Classic Freudian slip within that post
What exact proof would you accept that would prove to you that Jesus is in fact the son of God? I'm interested to see where your naivety ends ... if it does, at all.
I suppose so.
In that case nobody can say anything definitive about Jesus. Which goes back to my original point with Extra, the burden is not on me to disprove the historicity of Jesus. It's on him to prove it to me.
I liken it to you trying to prove to me that Bigfoot exists. If you can't provide me with evidence and facts that Bigfoot exists I can say that your claim is false. It doesn't mean I can't disprove Bigfoot's existence, it just means that your claim is false.
Classic Freudian slip within that post
What exact proof would you accept that would prove to you that Jesus is in fact the son of God? I'm interested to see where your naivety ends ... if it does, at all.
None is a valid answer too, and it's implicit in the question. There's nothing tricky/loaded about it in the way the question was proposed. I don't need to propose toes, or dictation or using a pen with my mouth to imply that 'none' is also a valid answer.
There's ZERO ambiguity in the question. Absolutely NOTHING was added to the original question. What happened is that rascal tossed a theory that the response would need to be a number between 1-10. His theory is wrong in that the response needs to be a number between 0-10, and I gave him an example to sustain that 0 is a valid answer too. Unlikely? sure, but as the question was posed, absolutely valid.
The problem with you is that you made a stupid comment and now that you've been called out for it, don't have the balls to agree that you were wrong. And your whole premise of science being stupid because they pull out the 'we dont know' card, comes down crashing when you use pull out the exact same card every day in life.
But if you want to keep amusing us, please go ahead, and defend your 'loaded question' position one more time.
Blessed are those....oh, never mind.
How is it 'somewhat of a trick' answer? I mean, we could argue it might be non-obvious, but as the question was presented, it's an entirely valid answer.
What part of 'valid answer' from his post you didn't understand? Really...
deleting is bad.
Trick as in non-obvious.
If I told someone that I was going to create a new planet. On this new planet I'm going to create a new race of people. I'm going to let them run around aimlessly for a while and let them fight amongst themselves and kill each over about how they think they got there. Then I'm going to impregnate one of them, and I'll have my son tell them that I created them but I'm not going to give him any proof of it. I just want to see who believes him and who doesn't. Those that choose to believe him, I'm going to give them a reward. Those that choose to question him and not blindly follow him, I'm going to set them on fire.
"Sound good buddy?"
They would probably call me an asshole. Just sayin'.
I would go with the latter. He is Canadian, ya know?
I agree, but in all fairness to Stout I'm not getting the feeling that he's trying to prove to you anything definitive about Jesus (in this thread, there could be a lot of history I don't know). To me, his posts are all about explaining the current official position of the church which is something that can be proven.
"Jesus was the son of God" - Can't be proven.
"The Church currently maintains that Jesus was the son of God." - Easily proven.
Am I spectacularly missing it?
When many of you see the proof it will be too late.
I know for a fact that the real Jesus isn't a Kings fan.
Oh crap! I'm outta here.
I pray all the time for all sorts of things.
These are not necessarily listed in order of importance but to give you some examples...
I pray good dreams when I sleep, to bless my food, for traveling mercies, for wisdom in decision making, for comfort when I am sad, peace when I am afraid, for the safety of loved ones and myself, for favor at work and in life.
I have prayed for the Spurs to win.
Prayer to me is conversation with God. I pray all the time the same as I frequently call up my friends and trusted mentors to visit with them.
Actually I believe Extra's position on the historicity of Jesus is that the accounts as stated in the NT Gospels are accurate. He can correct me on this if I am wrong though, I don't want to speak for him.
But again, terms like "wrong" and "sin" are extremely and maybe entirely subjective. Amish Christians think it is wrong to drive a car. Mormons are opposed to consuming alcohol. Quakers refuse to serve in the military. And it seems to me that all Christians pick and choose what rules are relevant. The Old Testament mentions a few times that a man should not share a bed with his wife while she is menstruating, but I have never in my life heard a single Christian preach or follow that law. But when the same book has a few sentences about sexuality, entire legions are ready to change the way they vote, the schools they send their children to, and the neighborhoods they live in.
If by some bizarre twist of fate, our country became dominated by Amish mayors, governors, and presidents, would you happily adhere to their proposed restrictions on driving, dancing, colorful clothing, and the use of electricity? Or would you say that they were fanatics and fight them as often as possible in order to live your life as you see fit?
Couldn't have phrased it any better myself.
Very human.
I think you believe in gods, not in God.
I believe Jesus Christ is the one and only Savior of the world. I have accepted and confess Jesus as my Lord and Savior.
And I forever stand by that decision.
So then what makes your belief in abiological origins any more valid than my belief in a supernatural GOD?
In the meantime continue to wait for validation of said theory...
Oh... and don't pretend to lecture me on the scientific method.
You're the one going in circles. Quit trying to suggest that I've somehow made a blanket statement against all science.
I'm not debating the principles behind belief in scientific theories. I'm debating the skewed nature of the 'evidence' being used to validate the theory of abiological origins... the burden of proof in this case does not fall on me, it falls on those trying to substantiate the claim that life sprung out of no where.
My claim was that belief in abiological origins requires a certain amount of faith. Why? Because as of right now that claim is only an unproven theory. You stated that much yourself, I don't know why admission of that statement is so difficult for you to accept. Also, just because you have acknowledged it as a theory doesn't mean that the mainstream audience considers it as such. They have come to accept it as fact because it was taught to them that way; most aren't even aware that this particular theory has yet to be proven.
Furthermore, I believe there is a disconnect between our use of the word "faith". To me, faith is to believe in something without having physical proof of its existence. There is no spiritual connotation involved. Your rebuttals leave the impression that I'm somehow not disassociating the two premises.
Evolution equals not abiological orgins....
One is a biological model that defines the dynamics for speciation. The other, well... attempts to define how life itself began.
The theory of evolution (lower case enphasized) is supported by much geological and empirical evidence. But it doesn't address the origins question.
Who says I've disregarded the research??? I've read through 65+ years worth of articles on the subject. It kind of comes with the territory of attaining a degree in Molecular Genetics.
Collisions like the one you're suggesting would incinerate living organisms - not sprout life. Without its protective enzymes DNA would denaturalize (at temperatures slightly over 200 deg F). I believe this line of reasoning was abandoned in the early 80's because it was found that most of the 'organic' compounds required to produce amino acids would crack and oxidize. Furthermore, the concentration gradient required to keep the products from thermally breaking down after the reaction couldn't be overcome by any known natural process. As soon as amino acids were formed they would revert to lower energy states by breaking down into their cons uent species.
Also, the production of right-handed amino acid species in those experiments curbed subsequent attempts to grow polypeptide RNA chains longer than 5 amino acid bases - that is because all known biological molecules use the left-handed version of enantiomers, right-handed ones essentially 'stop' the growth of any growing polypeptide chain.
So you see, the lab setting is an essential participant in the quasi-successful creation of 'life in a flask' - don't disassociate the two. The reactions can't proceed without our deliberate intervention. More specifically, we eliminate all the physical (natural) constrainsts that would otherwise negate the reaction towards viable genetic material - and even when finally produced the molecules don't survive very long.
For example, the environment required to form the sugar-phosphate backbone polymer is radically different from the enviroment required to produce amino acids (5 of which also act as DNA/RNA polypeptide bases). Neither is sufficiently stable in solution... Labs are hence required to bring the two together. Undermining the effects of human interaction, however convenient, is what would be 'intellectually dishonest.'
You don't see me lobbying against ins utions who are seeking answers to the origins question? As I said earlier, "[let them] have at it". Why repress such research? Let them surprise me.
I stated earlier that I haven't built a strawman around the origins of DNA... I stand by that comment.
hardy har har... nice little red herring. Faith would undeniably be required if you wanted me to believe that something as complex as a simple desk sprung out of a tree. Of course I know who makes them. You missed the point entirely. Intelligent design is also required, as the wood pieces alone don't assemble themselves into the desk.
Or that you have placed your faith in such events? Same difference... hmm where have I heard that before? Oh yeah... this "big fella in the sky," AKA GOD created the Universe and all Life as we know it... sounds like a pretty exceptional event to me!
While mathematically possible it is not really plausible. Those polymers were 'designed' and created by man.
Look, I've already played the numbers game with Random Guy before. Ultimately, creation of DNA from pure chance alone was on the order of 10^-289... or some ridiculous number that was for all intents and purposes zero. But no, he admitted that he would rather hold on to that statistical chance than to ever admit that belief in GOD was more likely. At least I'm aware of the numerical chances that people such as yourself have willingly chosen to hinge their disbelief to.
No, I didn't forget it. The odds would be staggering (check your math), which is why I used it as an example. For that matter, the number wasn't chosen randomly as 50 represents the amount of base pairs of the smallest known, genetically significant RNA sequence; a segment comparable in size to a prion (en ies which borrow their replicative enzymes from pre-existing DNA/RNA organisms). Anyways, a 50 base polypeptide strand, while small, retains an entropic order beyond belief.
So says the atheistic sector of the scientific community.
Answer me this then - since no one around here has attempted to answer the question in the three years that I've been a member of this forum. What differentiates a recently deceased corpse from a living person? I mean, the corpse has every necessary biological component and element required to live. Why then is it dead? The DNA is still there, no? Shouldn't life be there too then? We all know this is not the case, as corpses just wither away.
IMO life is not a physical attribute. It is a gift from the spiritual realm. So until that realm is physically defined, I will continue to believe that life itself is by very definition 'supernatural'.
Yeah it's absurd. About as much so as belief that one of the most complex biological molecules suddenly sprung out of a chemical broth. Except I'm not ignoring the 'big elephant' in the living room... I acknowledge the Creator's hand was involved. I mean, could you imagine if someone tried to prove that it was mathematically possible for construction materials to transform themselves into the Empires State Building??
Last edited by Phenomanul; 10-23-2008 at 09:35 PM.
Wait a minute, are you saying that the gospels are accurate about the whereabouts of Jesus Christ?
Thats the equivalent of saying of sticking your fingers in your ears and saying "LA LA LA LA LA LA LA I DONT WANNA HEAR IT! LA LA LA LA LA!!!"
I agree, but it's a free country and she has the freedom of religion much like we do. She's not forcing anybody onto her religion so let her have her peace.
GRR but its so annoying!!!! Your totally right though.
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