Religious Nonsense

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I said as much too, yet here you are desperate to start some disagreement.
Seriously dude, what are you on?
No, you aren't reading my posts and you offer superfluous debate on facts which I have already addressed or stipulated to.
 
No, you aren't reading my posts and you offer superfluous debate on facts which I have already addressed or stipulated to.

Its not that I don't read your posts when I respond to them. I just edit out all the superfluous stuff you introduce when I mske a reply.
 
Indeed - and the theistic scientists I know are all of that opinion: God is outside of the remit of science. Your point is...?

Well whatever their field of science, coupled with a view that "god is outside of the remit of science" would confirm there is no overlap and humans are capable of holding (or compartmentlise) features of their life so that one does not contaminate the other

:)
 
Non sequitur, Michael. It's not a matter of what people know, it's just a matter of whether they speak about that which they don't know. If you are of the view that the theist doesn't know about what they speak, then you would probably think they talk nonsense. Similarly if the atheist talks about something they don't know...?

speak about that which they don't know

When theist venture into the realm of KNOWING ie - I know I will go to heaven - I know god loves me - etc etc - in my experience they always fail the HOW DO YOU KNOW question

Reason? HOW requires evidence and if pressed you get touchy feely answers or the IS manta of you know who

Similarly if the atheist talks about something they don't know...?

Sure nonsense can appear, and can be vanquished with the wand of Better Explanations

Wands of Touchy Feely or IS do not vanquish Religious Nonsense

:)
 
According to Robert Hazen, mud (clay) is the most likely medium responsible for the chemical and evolutionary emergence of bio-molecules and life itself, due to it's astounding chemical surface area . A single cubic centimeter (sugarcube) of clay will coat a tennis court!!!!!!

Interesting. I understood the surface of clay contains minute pockets of their atom bonds which helped life chemicals to sit together in a formation conducive to becoming self-replication units

Lol, just realized I am advocating for scriptural editing. It would be a start....

Been done, frequently

All that happens - squabbles over meanings increase

:)
 
Interesting. I understood the surface of clay contains minute pockets of their atom bonds which helped life chemicals to sit together in a formation conducive to becoming self-replication units
Absolutely, but at that scale, the more pockets the more surface area, which if spread out would cover the area of a tennis court with a molecular chemical surface.
1 cm^3 clay = surface area of a tennis court. Made available by the smallest bio-molecules contained in a sugar cube sized piece of clay. That just opened a whole new perspective of chemistry, to me. It is the size of the constituent particles which provide surface area on which chemical reactions can take place. Surface area extends both horizontally and vertically down into the earth's substrate. Biomolecules already form deep in the earth's mantle. It's almost imaginable...:)

This is why Dr. Hazen extrapolated the possible chemical reaction that could take place on earth during it's lifetime, would approach 2 trillion, quadrillion, quadrillion, quadrillion chemical reactions.
It's a really neat presentation on the probability of life occurring on an earth-like planet.

(start at 25:25 to avoid a lengthy introduction)
 
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(start at 25:25 to avoid a lengthy introduction)

Thanks

Been there done that

As a matter of interest I asked (in a debate) how much clay was used to make Adam? How tall and a few other details like left or right handed, colour of eyes etc etc

As suspected no answers

You would think the specifications of the first human would be of interest but the main story seems to be

Oops no female, hang on while I grab a rib

What? Run out of clay already?

:)
 
Well whatever their field of science, coupled with a view that "god is outside of the remit of science" would confirm there is no overlap and humans are capable of holding (or compartmentlise) features of their life so that one does not contaminate the other
Indeed. :)
When theist venture into the realm of KNOWING ie - I know I will go to heaven - I know god loves me - etc etc - in my experience they always fail the HOW DO YOU KNOW question

Reason? HOW requires evidence and if pressed you get touchy feely answers or the IS manta of you know who
Again, no dispute in that - at least to me - theists are unable to convince me that they do know what they claim to know.
Similarly if the atheist talks about something they don't know...?

Sure nonsense can appear, and can be vanquished with the wand of Better Explanations

Wands of Touchy Feely or IS do not vanquish Religious Nonsense
Again, no dispute. My point is that religious nonsense is not limited to theists but open to anyone to talk about religion / religious claims without knowing what they are talking about.
 
I'm not so sure. Perhaps it's my lack of knowledge of language. It seems to me that one advocates for the existence or establishment of something, not for the existence or establishment of not something.

As atheist, I advocate for science rather than for non-religion. I advocate for objective treatment of information about something", rather than a mystical interpretation of not-something.
In short, I advocate for providing proof in support of an objective (not subjective) proposition.
One is quite capable of advocating for a proposition. If that proposition happens to be the non-existence of something...
But I do understand what you are advocating. I (tend to) share the same. But that does not prevent atheists, or more specifically you, from talking religious nonsense... i.e. nonsense about religion.
And this may be due to ambiguity of "religious nonsense"... For example, if you don't know anything about Catholicism and start talking about how they don't believe in transubstantiation, then you're talking nonsense. It is of a religious nature, thus religious nonsense. The fact that you might think that the very notion of transubstantiation is nonsense, and thus consider it to be part of the "religious nonsense" of that religion, is neither here nor there to whether you are capable of talking religious nonsense.
 
Please accept the sweeping generality that sweeping generalisations are generally not to be taken as sweeping generalisations but should be considered to contain exceptions unless probably preceded by ALL

Generally

:)
Just to remind the honourable gentleman of the claims made:
"This is your mistake, atheists do not advocate for non-gods or non-religions."
This was followed by:
"Atheists, if advocating for a dynamical creative aspect to the universe, always do so..."

The use of the explicit absolute in the second is more than enough to suggest the otherwise apparent generalisation in the first was also intended as the explicit absolute written.

But it's not worth derailing anything for. I understand W4U's points, I am just calling out that atheists are just as capable of talking **** as theists, and about religion (thus "religious nonsense") as well. Consider it me just trying to bring some sense of balance into proceedings rather than continuing down the "theists are all stupid, atheists are all intelligent" type argument that seems to flow under most threads here.
:)
 
I understand W4U's points, I am just calling out that atheists are just as capable of talking **** as theists, and about religion (thus "religious nonsense") as well. Consider it me just trying to bring some sense of balance into proceedings rather than continuing down the "theists are all stupid, atheists are all intelligent" type argument that seems to flow under most threads here.
I thank the gentleman for his cautionary stance. And perhaps I have come across a little fervent if not dismissive. I know several theists whom I respect very much. They are honorable people. Far from me to dismiss a large portion of humanity as being stupid or unworthy in some way.

Perhaps undeserved, I see religious nonsense as tantamount to mythological nonsense. i.e. the subject matter itself is non-sensical, except from a theist's or mythological adherent's perspective. I see no difference between a "talking bush" in scripture or a "talking fox" in a fable. And I usually recognize the metaphorical nature of scripture, as I do in fables.

That this may offend some is not my problem. As I said before, I or no other atheist I know have ever harmed anyone in the name of atheism, but I have been exposed to physical harm by religious zealots in the name of theism.
In this case, personal experience does count in my book. I have a valid claim for justification.
 
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Analysis of the various stories: plagues, floods, etc.

I would contend such nominated examples would be examined more as history with some science content to confirm (eg the flood did / did not happen) but I would say, floods not being exclusively religious, floods are not examples of something pertaining just to religion worthy of study by science

As I put somewhere in a post somewhere religion can pick any science subject and follow the explanations down to as much detail as they wish

What, I contend, religion should be looking for is something to which they can point the religion finger and pronounce "There, that point there, that reaction, transformation (or whatever term choosen) THAT could not happen without god"

When religion finds THAT point and science does decide to throw its resources (and sticks religion for the bill) into explaining THAT point but is unable to explain THEN religion has a win (I would contend temporary) ON THAT POINT ONLY

Of course religion's answer "god did it" is piss poor and science would still ask "please explain how"

Don't think it will happen

Care to nominate another contender for a religious subject worthy of science study?

:)
 
Always good to see that my posts are held in such high regard. ;)

Just so no misunderstanding, as I re read stuff at 2:30 in the morning, the no great loss was me referring to my replies. If I didn't get back to make comments my missing comments would be "the no great loss" :)

:)
 
I am just calling out that atheists are just as capable of talking **** as theists, and about religion (thus "religious nonsense") as well.
Sure.
As "capable".
But they don't do it as often or on anything like the theistic scale.
 
IMO, you can't "advocate" for a non-existent object .
However, from an atheist perspective, theist do.

I agree with what Sarkus wrote in post #630.

People, whether theists or atheists, seem to advocate for the truth of propositions.

When he or she is making existence claims, the theist is advocating for the truth of the proposition 'God exists'. From the point of view of the atheist, the proposition 'God exists' is false. So from the point of view of the atheist, the theist is advocating for the truth of a false proposition.

Atheists appear to advocate for the truth of the proposition '~(God exists)', or 'God doesn't exist'. From the point of view of the theist, '~(God exists)' is false, so the atheist would seem to be advocating for a false proposition too.

I don't see any big logical difference. Both sides are advocating for the truth of propositions that their opponents think are false.
 
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I agree with what Sarkus wrote in post #630.

People, whether theists or atheists, seem to advocate for the truth of propositions.

When he or she is making existence claims, the theist is advocating for the truth of the proposition 'God exists'. From the point of view of the atheist, the proposition 'God exists' is false. So from the point of view of the atheist, the theist is advocating for the truth of a false proposition.

Atheists appear to advocate for the truth of the proposition '~(God exists)', or 'God doesn't exist'. From the point of view of the theist, '~(God exists)' is false, so the atheist would seem to be advocating for a false proposition too.

I don't see any big logical difference. Both sides are advocating for the truth of propositions that their opponents think are false.
Ok, in that context I can accept the definition of "advocating", reluctantly.

It just feels awkward. It still seems that "advocating for" something is different than "arguing against" something.

Can't very well "advocate against" something, can one?
By definition, to advocate is to speak or write in favor of, support or urge by argument, or recommend publicly. That makes “advocate for” redundant, and “advocate against” impossible.Dec 5, 2010
?????????
 
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Atheists appear to advocate for the truth of the proposition '~(God exists)', or 'God doesn't exist'.
The ones who advocate a reactionary position relative to the Abrahamic God sometimes do that. Most others don't.
I don't see any big logical difference. Both sides are advocating for the truth of propositions that their opponents think are false.
There's a much wider variety of assumed or implicit propositions on the atheist side of the boundary. The proposition that "God is not what theists think it is", for example, differs in key respects from "God does not exist".
 
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