godless dave
Great Dalmuti
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2007
- Messages
- 8,266
No, he was still just as honest and ordinary afterwards as before. And we have no way of knowing how honest and ordinary that was.
So the idea that the book which contains no errors, made accurate predictions regarding upcoming events, and remains consistent with science; the idea that book was the work of multiple authors would seem to contradict reason.
I don't see what the big deal is. Read the darn book, it's pretty whack.
I got as far as the second surrah (the cow?), where is says this:
"Verily, those who disbelieve, it is the same to them whether you (O Muhammad Peace be upon him ) warn them or do not warn them, they will not believe.
7. Allah has set a seal on their hearts and on their hearings, (i.e. they are closed from accepting Allah's Guidance), and on their eyes there is a covering. Theirs will be a great torment."
Pretty clear it's talking about me and the uselessness of trying to convince me. Done deal. Case closed. It's right there in the book. Allah has prevented me from ever "getting" it.
So... what's for lunch?
It could be falsified by the confirmed discovery of one real god.
Of course. But science is not the tool for such a task.
Are you sure your post was supposed to be an answer to mine?
OK, well we already addressed {allegory in the Qur'an} earlier but if this is the best you can do, and it also makes you feel better, then by all means.
I don't see what the big deal is. Read the darn book, it's pretty whack.
I got as far as the second surrah (the cow?), where is says this:
"Verily, those who disbelieve, it is the same to them whether you (O Muhammad Peace be upon him ) warn them or do not warn them, they will not believe.
7. Allah has set a seal on their hearts and on their hearings, (i.e. they are closed from accepting Allah's Guidance), and on their eyes there is a covering. Theirs will be a great torment."
Pretty clear it's talking about me and the uselessness of trying to convince me. Done deal. Case closed. It's right there in the book. Allah has prevented me from ever "getting" it.
So... what's for lunch?
1: While consciousness might continue after death, there's no reason to believe it does, as evidence of human consciousness has not been observed independent of a living, functioning human brain.
2: If consciousness exists in a manner that cannot, even in principle, be observed, then how can we have any knowledge of it? How can we say anything meaningful about whether it might exist? What is the difference between something that cannot be observed and something that doesn't exist?
3: There is no reason to believe that it might be possible.
4: "Faith is believing what you know ain't so." ~Samuel Clemens~
Those who don't believe in the continuation of consciousness (afterlife) believe there is nothing...they cease to be. That is also faith.
Then what is? Is there any other reliable tool for determining whether things exist?
No, it's science. There is no evidence suggesting that consciousness can continue after death, and plenty of evidence suggesting it does not. "Believing" that there is no afterlife is a conclusion based on evidence.
If there was evidence then there would be no need for "belief" now would there?
I am happy for you to give examples of this evidence, as I would be amazed that such things as god, afterlife, alternate universes etc categorical cannot exist because science has proved so.
I would truly be in awe of that.
I was specifically talking about life after death. In that case, there is copious scientific evidence that consciousness is a property of human brains, and thus cannot survive death. So in that case, it's not a belief that there's no afterlife, it's a conclusion based on scientific evidence.
With gods, there is no scientific evidence that they can't exist, just a lack of any evidence that they do exist. So it's reasonable to conclude that they don't, but it is not scientifically demonstrated that they don't.
With multiple universes, there is the same lack of evidence that they exist. The only reason to give the idea credence at all is that they are mathematically predicted by some theories of physics, which is more than any postulated gods have going for them, but it would not be reasonable to conclude that they exist.
The discussion is mainly aimed at people who deal in the realm of "reason" and "logic", if you read the OP.
I said that. Science cannot. that is exactly why it does not categorically state that god etc does not exist.
Science is saying no such thing. It deals with this universe.
You are confusing atheism with science. They are two separate things.
.I don't see what the big deal is. Read the darn book, it's pretty whack.
I got as far as the second surrah (the cow?), where is says this:
"Verily, those who disbelieve, it is the same to them whether you (O Muhammad Peace be upon him ) warn them or do not warn them, they will not believe.
7. Allah has set a seal on their hearts and on their hearings, (i.e. they are closed from accepting Allah's Guidance), and on their eyes there is a covering. Theirs will be a great torment."
...
Of course. But science is not the tool for such a task. [...].
Of course. But science is not the tool for such a task. What does science know about what 'real gods' are? Indeed, what does anyone know about that?
Plenty of belief either way but what of that? Belief is not logical - it has no place in logic.
As I said, statements claiming absolutely that there is no god, afterlife, alternate realities/universes etc are not 'statements of science' but statements of atheist belief systems. Confusing atheism for science is silly.