Iacchus said:I think the word you might be looking for here is "interaction."
No, I mean "dwellers". Unlike the bible, I mean what I say.
Iacchus said:I think the word you might be looking for here is "interaction."
Plain as the nose on your face. Now isn't that deep!? That's it isn't it? Everything with you exists merely on the surface. Hey, did I tell you about the dream that I had?zaayrdragon said:
Well, I've read quite a bit now about what Iacchus is going on about, and have come to one conclusion:
Lunatic.
Plain and simple.
Originally posted by Tricky
So was The Illiad, and it has precedence. If all you require is that something be ancient and recorded, then you have a bit of deciding to do. Are you going to renounce Jesus for Zeus because Zeus has a prior claim?
Originally posted by Iacchus
Hey Zeus! ...
Which of course brings up this dream I had. Where I was walking out of the local supermarket. It was a bit rundown looking but, it didn't look altogether different from the one that used to be down the street. It was earlier in the evening but had already gotten dark outside. And there were two men scuffling out in the parking lot and it was beginning to get ugly. And I'm thinking, "Man this isn't right," and I looked straight up and shouted, "Hey Zeus!" ... While thinking, "Maybe you better do something about this." And yes, I was thinking Zeus, except when I said it it sure sounded like the Spanish pronunciation of Jesus!
Well come to find out I wasn't exactly where I thought I was and, all of a sudden I started coming up from the depths of the ocean, and I mean the depths. And, in what seemed like an eternity to reach the surface (at an accelerated rate), it wasn't long before the sea began turning into a brilliant blue-green color. And right up above the surface rested this huge brilliant sun that illuminated everything. And I'm thinking, "Well it's obvious I've invoked some deity here, I'm just not sure I'm ready to look God straight in the face, not at this rate anyway." And don't get me wrong, it was beautiful!
So I was hoping the sensation of surfacing would stop, but no, on it continued, although it seemed like I had already gone way past the point where I should have reached the surface -- the sun was just too brilliant and the sea was too luminescent -- and I'm thinking, "Well, this is just a bit too eerie for me and, as much as I don't wish to offend God, I think I better try to get out of here." So, I pretty much wrenched myself awake and that was the end of it.
Yeah, but do you know what you mean?dmarker said:
No, I mean "dwellers". Unlike the bible, I mean what I say.
Iacchus said:Yeah, but do you know what you mean?
Science, as explained, is nought else but an explanation of the order which exists amongst the sensed-things (unreal things) within awareness.zaayrdragon said:"This is significant for it disarms atheists and materialists of their philosophies, reducing their ideas to absolute religions (pure beliefs)."
How, exactly, does it do that?
Only unreal things can be sensed. The sensations are real, but like the artist's paint, the things they portray are not. Therefore, by default, it is impossible to sense the reality of anything. It is impossible to provide perceptual evidence of reality. You cannot, logically, berate a theist for having no sensed-evidence of his God.Seems to me, rather, that it only further eliminates the immaterialist and dogmatically faithful, since not only do they not have the absolute nature to be sure of, but they also lack any perceptual evidence as well.
This is not true. Not in my case anyway. I think that there is a God because I have rationalised that there is a God.All the faithful has, is faith. You believe because you were taught to believe by other believers
This is irrelevant in regards to myself. I am not religious... I have no religion., and told that one book out of billions contains the truth. Never mind the fact that the book has been re-copied hundreds of times, edited, spliced into and out of form, etc. Never mind the internal inconsistancies, absurdities, archaic thought, or absolute nonsense.
Science, as acknowledged, is useful in that it understands [much of] the order which exists amongst sensed-existence and can manipulate that order for our own requirements.Science tells us what to expect from our perceived reality, and is consistant and constant. We can accept science as such, and have no fear of betrayal;
Our knowledge of the world through science is NOT a belief-system. Rather, our ignorance of the fact that science has knowledge of sensed-things as opposed to real-things has allowed people such as yourself to believe that science has knowledge of the real world, when it does not.Our knowledge of the world through science may well be seen as a system of belief,
Absolutely not. The things you sense are unreal in themselves, just as the things you see in an artist's portrait are unreal in themselves. The senses, like the artist's paint, give impressions of things.dmarker said:So absolute reality cannot be sensed?
Proving the existence of God is something I will attempt to do in the near future.I ask how do you know that deities aren't just dwellers of your own mind?
Not so. Because the sensation itself is real.lifegazer said:
Absolutely not. The things you sense are unreal in themselves, just as the things you see in an artist's portrait are unreal in themselves. The senses, like the artist's paint, give impressions of things.
You've never sensed a real thing in your whole life and never will.
What's that, to the general overall stupidity?Ratman_tf said:
At least he contributes to the conversation.
Piscivore said:
Ha! Anyone want to give odds that our man Radrook was a subject in that study?![]()
Why call me stupid?thaiboxerken said:
Iachus seems to be nothing but a troll, a polite one, but still a troll. He offers no evidence to support his claims, he only keeps repeating his same fallicious arguments ad-nauseum. So, I won't even try to debate with him. I'll just insult him.
Iachus, take your stupid god-beliefs and shove them up your tooty.
chance said:Radrook. It is better stated that they are bound by the observations of the natural world, reality is too subjective as you have demonstrated by your 3 Aliens examples. However one only needs to devise an additional frame of reference for agreement between the Aliens, e.g. a common temperature standard removes subjective hot and cold feelings.
Ratman_tf said:
I have never understood this part of your philosophy, Lifegazer.
While I aknowledge that sensed things MAY not be real in themselves, I don't follow how you can completely rule out the possibility that the sensed 'thing' is what it appears to be.
Science, as explained, is nought else but an explanation of the order which exists amongst the sensed-things (unreal things) within awareness. ... Therefore, science is useless in the formulation of any philosophy which seeks to propose that there is a real world-of- things "out there". The materialists and atheists of this world are clueless if they think that science is on their side.
Only unreal things can be sensed. The sensations are real, but like the artist's paint, the things they portray are not. Therefore, by default, it is impossible to sense the reality of anything. It is impossible to provide perceptual evidence of reality. You cannot, logically, berate a theist for having no sensed-evidence of his God.
think that there is a God because I have rationalised that there is a God.
This is irrelevant in regards to myself. I am not religious... I have no religion.
But science is useless in regards explaining the nature of reality, as explained. Hence the limits of science. You keep overlooking this fact.
It requires a leap-of-faith to think that the perceived order of the sensed-world also applies to another world that is real and distinct from this sensed-world.
Why call me stupid?zaayrdragon said:
Well, I've read quite a bit now about what Iacchus is going on about, and have come to one conclusion:
Lunatic.
Plain and simple.
Well, might I compliment you in your ability to impart meaning to that which is drab and purposely unmeaningful?This is full of 'I had a dream' and 'I imagined that I saw', etc... in other words, someone with a waaay over-active imagination is going to base a life-philosophy on 'dreams' rather than embrace reality, and therefore is probably going to have a rather miserable life, when all is said and done
About 17 I believe, because this is when the rebirth experience happened.Just out of curiosity - how old are you, Iacchus? Judging by comparison (i.e. the age I was at when I was in your shoes), I'd guess you're 13 to 15, or possibly 19-20. However, this is a judgement based on my own experiences, which are hardly typical, inasmuch as I had rejected Satan before I turned 10, while still accepting religion for another decade.
Why call me stupid?zaayrdragon said:
Iacchus - because you are. Your dream is yet another example of the absurdity you believe.
Rad, if we're going to start screaming 'mod' at every insult, we'll ALL of us be on the carpet, so to speak.
L.G., that's the biggest load of hogwash and bunk I ever heard, but I'll respond in depth:
What does stupid mean, if all we can manage is a subjective opinion? Obviously my subjective experience does not agree with yours. So how do we decide? Divide the child by two?zaayrdragon said:
I refuse to soil my subjective experience by responding to your stupid thread, which you seem to be using now multiplicitly rather than doing any logical or reasonable argument.
Stupid.
Perhaps there is an External Reality? And yet it's not ours to hold onto.thaiboxerken said:
False, science seeks to explain all things that exist regardless of it's "order/chaos" properties. Science also seeks to explain those things that are not sensed. Humans have very limitted sensed, so science has developed tools to measure and observe these things that we cannot sense. I've just refuted the assumptions you have made in your argument, I suggest you come up with something substantial next time.