Joey McGee
Banned
- Joined
- Feb 17, 2011
- Messages
- 10,307
Well, you're wrong and you're living an in imaginary nightmare, that must suck, sorry.
Religion is a kerfluffle. Computers often work well -and when they do not, there is usually a discernable reason why they don't. Religion works on the rules of probability for whatever you want religion to do/not do. Mohammed sucked-as did his followers and as did all the religious leaders who allowed their religion to promulgate evil and hatred (that would be a **** load of xtian ones and a **** load of the others)!!!I've been arguing that I think that modern physical theories are moving towards absurdity. Computer Simulation or Multiverse is no
better than religion; Religion even trumps those theories in evidence!
Islam, for example, did stabilize a society for a very long time and even ushered in a Golden Age. And isn't it at least a little bit odd
that one man was able to conquer the entire Middle East within his lifetime? That's evidence. I doesn't trump Quantum Mechanics or
Relativity in evidence but it does trump Multiverse theory.
When I mention this a lot of times I get the response that it's a straw man to think that all sceptics believe in such theories. After all, they
are nothing but unproven hypothesises, right? The point I'm making however is that they are preferred by sceptics over religious theories
because present day sceptics are almost without exception Materialists. And that it is essentially the Materialistic world view that is in trouble
when I state that Islam has more evidence going for it than Magical Computer Programmers. So I'm accusing the present day scientists or sceptics
of being dogmatic Materialists. Otherwise, they should take Islam way more seriously than Multiverses since that's what the evidence says.
My question is if someone can provide me an example of a person considered a sceptic, yet who isn't a Materialist. Are there any sceptics that
aren't Materialists? Or is such a position considered to be implicitly contrary to scepticism?
I wrote this physics simulation/game engine from scratch in C++. It's one of my hobbies.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nZ75ojwwMD8
Currently, I'm working on this :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XbnHb3rItuQ
I'm basically an expert on 3D Graphics and Physics Simulation. I've worked in the game industry for a couple of years and I have one actually published
xbox360/PS3 game on my name, but it wasn't very well received. (It sucked.) I currently work in computer security.
I wrote this physics simulation/game engine from scratch in C++. It's one of my hobbies.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nZ75ojwwMD8
Currently, I'm working on this :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XbnHb3rItuQ
I'm basically an expert on 3D Graphics and Physics Simulation. I've worked in the game industry for a couple of years and I have one actually published
xbox360/PS3 game on my name, but it wasn't very well received. (It sucked.) I currently work in computer security.
I've been debating these issues for about a year now on an international board that's filled with academics, sceptics and scientifically-minded people.
Just to be as sure as I possibly can be. Science isn't perfect, you know, but it's at least as rigorous if not more so than most experiments done
in sociology that are accepted by the community at large.
When the materialistic delusions become absurd enough, you can do that, yes. I've also said that you're almost, but not quite, able to proof that Lord Xenu
exists, already. It's logical trivialism you're running into, absurdity.
I think it's pointless to debate you any further. The only thing you seem to be interested in is spreading confusion. Not because you want to get to the
bottom of things, but purely for the sake of confusion.
...one man, Mohammed, conquered and stabilized a society all by himself.
I've already posted this on what I think the scientific theory of Islam is. It was a delight to me that it turned out to be the Shahada,
the fundamental Oath of Islam. The observation is that Mohammed apparently thought it best to choose the most evidence-based assertion for this.
Ok, to make it clear : I know they're unproven hypothesises. And so is 'There is no God but Allah and Mohammed is his messenger'.
Both are unproven. I know this.
But ... they're not equal in evidence due to the fact that Mohammed really did something extraordinary.And so, ... even though the evidence for Islam is not as strong as that for QM, it's still evidence. More than that for the other 'unproven' hypothesises.
And evidence is _never_ certain, not even that for QM. So the argument is valid, unless you require _absolute_ certainty but that's beyond the scope
of the Scientific Method.
My question is if someone can provide me an example of a person considered a sceptic, yet who isn't a Materialist. Are there any sceptics that
aren't Materialists? Or is such a position considered to be implicitly contrary to scepticism?
I've only met a tiny percentage of skeptics that were willing to say " I don't know".
Why not? Stress hormones can degrade the body and cause death, and a lack of stress can presumably prolong the functioning of vital organs. It seems that we can influence our time of death in a minor way, which is why men tend to die before big events like anniversaries, whereas women apparently look more forward to the events because they tend to die just after.Is there a materialist explanation for the fact that people can sometimes (apparently) "will" their dying body to stay alive, or, conversely, die on demand?
It is just an expression of speech: no scientist in their right mind will claim that we shall ever know all there is to know.How many generations have thought they had reached the pinnacle of knowledge?
Why not? Stress hormones can degrade the body and cause death, and a lack of stress can presumably prolong the functioning of vital organs. It seems that we can influence our time of death in a minor way, which is why men tend to die before big events like anniversaries, whereas women apparently look more forward to the events because they tend to die just after.
This is a timely example: John Adams and Thomas Jefferson both died on the 4th of July 50 years after the Declaration of Independence was signed. Now, IMO that is a hell of a coincidence. Neither knew of the other's death (which is a weird way to put it, but Yogi Berra would know what I mean).
Quite; it would be even more weird if there were no coincidences...Given the near-uncountable number of historical events and number of people associated with them, it is quite unremarkable that we find coincidental dates among a few of them.