And now you can get an online ordination for free!markfiend wrote:I hereby declare myself the high priest of last-Tuesday-ism! The church accepts donations by paypalmarkfiend wrote: one may as well say that the world was created last Tuesday with all our memories of previous existence created with it.
US Election
- markfiend
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The fundamental cause of the trouble is that in the modern world the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.
—Bertrand Russell
—Bertrand Russell
- CtrlAltDelete
- Amphetamine Filth
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markfiend wrote:But since Daddy Bush has bailed W out of every shitheap he's ever landed himself in, he's not been subject to selective pressuresCtrlAltDelete wrote:]Now, now MF. Take a deep breath. Deep in your heart you know they're right. Can you look at Bush and honestly tell me you believe in evolution?markfiend wrote:[The creationists deny the very fact of evolutionary change that has been observed to happen over and over again.
More crazy talk. Everyone knows the pressures baby Bush suffered when he valiently served our country during Vietnam.
On a slightly related note, is anyone else getting the wiggins from daddy Bushs latest experiments in hair coloring?
I would have done something, but I was overwhelmed by a lack of concern.
- boudicca
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Yes, but one can accept something grudgingly, can one not? To accept is not necessarily to like or agree, or to even give up on the ridicule.andymackem wrote:@ Boudicca. You have the right to say their theories are rubbish. But if they total roughly half the population, and we are in a democracy, don't we have to accept a majority verdict (once we've removed the don't knows and don't cares)?.
You cannot be sure your friends are wrong. I cannot... I am not. I do not dismiss any of these things entirely without proof - I can't prove the nonexistence of God, goblins, or for that matter. But, to me, someone else (no matter how close they are to me) saying that they have had some sort of experience of one of these things does not constitute 'evidence' of any great strength. It's fundementally anecdotal.andymackem wrote:The evidence for a transcendant god, if you choose to believe it, is also everywhere. I have friends who insist that God (the Christian one) has directly intervened in their lives and the lives of people around them. Personally I disagree with them, but they feel they have more direct, personal proof of their God than I can derive from any scientific treatise. And without having shared their experience, how can I be sure they are wrong?
Science provides far stronger evidence because it is based on endless questioning, exploration of all possible reasons for an apparent 'phenomena'. No quantum leaps or hasty conclusions - and no attempt to conceal its frequent inability to come to a conclusion (being a product of our imperfect minds, after all).
I was brought up on Bach! (where did it all go wrong )andymackem wrote: Faith = always destructive. Listen to Bach. Think again. What I term "corporate religion" might be, but faith can inspire wonders as well as disasters. From the earliest ages of human history it has prompted the high watermarks of civilisations: think pyramids, Stonehenge, the great churches, temples, mosques, think the art of the Italian renaissance. To pick a few examples. And yes, on the debit side think Spanish inquisition, Crusades, beheaded hostages in Iraq and all the rest. It's a two-way street.
I was a little unclear about what I meant by faith. The examples you give are, to me, results of great strength of human character and ability. I would even say spirit and inspiration, although I mean that in an entirely flesh-and-blood, this-world way. It is amazing what human psychology is capable of - the strength of a single person or a group of people on a m*****n (sorry! ) to achieve something. And yes, many of these missions (sorry again!) were in the name of God, but there are plenty of situations where human beings have directed this same instinct to achieve great things into non-religious actions and creations.
When I say "faith", I mean sheer close-mindedness, inability to accept any reality other than the one you have faith in, no matter how much evidence is brought to your attention that contradicts your belief. The thing about all the great human achievements you've described is they were all quite possible, with extreme effort. There was a lot of evidence that they were difficult, but not impossible. I suppose a main function of science is to push the boundaries of what exactly is possible for us humans, and to explore the grey area of uncertainty.
But if I told you I had faith that one day, if I just "focused my energies" enough, I'd turn into Joanna Lumley (in order to fulfil all Von's wildest fantasies of course), you'd see that I was a poor deluded soul, because my "faith" would be in something completely impossible. Every piece of evidence flies in the face of my belief that I can transform into another human being who is about 40 years older than I am, but I'm not going to let that shake my faith.
The world is full of people who believe utterly bizarre things in the face of all sorts of evidence because psychologically, it's the most comfortable way they know to exist. Psychiatric wards are full of them, and I've a feeling evangelical churches are even fuller.
Sorry for the length of this post - if you want to reply, Mr. Andy Sir (you, mackem, not the other one! ), take it to the holy thread, boy!
There's a man with a mullet going mad with a mallet in Millets
- hallucienate
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