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Picture of babthrower
Posted
Should we start a bleep group?

http://whatthebleep.com/groups/
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
06-08-05, 07:46 PM
jusork
Oh! I want to see that movie. It's on my list. I've heard good things. Should I watch the movie first to really know what a study group consists of though?

06-09-05, 01:52 AM
babthrower
Well, kinda tentatively I would say yes. I will investigate the threads, but I really want to see the movie before I do anything heavy. The reason is that after a long investigation I've decided that

1. religion is an aspect of human behavior; atheists have never polled at over 15% of the population anywhere anytime

2. values and religion are integrated; of course there are (secular) humanist values, but see #1

So if we want peace on earth, we have to look at options other than Western Religions.

They talk the talk, but they don't walk the walk.

Maybe Bleep offers appealing values, with that added je na sais quoi of spiritual authority.

06-09-05, 06:44 PM
jusork
You don't think it's possible that we're now evolving into a society where religion is unintegrated and not an aspect of human behavior anymore? Where religion is replaced with knowledge and reason and a calm, fair mind, and values stemming out of them, things that religion just standardized before science was a concept. Religion seems to be becoming less and less necessary. Science surely won't be going anywhere.

06-09-05, 08:24 PM
Sarai

quote:
Originally posted by babthrower:

So if we want peace on earth, we have to look at options other than Western Religions.

They talk the talk, but they don't walk the walk.



Babthrower, I think I'm missing something here. It looks to me like it is a video about physics. Does it present a new religion of some sort?

Also, I have to say that in my personal experience, I don't think that any group "walks the walk" better than any other. When you get to know another culture, you see that it is just as flawed as your own, just in its own way. The same is true of religion. In my experience, the tendency of us Western atheists/agnostics to idealize Eastern religions is simply that- idealizing. The reality is just as full of hypocrites and jerks (and good people and wisdom) as our Western religions.

This message has been edited. Last edited by: Sarai, 06-09-05 10:21 PM

06-10-05, 02:43 AM
babthrower
jusork says:

"You don't think it's possible that we're now evolving into a society where religion is unintegrated and not an aspect of human behavior anymore? Where religion is replaced with knowledge and reason and a calm, fair mind, and values stemming out of them, things that religion just standardized before science was a concept."

Whoa, whoa. You are rushing headlong into areas
which only the bravest will dare to explore. And this is the heart of philosophy. This is what it's all about.

A modality in which values can only be measured against what it is that humans (whether as individuals or as self-appointed
representatives of some defined social group) may feel they have the right to claim: that is what's up for grabs.

Are you up for it? Against this challenge, what the crusaders faced was nothing.

06-10-05, 03:19 AM
babthrower
Sarai said:

"It looks to me like it is a video about physics ... I don't think that any group "walks the walk" better than any other. When you get to know another culture, you see that it is just as flawed as your own..."

Yes, I agree with you, that is what I have found, and that is my point.

I guess it is a matter of choosing how it is that we want our own lives, and those of our descendants, to proceed.

You have said, "The reality is just as full of hypocrites and jerks (and good people and wisdom) as our Western religions."

Too true. But that does not absolve each of us of our responsibility.

06-10-05, 09:44 AM
Sarai
Babthrower, something is happening here, but I don't know what it is (but I've been through all of F. Scott Fitzgerald's books; I'm very well read. It's well known...) Wink

I'm confused. I think I'm not getting the main point about what this film is or what forming a group would mean. Could you give me the short version for dummies? What is the film about, exactly? How does it relate to religion? (I doubt I'll be able to see the movie in the near future, unfortunately! Not many artsy North American films make it to these parts)

06-10-05, 10:03 AM
newnickname
The Dancing Wu Li Masters is a book from 1979; maybe it was the first significant expression of the idea that modern physics, in uncovering the counter-intuitive weirdness of the universe, was coinciding with some aspects of Buddhism (maybe) and raising questions (about reality, consciousness, "life, the universe and everything") that were usually thought to be philosophical, religious and metaphysical.

"Subatomic particles forever partake of this unceasing dance of annihilation and creation. In fact, subatomic particles are this unceasing dance of annihilation and creation. This twentieth-century discovery, with all its psychedelic implications, is not a new concept. In fact, it is very similar to the way that much of the earth's population, including the Hindus and the Buddhists, view their reality.
Hindu mythology is virtually a large-scale projection into the psychological realm of microscopic scientific discoveries. Hindu deities such as Shiva and Vishnu continually dance the creation and destruction of universes while the Buddhist image of the wheel of life symbolizes the unending process of birth, death, and rebirth which is a part of the world of form, which is emptiness, which is form.

Imagine that a group of young artists have founded a new and revolutionary school of art. Their paintings are so unique that they have come to share them with the curator of an old museum. The curator regards the new paintings, nods his head, and disappears into the vaults of the museum. He returns carrying some very old paintings, which he places beside the new ones. The new art is so similar to the old art that even the young artists are taken aback. The new revolutionaries, in their own time and in their own way, have rediscovered a very old school of painting."

06-10-05, 01:49 PM
babthrower
David Bohm (d. 1994) proposed a physics model which was a strong contender, but did not win, the battle of how we might form mental models of physical reality. (Nils Bohr had insisted on a strict literal interpretation of the uncertainty principle. This view prevails. While we don't know both a particle's speed and its location, the particle does not exist. The Bohr interpretation implies that existence depends on human perception. (See Schrodinger's cat thought experiment.))

Bohm rejected this view. Physics is deterministic, he said. The particle does exist, whether we can perceive it or not. Bohm concluded that even space and time are constructs of the human brain, and they may not exist as we perceive them. He came up with the 'holographic universe' notion.

Bohm then expanded his theory to include mysticism. I don't know if that's good news or bad news. But it certainly displays the strong drive that humans have to model and integrate reality as we perceive it.

We can live with the idea that it's quite likely our brains can't construct a model of the universe without paradox. (Paradox is nature's way of telling us we're nuts.)

But so what? Another function of religion (and more important, I think) is to hold and support a system of values. In another thread we talked about secular humanism -- the view that humans (and not an alien, non-human god) have the right and the duty to determine values, and that these values should be 'good', in the biological sense, for human beings.

So you see where this is going? It doesn't matter if the god of religion exists or doesn't exist, independent of human minds. We percieve a universe without cause, and even if we invent a cause and call it god, which is only, after all, a way of saying 'a causeless cause', we have not solved the mystery. So we can accept that we cannot know, and set ourselves the task of arriving at values that make sense.

e.g. If a religion teaches that birth control is wrong, and biology teaches us that any species will increase in numbers until it destroys its habitat, we must recognize that the religion is obsolete, and form a new one.

Why form a new one? Why not just live without religion?

Because the majority of humans need a religion. So we should encourage religions that make sense. If necessary, we should invent them.


(By the way, I like this quotation:

"Every theory is killed sooner or later... But if the theory has good in it, that good is embodied and continued in the next theory." — Albert Einstein)

06-10-05, 10:02 PM
jusork

quote:
Originally posted by babthrower:
Are you up for it? Against this challenge, what the crusaders faced was nothing.



Well, I think I'm going to try to reach toward that direction anyway. Not really pushing anything though. Whether I make it or not. Wish me luck. Wink

06-11-05, 03:53 PM
frankvan

quote:
Because the majority of humans need a religion. So we should encourage religions that make sense. If necessary, we should invent them.



The majority of humans need a lot of things, food, shelter, education, etc. I think religion that doesn't provide the necessities, or impedes their attainment, could be left on the back burner. If we could invent one that satisfied the needs of the majority a lot of people would lose their profitable employment. Confused

06-11-05, 07:22 PM
FredPuli
Yeah and what are we going to do with all those empty unused churches if religion is abandoned?

Sorry, I'll correct that. What are you Americans going to do? Ours were emptied and unused years ago Big Grin Still, if you want to see a lot of unusual carpet stores, bingo halls, Victorian gothic buildings (with very big windows) converted into homes, kindergarten etc we know just where to look !

06-15-05, 04:29 PM
mike74
Why create a new religion dont we have enough!!! Besides if you look at religion take Chritianity.... They do not folow nor practice exactly the way the founder or founders once practiced it. If any of you have ever been to a sunday School once or twice you would probably remember Jesus saying more then once "oh faithless and perverse generation!" Religion has never really been perfect.... any of them.

And if you believe in the physics idea just mentioned "Physics is deterministic, he said. The particle does exist, whether we can perceive it or not. Bohm concluded that even space and time are constructs of the human brain, and they may not exist as we perceive them. He came up with the 'holographic universe' notion" You may have a religion. If you take away the particle Idea and place God in that statement you have a relgion that acknowledges a higher power!

So back on point why create a new religion! It seems to be in our nature to fail morally! Which if you've study religion They all point to this... also history!!! Can anybody name a time in history when man was flawless from an evil nature?

Course we got evolution theory that would state that maybe we are evolving to somthing beter... But how can that be a valid arguement when it seems evil things are on the rise....(When I say evil , I mean things such as murder, rape, stealling,and I guess terrible selfish acts that harms oneself as well as others)

Its clear another religion will not help. The real question is? Is Their a God? If so which one is real? Then theirs the how do yah know? And what is faith?

You see Science is based on theories and facts
Relgions are based on Beliefs, and hopefully faith!
In my opinion We need a faith in a God (if you believ one exists) Then a pursuit of a deeper knowledge of that God! Becuase if I'm correct in this thoery thiers probably suppost to be somekind of a relationship their! ok again take Christianity (Being thats our most prominent religion here in the states) If you look at the people out of the bible their was a relationship in a sense of that they where not the only ones comunicating... For instence you would read about an appostle praying then you would read the spirit said go here or their then provide the means to accomplish their mission. How many Christians in this day and time have that kind of a relationship?

OK I"m not trying to knock Christianity or even to defend it. But I have more knowledge of this religion then the others... But I guess what I'm trying to say is dont shut your mind to a sertian religion or science until you know more about it... or its God rather then its people!!!

That would be like me totally ignoring Phycallogy becuase I dont like the way the come up with their disorders!!! I'll have to try and find that web site again... but what I read floored me!!! It basically said that a disorder is voted into a disorder.... in other words their is no solid scientific basis for certian disorders... So if I did a lil more study on it I'm sure their has got to be some disorders that have been proving scientifically!

One more example and this may go back to my human nature point. The FDA recently did a study on How long drugs affects last after the exploration date.... They found that they can last up to 5 years longer then the experation date.... Wounder why..... So you through out the drugs and by more... giving more money to already filthy rich pharmisudical companies!!!!

But enough of that I find this forum very interesting! I hope we all come to some kinda truth rather then something made up! I'm tired of getting jerked around by religions and certian science fanctions(I guess we can call them Theoryists, and theologists)

06-16-05, 02:04 AM
newnickname
Evolution theory doesn't say that we're evolving into something better. Evolution theory says that species tend to adapt - by random variation and natural selection - to the prevailing environment. Those organisms better suited, even only slightly, to survive and reproduce in a certain environment tend to have more offspring - perpetuating that slight advantage in the DNA they pass on. This process repeats over and over, and so species may gradually change.

Species don't become 'better', they just tend to become better-suited to a particular situation.

Some say humans have more or less stopped evolving, having much less selection pressure then when we had just climbed down from the trees.

The 'evil' that you see around you can be explained in part in terms of evolution - aggressive (sexually, and in competition with other males) male apes tend to have more offspring. To some extent, aggression is selected; it's not just chance that most violent crimes are committed by young men.

Alternatively, you might say that we evolved to live in small groups on savannah - not piled up on top of each other in our millions in cities; no wonder we get irritable or violent.

It can give us insights into our character, and warnings on how not to do things now, but evolution probably isn't the place to look for a guide on how to live life.

You're right - psychiatry isn't an exact science. We really don't know much about the brain and the mind.

Modern physics, on the other hand, seems to be a candidate for a new religion partly because of the authority that Babs mentioned, but also because (more than some religions these days, maybe) it can give us that sense of awe about the everyday - concepts about the nature of reality that leave your mind reeling.

06-16-05, 10:47 AM
babthrower
mike74 wants to know:

"Why create a new religion..."

We have an excess of religions that fall into certain categories:

1. tax scams

2. religions created out of whole cloth by people who want monetary and sexual power over others

3. religions created out of whole cloth by people who never want to do another hard day's work as long as they live

4. religions created out of the mystical delusions of schizophrenics

5. religions created out of some new 'take' of an older religion which itself is not well understood by the new adherents; such new dogmas are often based on poor translations of ancient texts

and so on.

Mike continues:

"Besides if you look at religion take Chritianity.... They do not folow nor practice exactly the way the founder or founders once practiced it."

Too true. Frown

Still, that would be a problem for another generation.

Mike makes a final point:

"If you take away the particle Idea and place God in that statement you have a relgion that acknowledges a higher power!"

I think from what I have seen that Western religions call for a personal god: a particle wouldn't cut it, I'm afraid. We need the notion of some one who 'sees us when we're sleeping, who knows when we're awake, who knows when we're been bad or good...' Some people cling very tenaceously to the notion of an intimitely caring god, in spite of all the evidence that there is no such thing. How many have called to their god in times of terrible trouble, relying on verses from ancient texts that quote their god as saying he will protect them? And called in vain?

There have been 'secular humanist churches', one that springs to mind is the modern Unitarian-Universalist church. (Historically the Unitarian church was a Christian church .) But they don't have a god-figure, and seem to serve the (important) purpose of defining oneself and one's values. But they aren't winning the hearts and minds of the people.

We need a new religion to displace those which teach fanaticism in the name of god, and fervently look forward to armageddon, and work toward it. Don't you think it would be a good idea if such lunacy were displaced by something that makes sense for our children and future descendants?

A few years ago some scientific types came up with the notion of Gaia, a sort of earth-mother who is in fact mother earth, I believe. The goal was to personify nature, so that we would take care of the earth better. Didn't catch on.
http://contenderministries.org/UN/gaia.php

I'll leave further discussion of the interesting points that you raise for another post.

07-17-05, 05:32 AM
mike74
The mother earth and anture worship has actually been around for a long time!! You have diferent pagans That believe this. Druids and wicca come to mind!

And you stated "We need a new religion to displace those which teach fanaticism in the name of god, and fervently look forward to armageddon"

Why do you keep mentioning Armageddon?


And as far as the Question it still stands? Why create a new religion or God!? If you have definate proofthat theirs is no God Rather then Godless religous people, why create one? And Why blame God (wether Real or not) for the actions of religous zealics? People do alot of thins in the name of a religion or a god, but is what they do in concordance to their God?

07-17-05, 09:32 AM
babthrower
Originally posted by mike74:

"The mother earth and anture worship has actually been around for a long time!"

Yeah, but they don't have a broad appeal. Their membership isn't growing much.

Mike continues: "Why do you keep mentioning Armageddon? "

Don't read the news much, do you Mike? There's a flavor of Christianity running amok these days and it's allied with NewCon politicians. It's anti-ecology, masculist and war-mongering. It takes the view that the world is evil and is coming to an end soon. So we might as well live it up, get rich, spend money, because this earth will pass away and 'we' -- the elect, or the saved, or whatever -- will enjoy a new earth forever under the kingship of god. Armageddon is where this will happen, according to some lunatic's prophecies.

It's like the attitude of some people: it's okay to keep our house like a pigpen, trash the property, have old wrecked cars in the yard, punch holes in the walls -- it's only a rental.


This religion is growing fast, and gets big buck$ contributed by NeoCon politicians.

"And as far as the Question it still stands? Why create a new religion or God!?"

I already said why. To counter the religion I described above. Since people, it seems, must have a religion.

Mike closes by asking, "...why create one?"

Humans create gods all the time. If we must have gods, why not have one with sensible human-oriented goals, instead of the blood-and-guts type favored by fascists?

And "And Why blame God (wether Real or not) for the actions of religous zealics?"

I don't blame god. It makes no sense to blame an imaginary being for anything. I blame the 'religous zealics' you referred to. Wink

07-17-05, 12:13 PM
Professor
An honest review of the movie What the (bleep) Do They Know? can be found in Skeptical Inquirer magazine. It is also reviewd at a site called Skeptico ("What the (bleep) Were They Thinking?").

Quantum mechanics (QM) is real science. Given that its predictions agree with experimental observations to incredibly high precision, it is arguably the most successful scientific theory of modern times. But QM is weird (in the context of human experience) and every physicist acknowledges that it is weird.

That makes it a target for misunderstanding and abuse by all manner of ignorant, gullible, or just plain wacko people seeking scientific validation for their mystical mumbo-jumbo. Hence this movie, which abuses QM the way creationism abuses geology and paleontology.

Some day we will (hopefully) have a deeper understanding of QM, a glimpse into what lies behind the apparent quantum weirdness so that the "woo-woo" factor will disappear, and with it will disappear the nutcases who come out of the woodwork to twist and exploit QM to their own quasi-religious agendas.

We humans have barely emerged from our savage, animalistic ancestry. Through a process we call civilization, our primal urges (such as to murder others who threaten us) are suppressed. Religion and mysticism are in the same category -- primal urges arising from our pedigree as primitive and irrational organisms seeking some kind of harmony with the world. But these tendencies are more persistent and tougher to eradicate.

Just as we teach young children not to solve their problems with aggression against others, we need to teach them not to jump to irrational conclusions or to cling to beliefs lacking physical evidence. That is the challenge for ages to come.

07-17-05, 04:30 PM
babthrower
Thanks for that site, Prof, very enlightening. I had hoped that the What the bleep approach might be something that could give rise to a new religion that would advance sensible human values. All I knew about it was what an excited friend told me after seeing the film. But no metaphysics that is inconsistent with both common sense and contemporary science can be the basis of a new religion.

Drat!

This message has been edited. Last edited by: DorianGreyed,
 
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Picture of mike74
Posted Hide Post
Again you both make my point... Its not a religon or evolution! Its man!!!! You can give them morals, a god, a book... But the end results has always been the same! So the problem is not some form of morals or religon its man himself.

I heard a story once! Its placed in midevil times. A jestur trains this cat with manners of a gentleman! He sits at a table wearing a suit! Uses the proper spoon! And so on and so forth! But to make the story quicker(And memory issues Big Grin) The king finds out about it and wishes to see this cat! So the jestur gets their; the cats does his job and the king is most impressed! But the cat notices a mouse and all of the sudden goes after the mouse tearing his clothes and making a mess all over the king!

I guess the moral of the story is you can take a cat out of his environment, even train him to behave civilized so to speak. But you cant take away the cats nature from him! He will always be a cat.
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07-17-05, 07:00 PM
frankvan
If we can somehow reach the point where what we believe is strictly limited to what we know we would have that new religion we seem to need. I would call it orthodox Skepticism. Wink

07-17-05, 07:16 PM
Professor
I think mike74 makes a convincing point. Our brains are "hard-wired" a certain way that will always make us vulnerable to our innate emotions -- rage, lust, etc. Short of re-engineering our own neuro-biology by methods far in the future not yet imaginable -- if our species can survive long enough for that to happen -- I'm not optimistic about solving our social problems. Mike's "civilized" cat will always revert to a mouse-killer, and we humans will always revert to naked apes. Wish it weren't so. Frown

07-17-05, 09:49 PM
babthrower
[QUOTE]Originally posted by mike74:

"Its man!!!! You can give them morals, a god, a book... But the end results has always been the same!"

Well, yeah, religions call it man's sinful nature, sin being defined as acting against the god's will. Non-religious people call it 'naked ape' behavior, in which mankind's ethical development is countered by instinctive behaviors which were good for gene-replication during our long evolutionary descent.

But that's not the point, that's the given. The point is, how do we counter it?

Both religious and non-religious believe that effort can produce effect.

Religious believe that rituals, prayers, 'cleansings', and so forth, will 'purify' man.

Non-religious believe that as humans begin to understand how social behavior can be shaped, we can devise ways of training people so that people will, above all, not destroy their home, the earth; and treat each other more humanely as well.

Religious are suspicious of any code of behavior that places a value on 'material' things: it is assumed that only spiritual values please the god. (But notice that many churches are monuments to material wealth and power. But I digress, sorry.)

Non-religious are suspicious of any value system based on the presumed views of an imaginary being.

*********** Example **************

Birth control is a means of limiting human population growth.

War is another means, as is starvation.

In general, religions seem to favor the latter, calling the former 'sinful'.

*****************
Questions:

Do religions hold such beliefs because they are tradition-bound?

Would it not be beneficial to have a religion that promoted population control by humane means?

Would it not be necessary to found a new religion that is not tradition-bound in order to arrive at humane means of population control?

07-18-05, 01:38 AM
mike74
That religon is on its way! LOL According to a radio program who interveiwed a luciferian," He stated that when This one man takes power they will set up Resocialization camps!" He said they would use starvation to resocialize people from their religous beliefs to the new world religon." In other words if your a muslim,christian,buddist...... so on and so forth, and do not reject your beliefs and believe in this new religon you will starve.

07-18-05, 10:47 AM
babthrower
Babthrower asked:

"Would it not be beneficial to have a religion that promoted population control by humane means?"

Mike replied:

"That religon is on its way! ... they would use starvation to resocialize people from their religous beliefs to the new world religon."

Sorry, Mike, but I don't think starvation is humane.

And just possibly some other people might have something to say about this Master Plan.

Not all proposed religions will work in the future, I suppose, more than in the past.

Just as we struggle to establish our favorite political system, e.g. democracy or fascism, I expect we will struggle to establish our favorite value system, bolstered by some new invented divine figurehead. What is to be desired this time, though, is that the figurehead will be benign, and this will inspire a struggle of words and ideas, without recourse to the old ways of enforcing compliance by arms and starvation.

I suspect Mike will not agree. He is convinced all men and women are intrinsically evil. Some of us believe there are imaginative people of good will on the planet, though. I know. I have met many personally throughout my life. Smile

07-18-05, 07:22 PM
mike74
No offense but look at history. I'm not talking about the individual, but man as a whole. Again look at our history.

07-18-05, 08:08 PM
jusork
Wouldn't evil mean that there's no good in us? If so, I really don't think anyone lacks good, even if they do bad things. Perhaps we should be called something more like intrinsically multi-personalistic?

And what about all the people who are good and moral people? Is evil nature just being repressed or what?

07-18-05, 08:16 PM
babthrower
Actually I have looked at history. Quite a bit.

I see that slavery was universal in the year 1500 AD. I see that there have been major steps since then to make it illegal. There are still slaves, plenty of them, in the world. But a nation's status depends a lot on factors such as whether slavery is legal or permitted. Some individuals had a big impact in abolishing slavery. But it took a lot of effort by ordinary men and women of good will to abolish it.

I see that monarchies and tyrants were the norm for governments until the British began the slow steps toward constitution beginning in the 17th century. A wonderful bunch of idealists, at the risk of their lives, created those remarkable documents, the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States. They were inspired by some theorists like Locke, Voltaire and the French Philosophes, who believed that a man's life need not be nasty, brutish and short.

Two hundred years ago most of the world was illiterate, and those in power liked it that way. Some idealists began to struggle to gain acceptance for the notion that all children should be taught to read and write. Today that is normal in advanced nations, and desired in the poorer nations.

Notice that none of this was accomplished by people kneeling and praying; but by people working hard to change the thinking of other people.

History is interesting.

07-18-05, 08:39 PM
juanruiz
The operative word here is thinking. Dogma, be it theological, political, philosophical, or whatever only survives when people follow it like sheep. This is the big mistake made by the so-called creationists: they start with dogma (The Bible accurately describes creation), and go from there. This is the glory of science; it demands thought. The works of Newton and Einstein were never thought to be inviolate, holy writ. Nor was Darwin a god. Freud, Jung, enjoyed a great vogue, but even they come under scrutiny. Margaret Mead, a goddess of anthropology? No. Even her ethnographies have been reviewed and found wanting in method and findings. Religion does not allow that. Quite the contrary. Murder those who disagree: Tyndale, Bruno, ad infinitum. Chrisitanity has never wanted such thinkers; those who rock the boat. Hans Küng, for example. Toe our line or else. Luckily for Küng, he didn't live in the 17th century, unlucky for Bruno he did.

07-19-05, 03:27 AM
mike74
Do you watch or listen to the news? How many people just today alone have killed someone or raped some kid!

By the way you left out Martin Luther(either one) Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, Jesus Christ, Mahuamed,and maybe not all but the majority of our founding fathers were religous! Their are many religous thinkers in the past also(granted Jesus and Abraham Lincoln wasnt accepted by everyone and was killed)!

Their are also the forgoten Like missionaries who tought schools in poor areas where they werent excepted. I'm sure their was some who were not religous, that tuaght or play a part in history that we have never heard of. Granted the missionaries tuaght religon but they also tuaght how to read write arithmatic, even science.

See atheist and agnostics r just as dogmatic about their beliefs as Christians and muslims. They talk about tolerence and acceptense but if you believe in something they dont look out your a heritic... Burn them at the stake!!!!

What I believe.
Is man inherently evil? I dont know (not scared to admit I just dont know)
Is man kind evil? Whatch the news and read history.
Are their thinking religous people? Yes their are!
Are their thinking non religous people? Yes their are!
I dont think smarts stops at religous; non religous, color,or even political bounds! People who think this, are as simple minded as the ones who where the white capes and hoods and where swastika patches!

07-19-05, 11:39 AM
babthrower
Mike, you keep claiming we're 'making your point' for you, but you seem to consistently miss mine.

You see the news as proof of your 'point', too, don't you? I wonder why. Did we not say from the outset that if we want peace on earth, then we have to look elsewhere than at the major religions? (Factors within two major religions are leading us toward Armageddon, and they are doing it consciously because of some crazed notion they have about an imaginary god's will.)

Now you're on about bad news: guys raping kids. What does that have to do with the topic?

Then you go on:

"By the way you left out Martin Luther..."

What did he ever do to promote humanist 'goods'? As far as I know, all he ever did was start a new religion by defying the pope. Brave, I'll admit, but just another religious power-trip.

Then you go on:

"[By the way you left out] Abraham Lincoln..."

No, I didn't. He was included when I wrote: "Some individuals had a big impact in abolishing slavery. But it took a lot of effort by ordinary men and women of good will to abolish it."

Mike goes on : "[By the way you left out]...Jesus Christ, Mahuamed..."

No, I didn't leave them out. They each started the very religions that are at the core of the problem of peace on earth right now. The religions they founded both typify the worst kind of religion: where humanistic goals are set aside in favor of some crack-brained notion of pleasing the imaginary god. I said, "So if we want peace on earth, we have to look at options other than Western Religions."

That's not leaving them out, Mike.

It wouldn't hurt if you read and gave some thought to some of the other posts, too, Mike.

Sarai said: "The reality is just as full of hypocrites and jerks (and good people and wisdom) as our Western religions." This is acknowledging that mankind is flawed. We know that.

Newnickname said: "Evolution theory doesn't say that we're evolving into something better. Evolution theory says that species tend to adapt - by random variation and natural selection - to the prevailing environment." (So any choices we make as to belief systems, not being random choices, have nothing to do with evolution theory.)

Newnick also reminds us: "The 'evil' that you see around you can be explained in part in terms of evolution - aggressive (sexually, and in competition with other males) male apes tend to have more offspring. To some extent, aggression is selected; it's not just chance that most violent crimes are committed by young men."

You see, if you demonize bad acts ("Satan made him do it!") that gets you nowhere in terms of dealing with human over-agression. Because once again, you're pointing to an imaginary being as the cause of the unwanted behavior. Its as if you have a headache and for some reason you believe Martians are directing toxic rays at you so you cover your head with aluminum foil to block the rays. You won't cure your headache that way, Mike, because Martians are imaginary beings.

So it's a bit premature for you to crow that all of us posters are "making your point for you."

*****************

Of all existing religions, I think I like the Quakers best. If you look at the reforms done in the past, the kind I've been talking about as 'good things', you see Quakers there somewhere. They have struggled patiently over the past two centuries - some have gone to prison or died - to advance such humanist values as:

- simplicity in the manner of living
- democracy regardless of race, sex, class, or nation
- 'socialist' values such as care for the poor, aged, and insane
- encouraging women to be ministers
- opposition to war
- opposition to slavery

The believe in social equality. Quakers refused to remove their hats to those in authority and used the singular "thee" and "thou" in their speech, while the common people were supposed to address their betters as "you."

And, being opposed to war, they would never urge their government to bomb the middle east back to the stone age, nor would they send their young people to die in suicide attacks on civilians just going about their everyday lives.

Yet Quakers are Christians.

They're almost perfect.

(I'm not a pacifist. I believe in fighting in defense of one's country or home. I just don't believe in little warlike 'adventures' at the drop of a hat, or to make a presidential candidate look as if he has some stones even though his military experience is pathetic, or to test weapons systems, or to advance the economic status of the already obscenely rich.)

07-19-05, 08:34 PM
jusork

quote:
Originally posted by mike74:
Do you watch or listen to the news? How many people just today alone have killed someone or raped some kid!

Is man kind evil? Whatch the news and read history.



Since there are over 6 billion people in the world right now and only a few have committed evil crimes, percentage-wise you'd have to consider that most people in the world actually aren't inherently evil. (The same for the number of people throughout history.) Right?

07-20-05, 01:12 AM
mike74
[QUOTE]

Notice that none of this was accomplished by people kneeling and praying; but by people working hard to change the thinking of other people. [QUOTE]

This is what you quoted ay the end of your previous post that is why I listed people like Martin Luther + (King) , Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, founding fathers, Jesus, MAhumaed......

Martin Luther may have been religous but He stood up to those who oppressed becuase of beliefs(kinda help chip away for freedom... Maybe religous freedom for a certian denom, but its freedom. I guess we should have no religous freedoms. MArtin Luther King help in civile rights as well as other relgious folx both Christian and Muslim. Names like Malcom x, Jesse Jackson, Billy Graham (Which doesnt have a scandal to his name by the way, he gets confused with people like Swaggared and oral roberts and such), but those are the popular names what about all the others who where religous that played a big part in that I guess Those simple minded Zealets should not be included! Obviously Abraham Lincoln another praying man played a big part in abolishing slavery, George Washington , and other founding fathers where also religous who played a big part in our independence, Jesus Preached peace and tought selflessnes (maybe it didnt take, but you know he did), (besides if it wherent for Christ where would the quakers and other Christian pasifist be?), Mohamed as far as I can tell tuaght along the same lines(Not an expert on Mohamed, nor a good speller Big Grin, but from talking with a muslim friend at work is what he tuaght) Do I need to name more... All of these where the neeling and praying type! Yes I get what you are saying! Your judging these religions becuase of a few, just like they judge you becuase of a few! Your no beter then they are is what my point is here at the moment!


OHHH and you mentioned again about starting another religion so I guess you've missed my original point! You cannot find a perfect religion that everyone will eccept and live by! Its not possible! History has proved time and time again! Christ Tuaght to be selfless, humble, and to think of others before yourself... How much beter a code of conduct can you get!!!! Just becuase people dont believe or live by these doenst make that code bad? Does it? And if I'm not mistaken Muhammed mentioned some things along those lines....
So whats the point of Wording Be selfless, humble, and love others as much as yourself, Loving your enemy? Tell me whatelse needs to be redone about that!

If These to guys couldnt get people to follow these simple rules what makes you thing some new code of religon will????????????

07-20-05, 01:35 AM
babthrower
Mike asks, "If These to guys couldnt get people to follow these simple rules what makes you thing some new code of religon will?"

Because who wants to follow rules that don't make sense?

Be selfless: that goes against common sense. We should think about our group, sure, but if we don't have a vested interest, something to our advantage, why bother? Why be a martyr for nothing?

It would be nice if people could just make laws.

But it seems that people need the thrill of imagining there is a very powerful spirit taking care of everything and watching their every move and every thought. It helps them control their urges, maybe.

The influential founders of the American constitution were Deists. So their idea of god was of a great mind or intelligence that created the universe. But this Deus (Latin for god ) did not concern itself with the everyday matters that affect individual humans. It didn't want blood sacrifices, it didn't care which tribe won a battle, it wouldn't help one tribe against another.

In a way, it was a very Republican god. People had to look after themselves. Don't bother it with prayers. It didn't listen and didn't care. It supplied food, air, water -- now go scratch!

If people were sensible enough to want that kind of god we would have no problem with promoting values that make sense to humans. People would see, for example, that unless we limit human population then war and starvation are inevitable. So being practical people, we would say, let's practice birth control.

But alas, the largest Christian sect (and some of the smaller) still say that war, disease, and starvation is the way pleasing to god.

Go figger. Confused

07-20-05, 02:14 AM
mike74
OK Name one? Which Christian sect says War, Disease, and starvation is a way to please God?... And where is your references? And your references on the founding fathers... Does this also include Lincoln, and the civil rights people I mentioned? And where did it come from? I'd like to read it... please make it a reliable sorces atheist/agnostic today is just as political and propaganding as Christian sights.

And How does being selfless not make sense... If people where not so selfish and greedy(which would fall under selfishness) their wouldnt be any wars!

And if you make up a new fake religion why would anyone believe in this new god of yours or what ever you use? or even follow its rules. Somebodyelse may say the new religion makes no sense! What do you do then?

07-20-05, 03:04 AM
mike74

quote:
Deists


OK I've found good sights, both Christian, athiest, and other wise... I see your point but some did believe in God and prayed, but not the majority!

President George Washington, September 17th, 1796
"It is impossible to rightly govern the world without God and the Bible"
But I gues 1 or two may have believe in the Bible!

07-20-05, 03:12 AM
mike74
Patrick Henry

"It cannot be emphasized too strongly or too often that this great nation was founded not by religionists but by Christians, not on religion but on the Gospel of Jesus Christ. We shall not fight alone. God presides over the destinies of nations."John Jay, 1777 The first Chief Justice of the United States

"Providence has given to our people the choice of their rulers, and it is the duty, as well as the privilege and the interest, of a Christian nation to select and prefer Christians for their rulers."

Just a few and they seem to be very uhhh untolerable to other religions! About as bad as the athiest and humanists of today Big Grin

07-20-05, 03:35 AM
babthrower
Damn, Mike, I like your spirit!

"OK Name one? Which Christian sect says War, Disease, and starvation is a way to please God?"

Well, bear with me a bit.

Biological principle #1: In 1798 the English biologist Thomas Malthus stated it like this:

"In the United States of America, where the means of subsistence have been more ample, the manners of the people more pure, and consequently the checks to early marriages fewer, than in any of the modern states of Europe, the population has been found to double itself in twenty-five years.

"This ratio of increase, though short of the utmost power of population, yet as the result of actual experience, we will take as our rule, and say, that population, when unchecked, goes on doubling itself every twenty-five years or increases in a geometrical ratio.

"Let us now take any spot of earth, this Island for instance, and see in what ratio the subsistence it affords can be supposed to increase. We will begin with it under its present state of cultivation. If I allow that by the best possible policy, by breaking up more land and by great encouragements to agriculture, the produce of this Island may be doubled in the first twenty-five years, I think it will be allowing as much as any person can well demand.

"In the next twenty-five years, it is impossible to suppose that the produce could be quadrupled. It would be contrary to all our knowledge of the qualities of land. The very utmost that we can conceive, is, that the increase in the second twenty-five years might equal the present produce. Let us then take this for our rule, though certainly far beyond the truth, and allow that, by great exertion, the whole produce of the Island might be increased every twenty-five years, by a quantity of subsistence equal to what it at present produces. The most enthusiastic speculator cannot suppose a greater increase than this. In a few centuries it would make every acre of land in the Island like a garden.

"Yet this ratio of increase is evidently arithmetical.

"It may be fairly said, therefore, that the means of subsistence increase in an arithmetical ratio. Let us now bring the effects of these two ratios together.

"The population of the Island is computed to be about seven millions, and we will suppose the present produce equal to the support of such a number. In the first twenty-five years the population would be fourteen millions, and the food being also doubled, the means of subsistence would be equal to this increase. In the next twenty-five years the population would be twenty-eight millions, and the means of subsistence only equal to the support of twenty-one millions. In the next period, the population would be fifty-six millions, and the means of subsistence just sufficient for half that number. And at the conclusion of the first century the population would be one hundred and twelve millions and the means of subsistence only equal to the support of thirty-five millions, which would leave a population of seventy-seven millions totally unprovided for."

Now Mike, we know that advances in agricultural science have improved our outlook somewhat. We have higher-yielding seed, and so forth. But anyone who thinks about it can see that population growth will outstrip the growth of food supply.

And people want much more than food. We want what any organism wants: room to live in.

So how do we handle the problem?

1. Emigrate. For hundreds of years, people have migrated to new empty regions and flourished for a while. Then they had to move again, because they had filled up the new area. Example: Lief the Lucky left Scandanavia for Iceland. In a few years Eric the Red left for Greenland. Why? The arable land on Iceland was deemed to be totally utilized.

Now we have run out of space. There are no more unexploited continents.

2.Increase agricultural production. The same land produces more food.
We are doing that. But we are also noticing that the young people want not just food, but range and scope in which to live freely and express themselves. We see the same thing in wild populations of animals. If a population becomes too crowded, even if the food supply is not yet exhausted, we see decline in health and vigor of animals, and an increase of disease and aggression within a breeding area.

3. Reduce surplus population. Move into adjacent areas, killing as we go. To do this successfully we need good armaments and good morale. It is nice if we have a slogan that makes us feel entitled to the land of our neighbors. "Manifest destiny", for example.

So ask yourself, Mike, if you were a farmer, and you saw that your hundred acres would not support (healthily) more than thirty cows. Yet the herd was increasing and it was up to forty and they were not doing well: the grass was clipped to sod level as soon as it sprouted, the animals were fighting and injuring each other, the young were feeble and malnourished, the pasture was dying because the very roots were laid bare.

What would an intellignet farmer do?

(1) Allow them to continue to breed even though weakened by starvation and disease. After all, in time the death rate will cause the population to drop to the point at which the land can again support it.

(2) Control breeding until the numbers of animals are such that the land can sustain the animals in a healthy condition.

This post is becoming too long. So I will leave you with a couple of questions.

Read your O.T. What does god recommend when the population becomes so dense that tribal warfare breaks out? Does he recommend spilling one's seed on the ground?

No. He condemns such a practice (cf. Onan). Instead, we read of smiting the enemy, bashing the enemy children's heads against the walls, etc. etc.

And because of these ancient ways, religions today teach that birth control is wrong. And in the most 'Christian' countries, the murder rate is high, terrorism is rampant, and war is glorified. Well, I suppose murder, war and terrorism control population, anyhow. And please the god.

Does that answer your question?

07-20-05, 03:58 AM
mike74

quote:
cf. Onan


LOL You keep your pants up!!!!! But not all argue birth control... but the majority do argue against abortion! Is the Catholics actually Christian? The believe in so many gods or saints or..... And are they not diest to an extent also?

ohhh and you forgot number three the farmer would seel those extra cattle he dont need and make a profit! Big Grin

But again Where do you see a Church Mainly Christian that promotes that war, disease, and starvation is the way pleasing to god.????

LOL Again if you obey principles of That bible their wouldnt be any teen pregnancies,uneeded pregnacies, and unmarital pregnacies.... why becuase every would be selfLESS(NOT SELFISH), but selfLESS!(I'm not sure you understood what I meant in one of my previous post).

Which reminds me if I understood you correctly:

"selfless: that goes against common sense"..... How so whats wrong with putting others before yourself.

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Man is not intrinsically evil, any more than his nearest relative, the chimpanzee, is intrinsically evil. Neither is capable of anything more than interacting with his environment. When we have sufficiently evolved and are comfortable within our environment we are capable of behaving intelligently. A rudimentary understanding of the basic math involved in an exponential growth in population eventually outstripping an arithmetic growth in food production as well as zero growth of our finite planet, should lead to confronting the rate of reproduction. While the chimp may not realize that problem his environment will provide a natural solution, one way or another. I think that our present level o understanding as a species is only slightly more advanced than that of our simian ancestors. So we can hardly expect to see much more progress through following the prescribed religious remedies of selflessness, than we have achieved in several thousands of years of human existence. We remain caught in the endless repetition of the cycle of wars, famines, diseases; praying and preaching the whole time. So long as we cling to the remedies of "threats of hell and hopes of paradise" to regulate human behavior, we can scarcely expect to produce very different results than we have in the past few centuries. I don't think the solution to our problems is the development of one more "religion" but rather the realization that we are more risen ape than fallen angel. A healthy respect for demonstrable scientific facts and the recognition that, if we are to progress at all, we must stop expecting mythical gods to do the things we avoid doing for ourselves. IMHO
++++++++++++++++++++++++
07-20-05, 09:18 PM
Professor
Well said, Frank. Cool

07-20-05, 10:46 PM
mike74
I agree with frank on the one more relgion. Its never worked in the past so why should it work now? But still not real sure about the evolution theory... After all it is still a theory. Granted good arguments, but no real definate proof. As far as Creationalism its niether theory nor proven fact, its based on faith. In which you either believe it or you dont, but neither has real concrete totaly true blue hold it in your hand you cant argue with fact. So you either go with one or the other bont dont tell me its scientific fact when the experts cant even prove either one!

If their is (factual evidence beyond arguement, or doubt)on either one of the theory or a faith I'd like to see a good reference I can go look at! A web site would be nice, or a good reference of some sorts.

P.S. Selflessness would you look at that word the same way if some brillient nonreligous person perscribe it to people? Just becuase it comes out of a book religous people follow sheepeshly or otherwise doesnt mean its not a good quality to live by! That doesnt mean it will solve all problems but alot would be! Why do you think people rob? Its either becuase of selfishness, or hunger? Maybe even the reason the U.S. is in Iraq? What if the rich oil or any other big buisness that stand to gane by such blood shed were not so selfish? Would we be their; killing people and getting killed?(That is if you perscribe to this theory of why the U.S. is in Iraq) Just becuase a religous figure you don like perscribe it 2 centuries ago dont make it wrong for today! I'm not saying its the answer, but just arguing you cant leave this out becuase of a book you would like to burn!

07-21-05, 01:52 AM
mike74
Jed Macosko, a young research molecular biologist at the University of California, Berkeley, and a statement signer, said, "It is time for defenders of Darwin to engage in serious dialogue and debate with their scientific critics. Science can't grow where institutional gatekeepers try to prevent new challengers from being heard."

Whats up with this? How come their is no debate? Not all of the scientist that challenge evolution are religous, but are like me... just not convenced!

Here are some sites for arguements:

http://www.reviewevolution.com/press/pressRelease_100Scientists.php

http://www.arn.org/docs/behe/mb_smu1992.htm

http://www.creationevolution.net/

Their are more to come when I have a tad bit more time, but honestly why do the evolutionist not debate the experts on the other end of the spektrum? Why do they label them and ignor them instead... Sounds offly familier to the religous folx we like to criticize so much!

(I brought this point up becuase it keeps coming up) I know its not totaly related.... but then again maybe evolution is a new religion of mythical ancestories, and unproven theories! Big Grin

This message has been edited. Last edited by: mike74, 07-21-05 03:28 AM

07-21-05, 02:55 AM
babthrower
frankvan said:

"... we are more risen ape than fallen angel."

I really like the way you get to the kernel, Frank. You really ought not to be so humble about your opinion.

You brought up an important point that I had not mentioned. It is laziness that leads humans to put all of the responsibility for decision-making on the shoulders of mythical gods.

To the gods we ascribe human emotions: pride, lust, jealousy, thirst for vengeance, and so forth. (Zeus was lustful, Jehovah was vengeful.)

Because we describe the gods as perfect, holy, absolutely good, and so forth, we can then ascribe our own lust, jealousy, vengefulness, greed, pride and so forth, to the gods, and say that our own primitively-driven urges are theirs. That ennobles the urges, and justifies our acts; we proceed, 'praying and preaching the whole time'.

"A healthy respect for demonstrable scientific facts and the recognition that, if we are to progress at all, we must stop expecting mythical gods to do the things we avoid doing for ourselves."

If only. In despair of this eminently rational idea gaining foothold, I resort to the notion that humans are so limited that unless there is a deus to aspire to or to hold responsible, progress may not be sustainable.

Thus the desperate resolve that we must invent a better god.

07-21-05, 03:59 AM
mike74
"Would it not be necessary to found a new religion that is not tradition-bound in order to arrive at humane means of population control?"

"Thus the desperate resolve that we must invent a better god."

babthrower Are these not your own words?????

And it is not proven we came from apes nor fallen angles, and I subscribe to neither theories! If you want to be scientific arent you suppost to go back facts rather then theories, or even faith? But then again I guess evolution is a new religion!

"It is laziness that leads humans to put all of the responsibility for decision-making on the shoulders of mythical gods."

You are right in this thought and its backs up my points Razz A book, or God or whatever says not to do so and so and such and such, and live this way and that! But Nobody ever does this and that, or acts so and so! ITs always soso! Be tru to thine self and tha hell with all others(excuse my french Red Face)!!! What ever is supreme that is supreme will forgive in another life! Thats Laziness! and Selfishness.... But unfortunatly most are not so selfless... Maybe becuase it doesnt make sense to someone who came from a monkey Big Grin Wink!!!! LOL Sorry couldnt resist that! Its all in good fun Big Grin!


"A healthy respect for demonstrable scientific facts and the recognition that, if we are to progress at all, we must stop expecting mythical gods to do the things we avoid doing for ourselves."

You mean like loving your neighbor, loving your enemy(Hmmmm keep your friends close but you enemies closer), or instead of being a prideful...aragent SOB be humble and nice to people even if you think less of them!?!?

Or once again are we talking about the unproven theories you like to promote.


LOL ok so we went from Phisics to, the bible being the worst book on earth, to new religons, and now we are on the evolution THEORY. Anybody care for politics? LOL or have we covered that one also?

07-21-05, 06:38 PM
frankvan
" And it is not proven we came from apes nor fallen angles, and I subscribe to neither theories! If you want to be scientific arent you suppost to go back facts rather then theories, or even faith? But then again I guess evolution is a new religion!" Mike74

No, it isn't proven, in the sense that a geometric theorem can be proven, but to insinuate that the theory of evolution is equivalent to the "theory that man was created in God's image" is ridiculous. The theory of evolution is a scientific theory which has survived over two hundred years of having been tested by every other existing science imaginable. A scientific theory may start out as a hunch, some inquisitive observer conjectures as to why do certain things take place. He makes use of what knowledge he has to speculate as to a reasonable explanation for his observations. He forms an hypothesis. And, if it seems to make sense as to reasonably explain what he sought to prove, he proceeds to consult other experts in his field. He conducts experiments. Some experiments may prove his original hypothesis wrong and he discards it, but if it fails to disprove it it may only add some bit of reinforcement to it. As Einstein famously observed, "A thousand experiments may not prove me right, a single experiment could prove me wrong". Darwin's theory of natural selection has been refined and modified and tested for centuries and has not been proven, perhaps, but it has certainly not been discredited either, Paleontology, zoology, biology, archaeology, have added to the vast accumulation of supporting evidence of the basic premise, even to the fairly recent contribution of DNA. Does the fact that there is a more than 98.5% match between man's DNA and that of his chimpanzee relative raise any questions in your mind? Creationism, on the other hand, is based on the notion that if there is something that we cannot prove or explain completely, it must have some magical, supernatural, explanation. Perhaps even, one foretold by ancient soothsayers, and perpetuated with infinite variations, and considerable profit, by "holy" men who earn a livelihood preaching it.

07-21-05, 07:56 PM
mike74
Evolution promotes a god its called nature.. natural selction. But how can everything run so mechanically and it just be by chance? Some star billions of years ago farted and oops we are here! I think you notion is just as hard to swallow as creationalism! I can understand why your so called experts do not debate with other scientist who have big questions about evolution! They have nothing to prove their theories just hersay, and speculations!

Damn they say pigs organs can replace ours if we need them; can some one then theorise that maybe we came from pigs... I've also heard that same about sheep! Besides the more proof so far these so called scientist find that they think will proove their theory it takes them 2 steps back! I bet if you looked really hard you could also find stuff that would support the creation theory or faith... But I forget you've been brain washed and indoctrinated by these so called scientistic priest who turn theory into fact with speculations! But I guess that is ok as long as it is capable for you to explain away something you dont want to comprehend!

Ohhh by the way Creationalism has survived much longer then evolution. And their are very good theories behind it, not just religous implications... even though your hatred for religous thinkers, or someone who may have a differing opinion has blinded you to this fact.
To leave creationalism out and preach we came from apes without any proof is foolish! Its the equivelent of people saying the world is flat! Their where good arguements for it but no solid proof! And they condemnd those who thought it was round.... Your no different then these people!

07-21-05, 08:28 PM
babthrower
Mike laments: "... they say pigs organs can replace ours if we need them; can some one then theorise that maybe we came from pigs."

It's far, far worse than that, I'm afraid, Mike. The oldest human ancestor on land was a kind of segmented worm.

(They say if you place a paper bag over your mouth and nose it will stop you hyperventilating. It's a purely mechanical response, it increases the carbon dioxide in your blood. But it's not there by chance. It's a response that survived because it helped a very ancient non-human ancestor to adjust its breating rate. Hope it works for you.)

07-22-05, 01:12 AM
mike74
Their is also another possibility.... Maybe oxygen and carbon dioxcide was placed here so we can live along with other elements to keep us alive.... But thats also just a theory.

07-22-05, 01:39 AM
mike74
if you take a fish out of water what happends? If you put a man under water what happends? Or if say you have a family of fish and you slowly decrease the water over a long period of time do you really think he will learn to lose its gills so he can get oxigen out of the air instead of water or even one of his offsprings?

I guess you mean to tell me that man was on this planet and did not have any lungs... but over a period of time grew some? Thats about as far fetch as thinking of some kind of mystical god! 1st off if that where the case then I guess with the ozone layer getting depleted sooner or later we will grow skin that is able to filter ultra violet rays?

07-22-05, 08:45 AM
babthrower
[QUOTE]Originally posted by mike74:

"...if say you have a family of fish and you slowly decrease the water over a long period of time do you really think he will learn to lose its gills so he can get oxigen out of the air instead of water or even one of his offsprings?"

Actually, one of the discarded lines of evolution theory, from a French guy named Lamarcke, went something like that. He thought that during a lifetime, a body adapts to its changing surroundings. These adaptations would be passed on to the offspring. So if an antelope which usually feeds on grass found itself in a dryer environment, in which the grass dried up, it would eat leaves; and as the leaves (on the trees) became eaten up, it would reach higher into the branches and thus stretch its neck over time. Then when it reproduced, its young would inherit that slightly longer neck. And so forth.

But the theory (Lamarckism) was discarded. It just didn't work. Now in modern times we know why it didn't. The materials in the egg and sperm that determine the traits are there from the parent animal's birth (sometimes there is a change caused by radiation or some other factor during the parent's life, but this change is random). The materials that carry the parent's traits -- let's call them genetic materials -- are not affected by the parent's life experience.

But you hafta give Lamarcke credit. He knew there had to be some explanation for the evidence in ancient rocks for the fact that at one time the number of species was much less, and the structures of the animals were such that it is quite obvious that modern variations descended from them. In some living species which have been selected not naturally but deliberately, e.g. dogs, these varieties have evolved over not millions, but hundreds of years.

If the definition of a species is a group that interbreeds naturally, then today we have 'species' of dogs. Interbreed the smallest known adult dog, a Yorkie 2.5 inches tall by 3.75 inches long, weighing 4 ounces, with the largest ever dog, an Old English Mastiff that weighed 343 lbs and was 8 feet 3 inches long from nose to tail. Now, this interbreeding must occur as it would in nature (no artificial insemination, no human interference) and the offspring must survive to breed and pass on its traits. Couldn't happen.

(Actually this could never happen for other reasons than physical incompatibility, the little dog died of old age and besides they were both male but you see my point.)

My point: Humans have produced, arguably, at least 2 species of dog, and done it in less than 1,000 years. We know that because historians show that there were only a few varieties of dog in the year 1,000 A.D., all purpose-bred for hunting, herding, or (in Asia) cute pets. The artificial selection methods used were very simple: a known good retriever was bred with another known good retriever and the pups sold for more money. Overall the system worked. This shows that dog breeders understood that parental traits could be passed on to offspring.

So that if dogs were bred to produce smaller and smaller dogs, in time all members of the variety would be smaller than the ancestors.

Smart people like those dog breeders use their eyes and their brains. They don't deny the evidence of their own eyes for the sake of something they read in some old book.

07-22-05, 09:41 AM
newnickname
Mike, you're expressing incredulity at evolution without, it seems, having taken enough time to look into it properly.

Lungfish are around today. They show us how gill-breathing animals could have evolved lungs. People appeared long after lungs had evolved in many species - man did not grow lungs. Evolution does not occur within one generation - you can't prove or disprove evolution by tormenting one family of fish.

You seem to have caught the Creationist confusion over the word 'theory'. All scientific explanations of the observed world are called 'theories'. In everyday English, 'theory' is sometimes taken to mean 'guess' or 'hunch', but in science it means an explanation.

In science there are no 'rock-solid facts'. Science is based on assumptions such as the nature of the universe doesn't change arbitrarily from one moment to the next - but we can't know that for sure. The sun may not rise tomorrow. Evolution is a 'theory', but so are explanations of gravity, relativity and all the other basics of contemporary science. None of them are absolutely certain and proved. They are all simply the best explanations we have so far, of all the evidence we have so far. They are also all scientific, in that they are based on observations anyone ('in theory') can make, and they can be disproved by new evidence, or replaced by better theories.

Evolution could be disproved at any time. If just one fossil was found out of the order in time predicted by the theory, the theory would collapse. Of the millions of fossils we have uncovered, not one has been out of place.

Creationism is not a scientific theory partly because it can never be disproved. No matter what questions are raised about it, they can be answered by "that's just how God wants it".

07-22-05, 10:54 AM
mike74

quote:
But the theory (Lamarckism) was discarded. It just didn't work. Now in modern times we know why it didn't. The materials in the egg and sperm that determine the traits are there from the parent animal's birth (sometimes there is a change caused by radiation or some other factor during the parent's life, but this change is random). The materials that carry the parent's traits -- let's call them genetic materials -- are not affected by the parent's life experience.



I think this is clear enough evidence evolution has holes in it!.... And I dont deny evolution becuase of any book ecept the ones in public schools... at least the ones used when i went to school, they may have changed sense. But smart people also dont deny something just becuase they have a prejudice towards religous people, or a certian religion.

NNN has Said
"You seem to have caught the Creationist confusion over the word 'theory'. All scientific explanations of the observed world are called 'theories'. In everyday English, 'theory' is sometimes taken to mean 'guess' or 'hunch', but in science it means an explanation."

So by your own words I am right, its just a belief system, as is most religions or creationalism! Becuase basically religions are formed from explinations of life and the writers surroundings. The only difference is you say nature showed, and you studied, and they would say god showed and they observed it.

Creationalism religous or otherwise is based off
a collection of facts, but veiwed in a different light. You may say the monkey developed a tail over years of evolution becuase he needed a way to hang from a tree to get a certian type fruit he might eat, and a creationalist would say he was made that way so he could have a way to hang and eat fruit. Same conclution, but different beginings, but neither can be proven, and neither is a brainless thought process just different points of veiw, Kinda like you see the glass half full and I might see it half empty. I say tomatoe, but you might say Tumaghtoo!

And by the way I never said evolution is not a arguable theory, just that their are not enough facts, or proven Hypothisis behind the theory that make it any beter then creationalism. My passion is really not to argue which one is more beter then the other. LOL I will. Admittedly i do think creationalism has more backbone in it then evolution(But thats just an opinion, as well as is your point of veiw), but thats not to say evolution doesnt have some interesting points of veiw. But you want listen to another point of veiw becuase you are closed minded, becuase of prejudices towards others who may think or see the world differently then you, but your blinded by prejudices. Neither theory is concrete, but just a belief sytem. Again you seem to be as bad as the religous folx you hate so much!.... Or so it would seem.

But in light of the conversation we all can go round and round about this, neither giving way to the other, but I have to admit I have learned alot in this discussion both about evolution, creationalism, and people! I've enjoyed the debate eminsly. LOL I'm sure you have enjoyed my spelling. I didnt know aitheist where as dogmatic about their beliefs as the christian I've debated on the other side of the argument scale, but thats cool it makes the debate more enjoyable! Wink

This message has been edited. Last edited by: mike74, 07-22-05 12:30 PM

07-22-05, 11:44 AM
mike74
P.S. Heres another side of the lungfish argument... it is a Christian site, and it does have some holes in it also.... but it is after all a different point of veiw.
Did_God_Use_Evolution_To_Create_Life_Part_2

If you care to veiw another point of veiw and way in the facts, and opinions in your own mind. If its not too closed of course. Wink

07-22-05, 12:07 PM
babthrower
Mike: Lamarckism and Darwinism are both evolution theories. Lamarckism was discarded a hundred years ago because it didn't work. Darwinism is alive and well and robust and doing just fine, thank you very much.

Mike, I thought you understood from the start that no one knows anything for sure. So we could play let's pretend for a while.

Mike goes out in the morning and sees that his driveway is all wet. "Must have rained", Mike says to himself. That's a theory. But is it true? Mike looks around, and notices that the street is dry, the tops of the cars parked along the curb are dry, and the trees are not dripping.

Scratching his head, he says, "Looks like it didn't rain. Maybe my wife got up early and put the sprinkler on." He has discarded his first theory because it doesn't work. He's come up with anther theory. Now he'll test the new one.

So he goes along the side of the house and sure enough, the hose is attached to the faucet and to the sprinkler head, and the whole area which the water from the sprinkler can reach is in fact wet. "Humph," says MIke, "for sure I know now what happened." But he doesn't want to be hasty. He sets up a question to test the theory.

"If the sprinkler is the cause, then the water will stop at the perimeter," Mike reasons. "But if there is water beyond the perimeter, this fact is enough to falsify the theory: the sprinkler cannot have caused the wet area, at least not all of it." He is quite prepared, you see, to discard this theory, too, if the evidence does not support it.

But Mike sees that the wet area does not go beyond the sprinkler's range. So he thinks he'll show off a little to his wife. He returns to the bedroom, wakes her up, and says, I see you sprinkled the lawn this morning.

All he gets is an outraged glare. "I did not. What are you, nuts?" And goes back to sleep.

"She must be lying," Mike says to himself. "No one else lives here. It had to be her."

He has received evidence, his wife's statement, that puts his theory into question. But he clings to his theory, and decides to reject his wife's statement.

He goes out and walks around, studying the situation from every angle. No new data. His wife lied for sure. But why?

So he goes indoors, makes a cup of coffee, and switches on the television news. He learns that a phantom prankster has been going all over town, sprinkling people's lawns as they sleep!

"My theory was wrong!" Mike groans. So he goes into the bedroom and wakes his wife to tell her he was wrong and that she didn't lie about the sprinkler after all. "Sorry", he says.

And sorry indeed he is, after she's through explaining to him just what she thinks of someone who wakes her twice about some stupid sprinkler.

But has Mike finally got a correct theory? Did the phantom prankster turn on Mike's sprinkler?

No one knows. There might be another explanation:

- a copycat phantom sprinkler
- Mike or Mike's wife was sleepwalking
- a fluke rainstorm, very very localized (it could happen!)
- etc.

*******************************
Here's the scoop. A scientific theory, which each of Mike's theories were, can be falsified. Did it rain? No, that's false, because the pattern of wet is not consistent with a rainfall -- at least a normal one.

An unscientific theory, on the contrary, can never be falsified, because the data cannot be measured or verified.

Mike's auntie tells him that many years ago, the night before her husband died, she had a precognitive dream: in it, she saw him lying in a coffin. She had advance warning from beyond that he would die.

"Just a coincideence", Mike says.

No, not at all, his auntie tells him. It was way too clear to be an ordinary dream. It was definitely a supernatural experience.

Mike's cousin, his Auntie's daughter, says, "Yes, it's true, she told me right after he died that she had had the dream."

Mike's other cousin says, "Nah, what she said right after he died was that she once had a dream about someone lying in a coffin, and that now that he was dead, she was sure it was a warning that he was going to die."

What possible test could you dream up to find out who has the most reliable memory of the events?

So you say to yourself, "Auntie must have the second sight, all right, because Auntie wouldn't lie."

And that's not a scientific theory. That's what's called a metaphysical theory. It cannot be tested. Auntie may not be lying. Auntie may have reconstructed her memory quite innocently. There's no way to tell.

Creationism is a metaphysical theory. Three thousand years ago some prophet who believes he is in touch with the creator of the universe tells some people that the creator told him in confidence (no witnesses present) that he had created the universe in 7 days. Some of the hearers write this down. Three thousand years later you read it in a book. You accept this theory as true.

That's your privilege. Mine is to put my faith in Darwinism. When something better comes along, I'll put my faith in that.

07-22-05, 01:53 PM
mike74
I dont remember ever stating it was true, but that alot of hypothisis could lead to this explination.

And I never said you did not have the right to believe in evolutionism. You can believe in anything your heart desires. If you tell me pigs can fly and you believe it then good for you. But dont sit here and tell me you found a wing next to a set of pigs bones and that makes for evolution, and creationalism is nolonger a valid theory. My arguement is this dont call someone brainless becuase they may veiw the world different then you, and never assume a theory is not scientific becuase you don agree with it, or that alot of religous folx were the 1st to assume this explanation. And just becuase it may have come from religous mind, doesnt mean it can not be theorised Scientificaly. Maybe the faith aspect cant, but just As no one cant realy disprove evolution, being that none of us can travel millions, or billions of years in the past and say see I told yah so, neither can someone go back and stand shoulder to shoulder with Adam or any other religous figures of creationalism, and say look he is the only one here hes gotta be the 1st.

7 days, 7 thousand years, or even 7 billion years You still cant say that this theory both scientific or metaphysical is a not little intreaging, and does make for some interesting explanations. Creationalims can be tested just as much as evolution. You test the mechanicability of everything in creationalism. Like the sun, the moon, the tide, our atmosphere, or the oxygen we breathe. All of these things, and much more make up a living environment. All work together for this purpose. Just like a car engine. You have pistons, batery, spark pluggs, an altinator, and many other stuff that where created to make that car run. I know alot of these examples can be used also to explian certian aspect of evolution, but again my point is both if you think about it take quite a bit of thought both scientificaly, and philisophicly to make an explination of the 2! Granted one can just say God made the earth, the sun, and the moon and put no thought into it, but You can put alot of thought, and explantion both scientificaly, and metaphysicaly. One could also say we just came from apes and not put much thought into it. Some would say why not we look a lot similer to them, and some people look just like them. But alot of thought from evolution is just speculation also... that is assuming that is what you meant by metaphysical.

07-22-05, 02:47 PM
FredPuli
The film with this title bombed in Britain.Don't wonder why Big Grin

However if the topic here now is really Intelligent Design, then it is an example of thinking as practised throughout human history. The less we 'know' the more we put our faith in some supreme Being or Beings to fill the gaps in our understanding. Some Christians say that mankind tries to play God. Too right. We now do, unaided by prayer, that which hitherto only prayer or miracle could have achieved. 'Barren women' are not prayed for but are given fertility treatment and are 'barren' no more. Women who wish to limit their pregnancies take a pill.Lepers are not saved by the Son of God but even by heathen pharmacists and doctors; just as well, since He has not come back to do any more.Parents do not pray at the bedside of yet another Christian infant's death; they see it outlive them.

There was then no explanation, no theory, to show how these 'miracles' wrought by mankind were achievable. If we could not explain or understand how a virus could possibly exist then it would be because intelligent design (aka God) was involved to make it so. ID had intervened.

Somebody in New Scientist (?) thought that this belief, of there being some 'intelligent design' intervening, was reassuring and comforting to some minds. Given the choice, as it were , between a plane that flew from A to B but needed a pilot to fly it at some points they would be happier than with one that required no outside intervention whatever to do the whole journey. So they prefer to hope or think that there is some grand, intelligent, planner who gives some input, some design, exists or existed rather than that the whole thing is entirely evolved and evolving on its own.

The only intelligent designer needed now is to fill gaps in our knowledge concerning various matters, some of them concerning evolution. Those gaps shall disappear, but never worry, there will still be something else we don't yet understand for the 'intelligent designer' to be taking care of.Since the proponents have not to provide any theory for examination they are in this happy position .For them it is not even 'turtles all the way down'**. Rest assured every time we solve some mystery the I.D.fans will come up with another poser 'explicable' only by intelligent design.In the meantime, just to be safe, the ID fans will exaggerate the complexity of organisms or distort or deliberately defame scientists' findings .

It is not as though the intelligent design is intelligent. As a patient in a hospital here said, observing her fellows, "If this is intelligent design then it's about time for a manufacturer's recall" Wink And that was just a lay person. The subtleties are more than that bald statement would suggest.

** Turtles: An old lady's theory that the world was standing on a giant turtle. Asked what the turtle was standing on she replied "Another turtle. It's turtles, turtles all the way down !"

07-22-05, 04:20 PM
babthrower
mike74 has this advice for me:

"...never assume a theory is not scientific becuase you don agree with it..."

I didn't say the creationist theory is is not scientific because I don't agree with it. I said I don't agree with it because it's not scientific.

So. Enough of that particular discussion.

Fred says:

"... never worry, there will still be something else we don't yet understand ..."

Too true! Confused But how awful if we knew everything!

What I don't understand about the 'intelligent design' dudes is that they ignore the obvious. For every instance of good structure, there are three of bad structure.

Natural selection is a much better explanation for the 'errors'. People crawled on all four's. Then the swamps dried up and the trees died, and people were living on a plain. Now it was useful to stand up on hind legs. So they did! Awkwardly, painfully, but they did. Through natural selection those whose backs could stand the stress survived -- marginally -- better. But over time were minor adjustments in pelvises, thighs, knees, lower backs, that made the upright stance more effective. This history of skeletal evolution is in the fossils.

But humans don't have good backs.

If the human back is the result of design, it was anything but intelligent design.

07-22-05, 06:23 PM
frankvan
I think that intelligent design made more sense when the whole thing was accomplished in seven days, the earth was the center of the universe, and the sun circled the earth. But with all this empty space, all these billions of years, all the discarded models along the way, for what purpose? To produce people?? I find it rather hard to swallow. Confused

07-22-05, 07:44 PM
newnickname
What the bleep do we know?
Mike, your 'lungfish' link also seems to misunderstand evolution. Evolution happens gradually, fitfully. Most species there have ever been have died out, because they couldn't adapt quickly enough. No species took sudden, huge leaps; one afternoon deciding, for example, "Hey, lets bury ourselves in mud for seven years."

The ability to lie dormant in hard times would develop gradually. (You can skip this next bit if you're eating.) The ability to secrete protective mucus is no big deal. Our own skin secretes stuff all the time. Early lungfish, those who didn't secrete so much, would have had poorer survival rates, and emerged from mud damaged and less able to survive and reproduce. The strong secreters would fare better, and have more offspring, who would also have more offspring... and so on.

(You're right that this is speculation. But it's speculation that doesn't require suspension of the laws of the universe. It sticks to the scientific assumption that the basic behaviour of the world around us doesn't change arbitrarily from moment to moment. It doesn't require miracles. As soon as you introduce miracles - divine whims and Shazams! - you are no longer really explaining, because such deus ex machina can 'explain' anything and everything - "Because that's just how the Divinity does it. End of discussion.")

The page you link to seem to assume that an organism has to have 100% of a trait, right away. That's not so. eyes (ha ha) for example. What good is 50% of an eye? A whole lot of good. Ask anyone with impaired vision if they'd rather have no vision at all. We can see how eyes might have evolved gradually, through natural selection. Looking at the human eye (for example) as it is now, shaking your head and saying, "Well, I can't imagine how that evolved." is not a convincing argument against evolution. We can work it out.

Looking at one amazing trait or instinct as it stands today and then saying evolution must be impossible because you can't see how that came about, is like watching someone juggle ten flaming clubs and saying it's impossible - wouldn't he have died the first time he tried it?

Hibernation for example. How (to borrow the question from your link) did the first bear manage to sleep for months without food? It didn't. The species started off slowly (like a juggler with a couple of tennis balls).

Those bears (or bear-ancestors) able to sleep longer and take it easy in the winter months would have had a better chance of survival, and consequent reproduction, than those who rushed around using up energy when food was scarce. Sleeping longer and being lazy when there's no food are traits that can be passed on. Hibernation, like the other mind-boggling examples on that page, came about gradually.

Why should symbiosis be impossible in evolution? Evolution is about surviving in a particular environment, and that environment includes other organisms. Of course species could adapt to each other, until a point is reached when they've become so specialized it looks like magic.

The world around is is stunningly complex. That doesn't mean we should give up trying to understand it and cling to creation myths instead.

07-23-05, 11:31 AM
babthrower

quote:
Look at eyes (ha ha) for example. What good is 50% of an eye? A whole lot of good.

says NNN.

Actually a lot less than 50% of an eye is good. One model for the evolution of the complex eye such as we see in birds (who have our eyes beat all to heck) starts with an organism that has a few light-sensitive cells on its upper surface! This animal can seek or avoid sunlight, detect the shadow of a predator, and so on. This attribute would obviously confer a benefit, and would persist in subsequent generations.

This random mutation could have occurred in different places to different animals, so that 'eyes' could have evolved independently in each of them.

Those animals who had random mutations to the nerve tissue around the 'eye' so that 'information' could affect behavior would have a great advantage.

(This implies that animals with only the light-sensitive cells and no more complex nerve adaption would have had only a small benefit: the 'sensation' would stimulate random movement (not purposive movmement) in the animal. This in itself can of course be a small benefit.)


The next stage: the area where the light-sensitive cells exist is overlaid with translucent 'guard' cells so they won't be damaged. We see this in snakes today. A Good Thing, Martha!

Next: The flat light-sensitive patch becomes depressed or cup-like. Now the organism is capable of detecting the direction of source of the light. (Darwin himself came up with this idea.) Another small but significant advantage.

Random mutations to the nerve tissue around the 'eye', if they could result in behavior change, i.e. if they provided 'information' even of a very rumndimentary kind, could affect behavior which would increase the benefit of each modification. Thus structure change leapfrogs nerve tissue change, and vice versa, only persisting if the outcome is beneficial. If not beneficial (and most random mutation would not be beneficial) the feature does not persist in the population.

Next: In those animals who have a protective coating over the sensitive cells, a patch of crystalline proteins form a 'spot' which allows light to pass through the cells and focus on the original light-sensitive cells, the proto-retina. Now we have the prototype of the lens.

And so on.

Thomas Ray, in a computer program called Tierra, showed that a computer program could write itself in a series of random changes if and only if each change had 'feedback' indicating if the change were beneficial or not.

Nature provides that feedback when organisms randomly mutate. The bad mutations either kill the organism or at least put it at a reproductive disadvantage.

That is the important aspect of natural selection that most creationist critics fail to understand when they lodge criticisms such as:

"If I'm building a truck engine, and I randomly throw objects into it, and randomly remove objects from it, even in a million years I will not have a truck that works."

But that's not what evolution does. As each object is thrown into the engine housing, it must convey an improvement in function, however slight, else out it goes. So after a million years, you would have a working engine.

Mind you, it wouldn't be nearly as efficient as a truck engine designed by someone who understood the principles of the internal combustion engine to start with. The 'evolved' engine might have lots of badly functioning parts. But it would work. Sort of like the human spine.

07-24-05, 12:16 PM
newnickname
Butterfly unlocks evolution secret.

07-24-05, 01:06 PM
Professor
How did a thread that began by discussing a movie on quantum mechanics end up with a "debate" on evolution? (I use quotes around debate because in reality there is none. Creationists have manufa