Write4U
Valued Senior Member
It must have been a truly unforgettable experience......That’s pretty awesome!
Looking down from way up and see your cities as a collection of ant-farms....
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It must have been a truly unforgettable experience......That’s pretty awesome!
Yeah, but what if I don;t have time to?
Like, I teleport into the center of the Sun.![]()
Jan believes he is a product of immaculate conception.
InterestingFingers in arch formation with fore fingers tapping
Match it up with the shroud of Turin.[/QUOTE]Interesting
I wonder what the DNA of JC would reveal
Any chance any church would allow a scientific DNA test on the supposed holy relic vials of JC blood![]()
You have a dark mind, Beer. Why am I smiling....This thread reminds me of a movie somehow.
Good Lord, I just swallowed my tongue.W4U said; Match it up with the shroud of Turin.
Good one. Which cheek is your tongue planted in?![]()
Strangely, theism can make a minor concession and become much more aligned with science.Only one of the approaches on this list requires denial of science and it is almost the definition of fundamentalism to adopt that approach to religion. Another of the approaches on the list is an exercise in continuous self-delusion, but some religious people choose to adopt it in an attempt to reconcile the irreconcilable. Meanwhile, more reasonable theists tend to adopt one or more of the other approaches.
which actually can be resolved by modifying the concept to a quasi-intelligent mathematical "essence" to the universe, from which all physical patterns emerge. More or less in the mold of Tegmark's mathematical Universe.
I understand the objection. I won't go any deeper than this observation for now. It's the wrong forum.I would forget all about the
quasi-intelligent mathematical "essence"
and
from which all physical patterns emerge
I would credit physics, no intelligence required![]()
But I have by no means given up on the concept of a physical universe that functions in accordance with relative quantitative and qualitative values and mathematical functions by which these values interact to produce results
Why? The word quasi-intelligent is a perfect substitute for the artistry we see all around us, wherever we look.Use of the word intelligent I think is a step to close to anthropomorphism
No, your missing the point. Shakespeare was intelligent, the quill was a tool.May as well say Shakespeare's quill was quasi-intelligent when he was writing plays and sonnets
No, that's "artificial intelligence" which requires a programmer. "Quasi" merely means that it has similarities, without any reference to a programmer. The prefix is used in a host of other identifications, none of them having anything to do with a programmer or artificiality.My personal preference for quasi-intelligent would be programmed operations
It must have been a truly unforgettable experience......
Looking down from way up and see your cities as a collection of ant-farms....![]()
The Catholic Church may accept it, but probably more along the lines of ''theistic evolution.'' Christians believe in the existence of souls, and evolution doesn't have a spot for that. The Catholic Church leaves the views of Genesis up to the reader - one can take it literally or one can view it as mere allegory. But, there was a time when the Catholic Church (likely before Darwin came on the scene) taught Genesis, as a literal story of the origin of man and the universe.I'd like to make the point that believing in a god or gods does not mean you have to be a science denier like Jan Ardena.
There are plenty of scientists who believe in a god or gods. Their religious beliefs are not incompatible with science like Jan's are. They accept evolution by natural selection, for instance. Indeed, even the Roman Catholic Church accepts scientific evolution, officially. It also officially accepts that the Earth goes around the Sun, although admittedly that has only been the official position for the last 30 years or so, following a little argument the Church had with Galileo four centuries ago.
It is impossible to be a religious fundamentalist without denying at least some modern science. Fundamentalists usually assert that their preferred holy book is the literal Truth - often the literal Word of God. Conflict then naturally arises when it is discovered that the Holy Text is in error when it comes to established scientific facts.
If your holy text claims that pi is exactly 3 (e.g. see the bible) or that the Noah's Ark story is a historical account, then there are number of ways a religious person might go about reconciling those claims with the findings of science. They include (and these aren't all mutually exclusive):
Only one of the approaches on this list requires denial of science and it is almost the definition of fundamentalism to adopt that approach to religion. Another of the approaches on the list is an exercise in continuous self-delusion, but some religious people choose to adopt it in an attempt to reconcile the irreconcilable. Meanwhile, more reasonable theists tend to adopt one or more of the other approaches.
- Denying the science and asserting the literal truth of the holy writings, even in the face of overwhelming evidence.
- Accepting that the holy writings are flawed because they were written by imperfect human beings trying to make sense of communications from God.
- Accepting that the holy book is not meant to be taken as literally true; it is a guide to living, not a science textbook.
- Accepting that the holy writings are, at least in part, instructive stories or allegories, rather than historically accurate reports of actual events or circumstances.
- Denying that the holy writings mean what they appear to mean; assert instead that, when read "correctly", they really say something different.
Aww...., I'm sorry wegs, I (mis)used that emoji as expressing awe and wonder (looking up into the heavens), not as an expression of disdain (rolling eyes in disgust).You're quoting and rolling your eyes at a comment I directed at billvon. Not sure what this reply means in relation to that.
Correct, the physics of the universe has it's own mathematical organizational abilities, dictated by the natural relative physical values and mathematical functions.the Universe had no say in the physics of itself
To describe and impart knowledge of the mathematical nature of the universal physics to othersus Minions invented maths to describe and impart knowledge about physics to other's
I disagree, only the symbolic language might change, but the functions would remain the same. They are mathematical and immutable.no matter under which physics system came into play if any sentinel being came to happen I'm sure they would invent a suitable math system to match
I believe the proper term there is "artificial", i.e. a robot is an AI.My personal preference for quasi-intelligent would be programmed operations
I would call it an artificial quasi-intelligent machine. A chip is a "processor", an artificial brain.a ATM I would not call quasi-intelligent, or the chip on the bank card used in such a machine