By your reasoning, when ever we define it as such.
Not according to my definition it can't.
That's evident. But we're tring to determine what actually is life here.
I'll give you a Hypothetical:
Imagine we make it to another Planet an discover a Crystaline materal covering much of the planet which we discover is made of Highly Organized Silicon based (we'll can them Proteins, for lack of better word.) Now, imagine if we discover that this Crystaline materal actually "grows" by Aborbing Silicon from the surrounding Envirnment and adds to itself following the same Complex Patten that it is constructed of.
If I told you that apart from the main core, any part seperated would revert to Patternless sand and would cease to grow. It doesn't reproduce another, seperate Materal from itself. It just grows. In fact, it's not "Decended" from another other form of Materal but rather is a highly complex form of the same base Silicon molecules that first formed during the it's own Abiogensis. First question. Does this Crystaline Materal "Replicate?"
Next Question. If I told you that this Materal also exibited a highly complex Electrical System running through it's Structure and even demonstrated the ability to direct it's growth according to it's environment, Would this Material be concidered Intellegent (even if only instinctual?) For that matter, does something need to be alive to be Intelligent?
On the contrary, your wording was nebulous. I had no idea what you were talking about.
Then I recken that's more a failure on your part, not mine.
No. Believing in the universe is different to believing the universe is a god.
Actually, the only difference is that to believe that the universe is not a god is to restrict your definition of God to a very Strict definition; a definition that has yet to be determined.
Which you've just proven my point. Belief is defined, not by the unknown Knowledge but rather how one views the known knowledge.
To ask someone if they believe in God is a nebulous question indeed when that word is undefined, the question Biased, and the answer not a simple yes or no.
Indeed. However, Einstein's field equations have passed falsification tests without fail. This level of precision is unprecidented.
Oh, lets not forgive just how many equations Einstein had formulated that
didn't make the cut.
But that's besides the point, of course. The point is that Einstein's field equations are also incomplete in many regards.
That doesn't make sense. Steam is ice, just at a different temperature. Matter is energy, just in a different configuration.
No, Steam is a state of a configuration of molecules, which are a configuration of Atoms, Etc. Just because you can change it's state doesn't mean a thing in relation to it's nature.
And yet, you still haven't told me what you mean by 'crash', 'system failure', or 'bug'.
They don't matter. I was using them in a Figuretive sense. That wasn't the meaning I was attempting to convey.
And what reason is that? Or do you consider the purpose of the universe to produce life / humans?
No. The Reason why is that I believe the Process of Evolution is an Integral part of the Universe and has been since the beginning (even if it wasn't being used at a certain point) and, as such, it can't be a failure if it's worked so well into the workings of the universe.
The Universe works, so it can't be defined as a failure.
If the universe were to suddenly develop a process that would result in preventing the universe from fuctioning, then that would be a failure.
As for Evolution, I don't concider anything a failure. Sad and a little disappointing purhaps but not a Failure.
Are you suggesting I live somewhere else? Maybe I do cause, around here, that's a minority view.
You said you understood my point, but you didn't. Review the previous few posts.
No, in the first few post, I was attempting to elicit a clearer understanding of your point. As soon as I got that, I understood your point. I just disagreed with it.
I think I would know what point I'm trying to convey, and, given your previous comments, I do not believe you understand.
That's the funny thing about Belief; Without proper facts, you'll always just be guessing.
Remember that I am only trying to establish that, conventionally, one is either an atheist or a theist.
Oh, that point hasn't escaped me. And remember, I'm trying to establish that (a)theism is realitive.
On the contrary, you yourself demonstrated how ill-defined 'blue-eyed' was: is someone with one blue eye and one green eye 'blue-eyed' or not? I was simply highlighting how important it is to keep your key terms sufficiently well-defined.
In the context I was using it, the fact it was so "Ill-defined" was my point. The simple fact that the meaning of the key-word "Blue-eyed" failed to apply in this given circumstance even though, the meaning of the word still retained some of it's meaning, just not all of it.
I didn't change my definition:
- Asexuality: to be not attracted to members of either gender
Semantics. The problem (one of many, actually) is that you have to ask does this apply to Sexual Attaction, Non-sexual Attaction, Or Both? Also, were does Sexual Distinction come into effect in determining Sexual orientation?
If a Man says he's Heterosexual and finds women to be appealing yet is sexually unattracted to
any Female, does this still make him Heterosexual? Would he have to have been attracted to at least one Female in his Life to be determined Heterosexual?
And what about general Sexual Arousal? A Man who is unattracted to either Gender specifically yet still is Sexually attracted to non-gender specific Stimuli: Smells, Sights, Sounds, Non-gender Specific Anatomy (Feet, Hair, Eye-color). If such a man was attracted to a series of Non-gender Specific Stimuli and found a female who exibited one or more of these Traits, would he be concidered Heterosexual (he is attracted to a Female), Asexual (he isn't attracted to a female because she's female), Or Bi-sexual (because he is attracted to traits shared by both men and Women.)
I reworded the definition, but they are synonymous. That said, I don't think I've accused you of equivocation.
Wasn't refering to you, though you sure didn't make it any easier.
Various things. The definition of 'blue-eyed',
To have Eyes Naturally colored blue.
the definition of 'deity'/'god',
Nice. Shift the question back to me again.
your definition of 'theism'/'atheism', etc.
I find no problem there, so it's not a issue.
Ultimately, I would like to know your definitions of 'theism' and 'atheism'.
I have no idea. But apparently one is not the logical conjugate of the other.
Think of a Coin. It has two Faces, one is obviously not the same as the other. If you flip the coin, what is the Probability of one side coming face up? But, a more important question, which side is no longer part of the coin?
Which is why, when we are talking formally, we use catagorical, rather than nebulous, definitions of key terms.
Aside from the fact that we still use nebulous definitions everyday..... Catagorical Definitions are often just as errored.
How so? I am free to define them as I wish. Indeed, I attempted to define them to fit the conventional definitions; can you show that I have not done this?
You are free to define them as you wish though I fail to see how you've attempted to define them to fit the conventional definitions since everything I know any Human sexuality (and believe me, I know quite a bit in this area) is contrary to your definitions. How you reason that they are in any way "Conventioal" escapes me.
On the contrary, I used convention as a baseline.
That's funny. So did I.
On the contrary, since every person has a sexual profile, we can arbitrarily group people according to what's on said profile. I decided to group people according to which genders they are attracted to (if any). People are either heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual, or asexual. I have yet to see definitions of any of these words that differs from my own.
First, every person's Sexual Profile is Relative to their own definition of Sexuality, Sub Definitions being more or less meaningless until People result to define themselves according to another's perspective of Sexuality and not according to how they define themselves.
Second, People are not either heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual, or asexual when these terms themselves are subjective. If anything, I'd define heterosexality and homosexaity as "Most Distingishing Sexual Oriention." The words heterosexual, homosexual, and bisexual lose their meaning when you apply a person's Sexuality to a M
ore Accurate Sliding Scale Model. Human Sexuality is very much like a Rainbow and each person falls somewhere within the Sexual Spectrum depending on where they are at that point of their lifes and, Like different Colors of the Rainbow, People can at times, fall between Generalities and still be their own color. Just because you measure colors as Red, Blue, and Yellow, that doesn't mean that's the
only colors.