You are seeing the light energy given off, not the atom changing states.
And it's more fusion, hydrogen to helium.
But point well taken.
If you believe a god initiated the big bang, you believe in a causal chain. I am curious though, why just one god? Where did the god go? What makes you think there was ever a god to begin with?
Deism is part of theism like atheism is a belief. You technically do not even believe a god exists, just that one once did. If you believe a god exists now, where does the god reside, what contact have you had with the god, what evidence do you have, what doctrine, what rationale other than some smart men who were too ahead of their time to call themselves atheists were claiming to be deists?Deism is part of theism. It's not a matter of individual interpretation. Theism is the belief that god exists. Deists believe god exists. Therefore, deists are theists.
No it doesn't. Fundamentally it's a notion that you harbor that an en y either exists now that's basically irrelevant or that one once existed that's still irrelevant. It's not grounded in reason and science, and it's just a weaker version of the god of the gaps approach.As far as your judgment of deists go, we just disagree. You believe what you do about it because you still equate religion and theism. Therefore, you see deism as being close to atheism. But I don't think so. Rather, it fills one of the four squares in the cross-plot of religion/non-religion and theism/atheism.
If we laid all our cards on the table, the majority of us have doubts about all of it, and none of us have an absolute certainty regarding deities. Some of us however are ok with admitting that we require more evidence than we've seen to actually profess a belief in the existence of something as extraordinary as a god.
You are seeing the light energy given off, not the atom changing states.
And it's more fusion, hydrogen to helium.
But point well taken.
"reason" I came from a fish.![]()
He did not see this.
He helped model it mathematically.
I think he saw it but didn't actually know it's velocity, or he knew it's velocity but closed his eyes... something to that effect.
You came from a vagina that smelled like a fish. Not the same thing.
hah, i beat you to the edit![]()
How would you know that? You enjoy smelling fishy vaginas?
I still ed it up
Cause I'm your dad.
These guys think you have to see a fish turn into a reptile...
There is actually a lot more evidence to see this, than a hydrogen atom changing states.
But you never see these guys arguing about hydrogen atoms, or water molecules, which they have never seen.
It doesn't matter what the unwashed, uneducated believe. Burgers aren't going to flip themselves.
Where did water come from?
I don't think you get what I am saying about chains. I do believe in one. It's the same one you believe in. It's not a special one like it is in religions.
You can't seem to understand the separation. It's not a hard concept to get, really. Where did god go? Were does a programmer go when they're letting their simulation run? Just because god started it, doesn't have to mean he's constantly tinkering with it.
Again, you keep being stubborn in or equivalency of religion and theism. So you don't understand that there are four genera or belief generated by these dichotomies. You keep insisting there are two by misrepresenting the third genus. You haven't even addressed the fourth genus of atheistic religion. You're missing the entire structure of the issue, which is as bad of a folly as anyone in this thread has made.
Will anyone ever be able to observe a fish to a reptile?
poseidon, you dumb
did anybody observe your grandfather giving birth to you?
. I should of known.
Yes, a bird was there and saw it all go down.
Human eyes can't see atoms.
You are correctly thinking about assessing its position indirectly thereby screwing with its momentum, so you can't assess this quan y. One can only indirectly measure one or the other.
but...
These guys think you have to see an ape like animal turn into a human for it to be so...
They can't believe anything unless they personally witness the event.
Good luck with that.
Not true at all. I believe in God and I've never seen him.
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