would suggest any sort of thinking creator, and since no one has been able to present any real evidence of one, I discount it as improbable.

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                                          RichardM1
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #171

                                          Ian Shlasko wrote:

                                          I see nothing that would suggest any sort of thinking creator, and since no one has been able to present any real evidence of one, I discount it as improbable.

                                          Do you see anything that precludes a thinking creator? You are applying bias. You shouldn't discount it a improbable, you should admit you have not data that requires, or precludes, a thinking creator, and that you have no idea what the probability is.

                                          Opacity, the new Transparency.

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