DEBATE: Evolution VS Intelligent Design
471as for christians and evolution - even vatican was ok with it. and they know a lot about christianity.
Moderator: Greg
emmanuelle cunt wrote:galanter wrote:
(And yes, the question of God is different than any other question of the form "does x exist"." God is not a thing among other things. God is, in a sense, being itself not some particular thing that is here today and gone tomorrow. When we ask "does God exist" we are asking a question about the metaphysical nature of reality...that is quite different than asking "does a green dragon exist" or some such.)
you're making suppositions about the nature of god and then you're treating them as a facts to show that question of god existence is from a different class of question that question's of everything else's existence. this is circle reasoning, and i think it's one step away from anselm's proof of god's existence.
galanter wrote:What I am saying is that the proposition "God exists" is a metaphysical hypothesis. A hypothesis doesn't prove itself, but the nature of the hypothesis does condition what kinds of proof are adequate. Saying "unicorns exist" does nothing to reset ones expectations about how statements about objects existing should be treated. But saying "God exists" does because it's not a standard physical world object that is the question...it's the whole metaphysical nature of being that is in question, and that's an entirely different kind of discussion.
Nnnnno it's not.yut wrote:One thing I find interesting is how inbreeding creates diversity. If a bro and sis have kids, chances are the kid will be mutated. This is how genetic diversity is maintained, even if the gene pool is limited.
Linus Van Pelt wrote:I subscribe to neither prong of your false dichotomy.
Linus Van Pelt wrote:I subscribe to neither prong of your false dichotomy.
steve wrote:galanter wrote:What I am saying is that the proposition "God exists" is a metaphysical hypothesis. A hypothesis doesn't prove itself, but the nature of the hypothesis does condition what kinds of proof are adequate. Saying "unicorns exist" does nothing to reset ones expectations about how statements about objects existing should be treated. But saying "God exists" does because it's not a standard physical world object that is the question...it's the whole metaphysical nature of being that is in question, and that's an entirely different kind of discussion.
No one has ever given me the slightest reason to think that metaphysical questions have any impact on the real world. If a metaphysical being (this God fellow) has an impact on our real world, then certainly someone can show it to me, as he has joined our real world in that instance. If not, then fuck it, even if he does exist, he's meaningless.
You can't tell me on one hand that this god fellow is incredibly important and has effects in the real world, and then on the other hand say he has no relationship to the the real world, so we can't look for him there.
Either he is real and has an affect on the real world, or he doesn't exist, or he doesn't matter. Pick one. If you pick the first one, show me some evidence.
Ultimately it is a total dodge to say that the question of god is an important one, but then say that we cannot fathom how to answer it. It creates a space of doubt about tangible reality, and insanity pervades that doubt. It's the insanity, and the real world effects it inspires, that is the true evil, and belies the notion that religion is benign and personal. It isn't. It is a culture weapon and it breeds evil.
matthew wrote:It may sound trite and tired, Steve, but the answer to how God relates to man is the person of Christ. It's as simple and intellectual as that.
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