Faith and science
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djj55 wrote:
this can not be proved.
I don't think it has been proven. Yet. But there is plenty of evidence - so those that understand the research and theories don't 'believe' as an act of faith, they 'believe' based on evidence.
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
_Maxxx_ wrote:
they 'believe' based on evidence
What one man calls evidence another will say it is not.
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_Maxxx_ wrote:
they 'believe' based on evidence
What one man calls evidence another will say it is not.
Sure, but what 1,000 men call evidence and one man says is not, one can see that, in all probability, the one is a dick head. And I would argue that evidence is evidence - whether you choose to use that evidence as support for an argument or simply refute it is up to the individual, but surely then it is up to all parties to show why they think that evidence is acceptable or not. Examples: Most people agree fossils are evidence of animals long since extinct. Some argue that they were 'put there by god' or are simply not as old as others would have it. Most people believe man travelled to and walked on the moon, evidence being the number of people seeing it, evidence such as moon rocks, etc. Some argue it was all one big hoax. If one was to point out lines of electricity pylons strung across the land in the far future, and suggest that they were used for carrying electricity from place to place, a naysayer could easily say that that wasn't so - but without an alternate viable theory it's just dis-belief.
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
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Sure, but what 1,000 men call evidence and one man says is not, one can see that, in all probability, the one is a dick head. And I would argue that evidence is evidence - whether you choose to use that evidence as support for an argument or simply refute it is up to the individual, but surely then it is up to all parties to show why they think that evidence is acceptable or not. Examples: Most people agree fossils are evidence of animals long since extinct. Some argue that they were 'put there by god' or are simply not as old as others would have it. Most people believe man travelled to and walked on the moon, evidence being the number of people seeing it, evidence such as moon rocks, etc. Some argue it was all one big hoax. If one was to point out lines of electricity pylons strung across the land in the far future, and suggest that they were used for carrying electricity from place to place, a naysayer could easily say that that wasn't so - but without an alternate viable theory it's just dis-belief.
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
So if 2 million people believe something and 1 million people do not then the 1 million are "dick heads"? Do you go by region? THERE IS A GOD! As more people believe there is evidence of God than say there is not.
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So if 2 million people believe something and 1 million people do not then the 1 million are "dick heads"? Do you go by region? THERE IS A GOD! As more people believe there is evidence of God than say there is not.
a) 1000 / 1 != 2,000,000 / 1,000,000 b) I said evidence not belief c) A survey apparently revealed 51% believed in God - not in Evidence of God, but just in God
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
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Sure, but what 1,000 men call evidence and one man says is not, one can see that, in all probability, the one is a dick head. And I would argue that evidence is evidence - whether you choose to use that evidence as support for an argument or simply refute it is up to the individual, but surely then it is up to all parties to show why they think that evidence is acceptable or not. Examples: Most people agree fossils are evidence of animals long since extinct. Some argue that they were 'put there by god' or are simply not as old as others would have it. Most people believe man travelled to and walked on the moon, evidence being the number of people seeing it, evidence such as moon rocks, etc. Some argue it was all one big hoax. If one was to point out lines of electricity pylons strung across the land in the far future, and suggest that they were used for carrying electricity from place to place, a naysayer could easily say that that wasn't so - but without an alternate viable theory it's just dis-belief.
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
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Most people agree fossils are evidence of animals long since extinct. Some argue that they were 'put there by god' or are simply not as old as others would have it.
Or that some aliens overthrew a planet of dinosaurs, were deathly allergic to the decaying dinosaurs and so they shot them all into space and ended up hitting our planet. Or, they aren't actually bones but models from some ancient civilization. Or, aliens planted them here to mess with the next "civilized" society. Or, or, or. The point is you can't prove it one way or the other. So, science gives theories, enough people agree that the theory is rational, and it becomes scientific teaching. Doesn't matter if it's right or wrong. :)
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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Most people agree fossils are evidence of animals long since extinct. Some argue that they were 'put there by god' or are simply not as old as others would have it.
Or that some aliens overthrew a planet of dinosaurs, were deathly allergic to the decaying dinosaurs and so they shot them all into space and ended up hitting our planet. Or, they aren't actually bones but models from some ancient civilization. Or, aliens planted them here to mess with the next "civilized" society. Or, or, or. The point is you can't prove it one way or the other. So, science gives theories, enough people agree that the theory is rational, and it becomes scientific teaching. Doesn't matter if it's right or wrong. :)
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
RyanDev wrote:
The point is you can't prove it one way or the other
No, that's not the point at all.
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
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RyanDev wrote:
The point is you can't prove it one way or the other
No, that's not the point at all.
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
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a) 1000 / 1 != 2,000,000 / 1,000,000 b) I said evidence not belief c) A survey apparently revealed 51% believed in God - not in Evidence of God, but just in God
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
_Maxxx_ wrote:
a) 1000 / 1 != 2,000,000 / 1,000,000
You are correct and very literal minded.
_Maxxx_ wrote:
b) I said evidence not belief
But I say there is evidence of God. That is the gist of this discussion.
_Maxxx_ wrote:
c) A survey apparently revealed 51% believed in God - not in Evidence of God, but just in God
I said A God. A survey would not get the various groups that have one or more god figures throughout the world.
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_Maxxx_ wrote:
a) 1000 / 1 != 2,000,000 / 1,000,000
You are correct and very literal minded.
_Maxxx_ wrote:
b) I said evidence not belief
But I say there is evidence of God. That is the gist of this discussion.
_Maxxx_ wrote:
c) A survey apparently revealed 51% believed in God - not in Evidence of God, but just in God
I said A God. A survey would not get the various groups that have one or more god figures throughout the world.
djj55 wrote:
But I say there is evidence of God. That is the gist of this discussion.
Show me some evidence, please!
djj55 wrote:
said A God. A survey would not get the various groups that have one or more god figures throughout the world.
Well the survey took in something like 20 countries - and I don't think they asked "Do you believe in a christian god" but "do you believe in god" = so I would think that those believing in a deity would answer yes to that. And again, the problem with this is that lots of people believe in god because that has been their upbringing - their 'evidence' is all based on teaching (aka indoctrination) and not by looking at evidence (of which I have yet to see any)
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
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Philosophical question here (but I'm not trolling -- honest!) Is it rational to believe something that you have literally no way to prove? Astronomers tell me that the universe is rapidly expanding. Space is, in fact, growing at such a staggering rate that distant galaxies are actually racing away from us at faster than the speed of light. As a consequence of this, these far reaching galaxies will eventually “disappear” from us entirely. At some point in the far-distant future (if the universe doesn’t collapse back in on itself) all but the closest galaxies will have receded entirely into the blackness of space leaving no trace of their existence to human observers. They will, at that point, be undetectable. So the obvious question for the astronomer in this distant future is simply, can you believe in the Universe? At that point there will be no way to scientifically prove the existence of the galaxies. In fact it would be quite possible for the scientists to have no knowledge of them whatsoever. They may believe with absolute certainty that we are, in fact, profoundly alone. And all the observational data would support their conclusion. In that case, the only way for someone to “know” the truth is if it were somehow preserved – in a book, for example. Scientists who studied ancient history might read the primeval text books and might somehow become convinced that the character of the authors of those books was trustworthy, and that their description of the visible universe was accurate. They would therefore know what was true (distant galaxies exist) even though they would quite literally have no way to prove it by any rigorous method. Would that be considered unscientific? Perhaps. Would it be irrational? You tell me.
kmote00 wrote:
Is it rational to believe something that you have literally no way to prove?
First humans are not rational - not a single one of them. Second logic is based on beliefs. Both implicitly and explicitly. Explicitly it via assumptions although the vast majority of people believe those completely. Implicitly it comes from failure to recognize that accepting logic itself is a belief and one that cannot be proven.
kmote00 wrote:
So the obvious question for the astronomer in this distant future is simply...
Hypothetically of course it would be more realistic to consider if the question would even be relevant given that humans might no longer exist, and very likely the Earth will not and most definitely will not exist as it does now.
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djj55 wrote:
this can not be proved.
I don't think it has been proven. Yet. But there is plenty of evidence - so those that understand the research and theories don't 'believe' as an act of faith, they 'believe' based on evidence.
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
_Maxxx_ wrote:
But there is plenty of evidence - so those that understand the research and theories don't 'believe' as an act of faith, they 'believe' based on evidence.
First belief is belief and most people who stand by that theory believe in it the same way other people believe in god because they have not investigated all the science associated with it in depth nor even a significant cursory survey of it. Second it is likely that a non-trivial and perhaps even significant number of people involved directly in that science are accepting, without question, some of the assumptions and even results of previous research. They haven't looked at it, don't understand it and don't question it. Thus they believe in it and nothing else. Third for a belief to be a belief there is no derivation. I believe parallel lines do not intersect in Euclidean space because it seems appropriate to do so. I also understand how the assumption, as an assumption and not a belief, impacts Euclidean geometry. Two different things. But the latter requires thought while the former is something that I simply accept day to day. Which is no different than someone else accepting day to day that a deity is impacting their life.
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_Maxxx_ wrote:
But there is plenty of evidence - so those that understand the research and theories don't 'believe' as an act of faith, they 'believe' based on evidence.
First belief is belief and most people who stand by that theory believe in it the same way other people believe in god because they have not investigated all the science associated with it in depth nor even a significant cursory survey of it. Second it is likely that a non-trivial and perhaps even significant number of people involved directly in that science are accepting, without question, some of the assumptions and even results of previous research. They haven't looked at it, don't understand it and don't question it. Thus they believe in it and nothing else. Third for a belief to be a belief there is no derivation. I believe parallel lines do not intersect in Euclidean space because it seems appropriate to do so. I also understand how the assumption, as an assumption and not a belief, impacts Euclidean geometry. Two different things. But the latter requires thought while the former is something that I simply accept day to day. Which is no different than someone else accepting day to day that a deity is impacting their life.
:thumbsup:
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djj55 wrote:
But I say there is evidence of God. That is the gist of this discussion.
Show me some evidence, please!
djj55 wrote:
said A God. A survey would not get the various groups that have one or more god figures throughout the world.
Well the survey took in something like 20 countries - and I don't think they asked "Do you believe in a christian god" but "do you believe in god" = so I would think that those believing in a deity would answer yes to that. And again, the problem with this is that lots of people believe in god because that has been their upbringing - their 'evidence' is all based on teaching (aka indoctrination) and not by looking at evidence (of which I have yet to see any)
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
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No
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
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No
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
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Well, don't leave me hanging.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
OK - you've been hanging long enough. The difference in believing in some supernatural creator who spends his time checking out what folk are doing, making up floods and performing the odd miracle, and sorting the good from the bad so they can be rewarded or punished, and having some common sense, is manifest. Science is based upon the processes which give reproducible results. Because there are, unfortunately, people who are dumb, have a vested interest or possibly both, even such evidence can be ignored, skewed or (at times) faked - but hence peer reviewing of scientific papers. (I'd march down the GW path here if I didn't think it would just serve to dilute the issues at hand) Many a psychic has been proven to be a charlatan - with real hard evidence showing how they fooled their punters; yet fools continue to hold onto their beliefs despite this real scientific evidence to the contrary. So we have to deal with both scientific evidence and the willingness to accept that evidence. Unfortunately, human nature seems to be that, once something has been believed, it is very difficult to dissuade people, even when showing that the 'facts' on which their belief was built is erroneous. What evidence is there for a god? None. At. All. Earlier civilizations believed in various deities - yet those 'christian' god believers would say they were wrong - but the evidence of a god that they had was equally as strong as the evidence of any 'one true god' (i.e. there was none) The only thing that points to the existence of a deity is the existence of anything at all - but the obvious circular reference applies there - so the instantaneous creation of a single deity is equally as likely as the instantaneous creation of anything else - including a deity-free universe or 40 billion gods. So the point is, I guess, that scientific ideas, while they may be modified over time, are supported by reproducible and calculatable processes. So eht current ideas are accepted (I refrain from using the word belief) and used with consistent results. Evidence of a God is certainly not reproducible (because there isn't any) That's the point.
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
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OK - you've been hanging long enough. The difference in believing in some supernatural creator who spends his time checking out what folk are doing, making up floods and performing the odd miracle, and sorting the good from the bad so they can be rewarded or punished, and having some common sense, is manifest. Science is based upon the processes which give reproducible results. Because there are, unfortunately, people who are dumb, have a vested interest or possibly both, even such evidence can be ignored, skewed or (at times) faked - but hence peer reviewing of scientific papers. (I'd march down the GW path here if I didn't think it would just serve to dilute the issues at hand) Many a psychic has been proven to be a charlatan - with real hard evidence showing how they fooled their punters; yet fools continue to hold onto their beliefs despite this real scientific evidence to the contrary. So we have to deal with both scientific evidence and the willingness to accept that evidence. Unfortunately, human nature seems to be that, once something has been believed, it is very difficult to dissuade people, even when showing that the 'facts' on which their belief was built is erroneous. What evidence is there for a god? None. At. All. Earlier civilizations believed in various deities - yet those 'christian' god believers would say they were wrong - but the evidence of a god that they had was equally as strong as the evidence of any 'one true god' (i.e. there was none) The only thing that points to the existence of a deity is the existence of anything at all - but the obvious circular reference applies there - so the instantaneous creation of a single deity is equally as likely as the instantaneous creation of anything else - including a deity-free universe or 40 billion gods. So the point is, I guess, that scientific ideas, while they may be modified over time, are supported by reproducible and calculatable processes. So eht current ideas are accepted (I refrain from using the word belief) and used with consistent results. Evidence of a God is certainly not reproducible (because there isn't any) That's the point.
MVVM # - I did it My Way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
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What evidence is there for a god? None. At. All.
Not true at all. Everything is evidence. You yourself are evidence. Answer this, in the court of law how many witnesses does it take to establish something as truth?
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so the instantaneous creation of a single deity is equally
That's because it wasn't instantaneous. The problem with your argument (and you all have the same argument) is you are essentially saying, "I don't understand it therefore it must not exist." That's quite juvenile. The path to understanding has been laid out for 1000s of years yet you refuse to test it and instead lazily claim it must not be true.
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are supported by reproducible and calculatable processes.
So is God. If I do good, I feel good. If I do bad, I feel bad. And where does this come from? And why? And who defined good? And who defined bad? Etc, etc. Yes, there IS a chemical process but why?
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Evidence of a God is certainly not reproducible
Of course it is. But you won't be able to use a voltmeter or a microscope to prove it. Just because science does not understand it does not mean it does not exist. It's foolish to believe that science is the only source of truth.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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What evidence is there for a god? None. At. All.
Not true at all. Everything is evidence. You yourself are evidence. Answer this, in the court of law how many witnesses does it take to establish something as truth?
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so the instantaneous creation of a single deity is equally
That's because it wasn't instantaneous. The problem with your argument (and you all have the same argument) is you are essentially saying, "I don't understand it therefore it must not exist." That's quite juvenile. The path to understanding has been laid out for 1000s of years yet you refuse to test it and instead lazily claim it must not be true.
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are supported by reproducible and calculatable processes.
So is God. If I do good, I feel good. If I do bad, I feel bad. And where does this come from? And why? And who defined good? And who defined bad? Etc, etc. Yes, there IS a chemical process but why?
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Evidence of a God is certainly not reproducible
Of course it is. But you won't be able to use a voltmeter or a microscope to prove it. Just because science does not understand it does not mean it does not exist. It's foolish to believe that science is the only source of truth.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
RyanDev wrote:
Everything is evidence. You yourself are evidence.
You could equally as well say that everything, myself included, is evidence of the great Ak-Kabar, maser of the Snake kingdom, whose slimy bile clots to make man.
RyanDev wrote:
Answer this, in the court of law how many witnesses does it take to establish something as truth?
Well, one set of witnesses saying one thing, and another saying the opposite, would lead to an unknown situation, not proof.
RyanDev wrote:
That's because it wasn't instantaneous.
what? Took seven days, did it?
RyanDev wrote:
"I don't understand it therefore it must not exist."
That is entirely wrong. I'm not saying that at all, I don't think that at all. I am saying I have seen no evidence of God, I have seen plenty of evidence of there being no god, of charlatans saying they believe in a god who don't and I have no doubt at all that large number of people think there must be a god for EXACTLY the argument you are saying I put forward - i.e. they don't understand something so it must be divine.
RyanDev wrote:
The path to understanding has been laid out for 1000s of years yet you refuse to test it and instead lazily claim it must not be true.
I honestly do not understand what you are saying here/
RyanDev wrote:
So is God. If I do good, I feel good. If I do bad, I feel bad. And where does this come from? And why? And who defined good? And who defined bad? Etc, etc. Yes, there IS a chemical process but why?
Well, at the risk of patronising you, evolution has a lot to do with it. Nobody 'defined' good - indeed different people would define good differently. Some people believe that adultery is wrong, and the stoning to death of an adulterous woman is good, and I guess they feel good after doing it. These people believe in god and believe they are doing good The chemical processes involved (generally) in feeling good lie in the evolutionary process; by feeling good about, say, pleasing the tribe leader, your life would tend to be longer, and your offspring more numerous. (of course evolutionary speaking it goes way beck before then) As a simple example, many people feel nauseous if they see
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RyanDev wrote:
Everything is evidence. You yourself are evidence.
You could equally as well say that everything, myself included, is evidence of the great Ak-Kabar, maser of the Snake kingdom, whose slimy bile clots to make man.
RyanDev wrote:
Answer this, in the court of law how many witnesses does it take to establish something as truth?
Well, one set of witnesses saying one thing, and another saying the opposite, would lead to an unknown situation, not proof.
RyanDev wrote:
That's because it wasn't instantaneous.
what? Took seven days, did it?
RyanDev wrote:
"I don't understand it therefore it must not exist."
That is entirely wrong. I'm not saying that at all, I don't think that at all. I am saying I have seen no evidence of God, I have seen plenty of evidence of there being no god, of charlatans saying they believe in a god who don't and I have no doubt at all that large number of people think there must be a god for EXACTLY the argument you are saying I put forward - i.e. they don't understand something so it must be divine.
RyanDev wrote:
The path to understanding has been laid out for 1000s of years yet you refuse to test it and instead lazily claim it must not be true.
I honestly do not understand what you are saying here/
RyanDev wrote:
So is God. If I do good, I feel good. If I do bad, I feel bad. And where does this come from? And why? And who defined good? And who defined bad? Etc, etc. Yes, there IS a chemical process but why?
Well, at the risk of patronising you, evolution has a lot to do with it. Nobody 'defined' good - indeed different people would define good differently. Some people believe that adultery is wrong, and the stoning to death of an adulterous woman is good, and I guess they feel good after doing it. These people believe in god and believe they are doing good The chemical processes involved (generally) in feeling good lie in the evolutionary process; by feeling good about, say, pleasing the tribe leader, your life would tend to be longer, and your offspring more numerous. (of course evolutionary speaking it goes way beck before then) As a simple example, many people feel nauseous if they see
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You could equally as well say that everything, myself included, is evidence of the great Ak-Kabar,
Yes, exactly. Or that everything is evidence of a big bang. So, why do you believe big bang over the other options?
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Well, one set of witnesses saying one thing, and another saying the opposite, would lead to an unknown situation, not proof.
Perhaps. However, there are people saying they have seen God. There is not a single person who can prove He does not exist.
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I honestly do not understand what you are saying here/
It's like a seed. You plant it and then if you nourish it, it will grow and produce fruit. A desire to know the truth is a seed. Planting it and nourishing it is to do what Christ taught. The fruit will be knowledge that He is real. That's an oversimplification but the way to know if God exists or not has been around for 1000s of years and has been proven by millions, perhaps billions of people. That's a little bit more than 2 witnesses that the law requires to establish something as truth.
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in feeling good lie in the evolutionary process; by feeling good about, say, pleasing the tribe leader, your life would tend to be longer
But that's a selfish act and in turn will not make you feel good. What about taking a box off of a truck? If I am stealing it I feel bad (assuming I am not past feeling) but if I am helping someone move I feel good? How could evolution create that? And why out of the millions upon millions of species are we the only ones like that? Evolution and randomness cannot create that.
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and failing to produce any.
I explained the process. It's similar to wind. You can't see it or touch it or even taste it or hear it but you can see evidence of it. The difference is with wind, you don't have to make any effort to notice the effects. However, with God, the analogy holds true but you have to make an effort, you have to test it and nourish the seed. My point is you sit there and don't test the religious process and only have faith in the scientific process.
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I'm afraid there isn't a god.
Then I dare you to prove it. Of course you can't. It's just a belief that you have. The pr