Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
Given the things you mention next, no gaps in scientific knowledge were answered by religion. (And historically, only accurately by pure luck.)You seem angry, as most in your position do, however I will note that no one has ever gave a thumbs up to those who answered gaps in knowledge with religion,
They sure took their time...nor are you giving the Catholic Church the credit it deserves for its scientific inquiry.
Famously Catholic as everyone knows.Moreover, early 20th-century scientists like Einstein adhered to a steady-state model,
You misspelled "physicist". I know they start with the same letter, but they are not hard to tell apart. And before that physicist with a white collar formulated and published part of the Big Bang model a Soviet scientist had already done it. (Both were independent)the Big Bang theory, formulated in its published form by a priest
the motivating evidence was the recession velocities of the spiral nebulae (galaxies). The CMB wasn't discovered for a few more decades.and supported by evidence like cosmic microwave background radiation,
The Kalam is a useless argument, but interest in it only seems been revived in the 1970s by that infamous non-Catholic Bill Craig.suggested the universe had a finite singularity, which shifted many thinkers to the metaphysical Kalam Cosmological Argument, which argues for a transcendent cause for the universe's beginning.
Your God? Yeah. Mine, not so much.
Hardly. It's very relevant.
I'm sorry, but it doesn't sound like you're qualified as either a scientist or as a philosopher to make the call as to when an ad hominem has been committed and when it has not. Moreover, you don't show any evidence that you can cite support for your "scientific assertion."
If you can't support your own statement, you need to shut up.
And who is your god?
I ask because, according to AI Overview:
Humanists do not believe in a god or gods. Humanism is a philosophy that focuses on the welfare of humanity, and humanists believe that people can live good lives without religion. Humanists value reason and science, and they believe that people can use their efforts to meet their needs.
As a math professor and philosopher, I affirm that Kylie is correct in identifying the given phrase, ""You can't believe Kylie, she hasn't had a formal education in a scientific field!" as both ad hominem and an attack.
... My God is an idea, more formally a Platonic ideal, ... There was no founding pair of humans. There was no global flood. Your God cannot pass an academic test on these criteria. My God isn't required to meet your God's definition, and hence is immune from such a test.
As a math professor and philosopher, I affirm that Kylie is correct in identifying the given phrase, ""You can't believe Kylie, she hasn't had a formal education in a scientific field!" as both ad hominem and an attack.
Really 2PV, I think you're taking this discussion far too personally.
Humanists need not believe in any god or gods, but the lack of belief in gods is no more a criteria than belief. I'm personally familiar with many Christians who are also humanists. It would be better, I think, to say that humanists do not believe in a god or gods qua humanists.
Having already admitted to being a mathematician and philosopher, I don't imagine it will come as any surprise to also admit to being a Platonic idealist. My God is an idea, more formally a Platonic ideal, and my chosen philosophical disposition tells me that ideas exist. That ideal encompasses the spirit of caring for the well-being of my fellow humans.
If it's not too presumptuous, I think it's fair to say you believe in a very specific God, and more, the very specific God described in your sacred texts. Unfortunately, and I say this with no inherent unkindness, the God described in your sacred texts created a universe described in your sacred texts, with historical events described in your sacred texts, that we know, objectively, do not exist.
There was no founding pair of humans. There was no global flood. Your God cannot pass an academic test on these criteria. My God isn't required to meet your God's definition, and hence is immune from such a test.
But since we're talking about God, you can't know that. It's entirely possible the mountains moved and God just hid it from your view because you're not a true believer.Well, if there are no suddenly moved mountains then there is no testable evidence.
If you're actually going to hold that to the standards of scientific testing, you'll have to get a lot more specific.I get what you're saying, and I generally agree with you. But in this case, I am talking specifically about the claim, "If you pray for the mountain to move, then it WILL move."
That claim is indeed testable.
Pray for the mountain to move, and then see if it moved.
That same untracrepidarian argument is used against [the late] Dr Henry M Morris, who authored the footnotes of his Defender's Study Bible.
Do you see THAT as both an ad hominem and an attack?
At least from a geological perspective, the movement of the earth such as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, plate tectonics and my favorites, the burn path of the Yellowstone Hot Spot are not philosophy based.Yeah I have to disagree with you there, your view that science is without its own philosophy is baseless and unprovable, and thus you cannot say definitively what "science" is.
And what is your god's name?
Oh good grief! Can you conflate things any more than you already are, Juvenal?
That's right. Take this as a verbal warning shot across your bow.![]()
The first discussion board I ever posted was "It's Happening," run by a Maryland pornographer whose minimal experience with the nascent internet of the time was sufficient to allow him to hack and redirect Jihadi websites to his discussion board. To say they were displeased would be accurate, but woefully insufficient.
Maryland Man Gains Control of Al-Qaida Web Site for FBI Use, But Agency Passes
I think you may be overestimating the caution with which I'm likely to greet warning shots on a moderated Christian discussion board.
OT, but the mention of the Kalam argument brought it to mind, I am getting the impression--and I would like your input as a physicist on it--that Christian theologians and their channelers in this forum still inhabit a classical Newtonian world. All of the assumptions about space, time, matter, causality, etc. seem topoint to it.The Kalam is a useless argument, but interest in it only seems been revived in the 1970s by that infamous non-Catholic Bill Craig.
A lot of them seem "pre-Newtonian". Unless someone is making a specific scientific claim, I don't have any interest in sorting out someones "viewpoint", physical, philosophical, or theological. Cheers.OT, but the mention of the Kalam argument brought it to mind, I am getting the impression--and I would like your input as a physicist on it--that Christian theologians and their channelers in this forum still inhabit a classical Newtonian world. All of the assumptions about space, time, matter, causality, etc. seem topoint to it.
I asked no questions in the post you quoted.You're pointing to a fallacy, by asking a vague question...
No, I was pointing out the flaws in the argument you present. Namely, the Kalam cosmological argument speaks of nothing more than Some undefined thing which set the universe into motion, and then assumes that this thing is something which deserves the label "god."then conditioning it to falsify the others point is not good.
Yes I have.Also I have to ask, have you actually read the Bible? It isn't an insult, I was just wondering
I think you'll find most scientists go by the scientific method as well.The golden rule: I, I, I. With all due respect and love Kylie but I said science plural, not you, I know plenty of scientists who work off of philosophy.
I'll point out that it was abundantly clear what I was referring to the whole time, as I was literally quoting the particular interpretation I was referring to when I said the things you claimed were me not referring to someone's interpretation.Oh, ok. Now that you're offering a qualification and clarification of your previous comments, I'll keep this distinction you've made in mind.
I am saying that the Bible makes a claim. That claim, as it is written, can be scientifically tested. If a person holds the position that the Bible is meant to be taken literally, then it follows that they believe the claim as written is literally correct, and that claim can be scientifically tested.So then, just for the record. Am I correct in now saying that: You are ONLY attempting to scientifically test some one person's INTERPRETATION about faith, prayer, and the "power to move mountains." ????
I don't have that much time, as I have a family and a full time job to worry about as well, and frankly I hold them to be more important than this website.When doing science, we have to be extremely specific and precise in identifying what it is we think we're "testing." We have to be able to identify our variables and as to what kind of variables they are. We can't just "do" an experiment. It's not that easy and simple. The following link offers a nice little heuristic I think we can keep in mind where variables are to be identified and assessed. More sources/links can be found that essentially agree with this one:
https://www.sciencebuddies.org/science-fair-projects/science-fair/variables
How much time do you have, Kylie? I have about three dozen DIVERSE scholars from various denominations of Christianity to learn from, comparatively. I'm pretty sure that only the most anti-intellectual of Christians (or Skeptics) will have a problem with the scholarly sources from which I've learned biblical exegesis over years. If those who want to discuss the topic of proper biblical exegesis are intelligent, I imagine they would be able to hash out a small set of common principles of interpretation we could all abide by, once the hashing around the table was done.
"I think you can learn."Do you want to learn? Now is your chance. You seem like an intelligent, even if strong-willed, person. I think you can learn.
I think in order for someone to be an authority in a particular field, then there needs to be some objective truth about that field.Kylie. In your mind, what exactly would constitute an authority?