seriously?He has Asperger's. Apparently that makes many things so much easier ...
seriously?He has Asperger's. Apparently that makes many things so much easier ...
seriously?
But according to Christianity, it isn't just "in our minds". There is a connection between our consciousness and something that exists "outside our world/universe"
Source.
Whether he is merely a self-diagnosed Aspie or has an official diagnosis, I do not know; but there must be something in a person to go so far as to self-diagnose themselves that way ...
You don't give convincing answers to the issues I've brought up.
You say things that don't make sense such as, "Evolution is under no doubt."
You say it's shocking that my name is science man because I don't seem to know much about cosmology,
yet you don't try to correct me
or if you are, you're not making any sense what so ever.
From what I've seen around here, it seems like you atheists on here think I'm ignorant,(especially on my understanding of the theory of evolution)
yet you don't try to correct me, or at least, not in a way that I can understand.
You guys are very unclear when you to argue back to me on the theory of evolution or you are clear but what you say doesn't argue what I've said.
btw phlogistican you don't understand what I was saying when I was talking about converting so let me ask it this way. Do/did your follow a religion? If so, did you talk to them about why you didn't want to follow their religion? If not, why or if so, how did it go?
In science (or at least your version of it) you claim to know that all and everything is a consequence of physical phenomena ... which is quite clearly a claim that "science" can never know (since empiricism is always girded by metonymic barriers at the marco and micro level ... or to put it another way, why at a certain level the investigation of the universe or a cup of flour falls on its ass ).
Needless to say, this is not rational.
:shrug:
That accepting the field of the senses as the complete field of investigation is like accepting a circle as the complete picture on whatever shape patterns exists
huh?Who said anything about senses?
Nobody.
the analogy is more about how if you accept something partial as the complete picture, you simply carry your errors through.You said that if you study a circle, you come to the conclusion that corners don't exist. If that circle is your Universe, they don't. It has nothing to do with senses or perception, this addition is tangential to your original point and a mere diversion.
what to speak of god, you could talk of how a cup of flour hides in the cracks that science can't peer into. IOW I am not talking about the subject of investigation, I am talking about the epistemological limitations of what is (falsely) heralded as having a monopoly on all knowable claimsWhat is not rational, is effectively your claim that God can hide in the cracks science can't peer into.
I am saying that if one expects a complete anything to be obtained from a discipline that works purely with tacit states and terms, its certainly irrationalYou seem to be saying that because _you_ have doubts about the completeness of each theory, God _could_ exist.
That's a stretch. It's certainly not rational.
huh?
what else do you think the heated oppositiona re talking about when they say "no proof"
the analogy is more about how if you accept something partial as the complete picture, you simply carry your errors through.
I am talking about the epistemological limitations of what is (falsely) heralded as having a monopoly on all knowable claims
I am saying that if one expects a complete anything to be obtained from a discipline that works purely with tacit states and terms, its certainly irrational
Excuse me for getting anthropomorphic for a second there. Do you have a point?then why bring it up?
:shrug:
still doesn't explain much about your zany ideas about the perquisites for a properly designed universe
its empiricalScientific proof is independent of the senses.
au contraire, the problem begins when you assume that all that exists is what you can bring your blunt senses to bear onNo, the problem begins when you assume there exists more than you can detect. In a circle Universe, there are no corners. You may dream of corners, wish for them, want them, or feel they exist, but they don't.
actually its philosophyWhich amounts to mud slinging, really.
you can also place a cup of flour in the same categoryYour god lives in the cracks not known my science. You have to live with that.
you for a start, when you subscribe to a pathological rendition of a reductionist world viewWho expects a 'complete anything'?
sureI'm quite happy, and do not need to introduce God to explain anything,
once again, its irrational to think that a tacit frame of reference can expand anything (aside from further tacit references of course)The habitat of your god is shrinking as science explores and understand more.
actually for the purposes of discussion, we could be talking about how even a cup of flour evades science.You just throw mud and doubt science to keep a crack open in your mind, and place your god in it. That's a bit tragic.
sureExcuse me for getting anthropomorphic for a second there. Do you have a point?
actually its philosophy
you for a start, when you subscribe to a pathological rendition of a reductionist world view
instead you lump in the claim that the characteristics of everything can be explained in terms of matter
Its not mud and doubt - its simply the limitations of the epistemology
its empirical
the length and breath of it is the senses
au contraire, the problem begins when you assume that all that exists is what you can bring your blunt senses to bear on
Scientific proof is independent of the senses.
Please try again, and comprehend what you are being told.
Actually its a philosophical critique of your premiseNo, it's mud slinging, and it's a pointless diversion.
I called it pathological since you don't appear to be capable of even discussing the philosophical ramifications of your world view (what to speak of philosophical alternatives to it)'pathological', no, that's you. Wanting more than there is.
which still gives you the same set of problems ....And energy, and forces.
when ever you get tired of the mud slinging, feel free to explain how tacit terms can generate a complete picture (although given your lack of understanding of empiricism it might be better to ask if you even understand what the word "tacit" means)No, just the limits of your understanding of it's uses.
Well excuuuuse me... Let me rephrase that for you.sure
Your claim of "need" is saturated in highly questionable premises