Schneibster
Unregistered
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2005
- Messages
- 3,966
Then it has to be amenable to change given sufficient evidence. And given the lack of evidence of any sort of creator, and the wealth of evidence that there are viable hypotheses as to the creation of the universe ex nihilo, and the creation of life without miraculous intervention, why has your opinion not changed? You're facing an absolutely overwhelming body of evidence on both points, and opposing that with the contents of a single book. That is unquestioning belief. It is not faith, and you are not proving the truth of your assertion that your beliefs are based on logic; logic would require that you gather all the available information prior to forming an opinion, and it is clear from your lack of knowledge about essential subjects in regard to the origin of the universe and the origin of life that you have not done so.My belief is based on logic and is not unquestioning.
You've stated it, but it is untrue. And if you did the research for yourself, you'd know it, as I do. What it comes down to is, either 90% of scientists are lying, or you're wrong. What it comes down to is, either all of the things that I can see for myself, and deduce from the things I see, are wrong, or you are. You tell me, "the sky is not blue." I walk outside, and look for myself, and it's blue. Sorry, man, but I gotta go with the scientists, and I gotta go with what I can see, know what I mean?I've already stated that, not only is the creation of the universe unexplainable by our current best understanding of how the world works, but there is no realistic prospect that it will ever be explained. The basis is that is where science has led us.
That's what your book says; and don't bother denying it, I've read it, friend. Cover to cover. Every single word. I like the prose in the King James edition, personally.I don't deny that what you sense is real, but it's absurd to think you would be able to see "some big powerful dude in the sky" with a telescope.
But answer me this: if you don't believe THAT, then how come you believe the rest of it?
Why? Have you examined the laws that govern it to understand the types of order they do and do not impose? And if you haven't, and it's obvious you haven't, because you don't know what the inflationary universe is, and you don't know how physics works, and you don't know much biochemistry, then how can you have formed such an opinion in any fashion that anyone might refer to as "informed?" And if that's the case, then what is it that makes you think your opinion is better than that of people who HAVE bothered to inform themselves about these things, and who overwhelmingly dismiss your opinion as superstition?It seems far more logical to me that the universe arose by design rather than chance.
This is called "observer bias." It means that you've noticed the very, very few instances where some sort of synchronicity occurs, and ignored the enormous number of instances where it could have, or even should have had the few been anything but random chance, but did not.And, I've experienced a number of synchronicities that bolster this conclusion.
Scientific proof has never been obtained of any paranormal experience; you will note that the million dollars of Randi's challenge, documented on this very site, has never been collected. It is the strong opinion of most here that it never will be. And unless or until it is, your "documentation" is worthless, evidence only, as I said in the previous response, of observer bias and random chance.Further, many people have had well-documented paranormal experiences.
You're not. You don't like the most probable alternative explanation; and when I say "most probable," I mean that it is more probable than the explanation you DO like. You cling to superstitious, magical modes of thought more appropriate to a caveman than to a member of a high civilization; given every opportunity imaginable to go find these things out for yourself, you ignore those opportunities because you don't like the truth. It makes you feel small and scares you, so you avoid it.I'm open to alternative explanations, but as former New York Yankees baseball manager Billy Martin used to say: "I could be wrong, but I doubt it."![]()