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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 1:15:35 AM   
seeksfemslave


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We are told by many posters that the scientific method of analysis is superior to the religious method therefore the idea of the existence of a Deity cannot be true.
Surely there's a logical fallacy there somewhere ?

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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 1:45:19 AM   
aSlavesLife


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quote:

ORIGINAL: seeksfemslave

We are told by many posters that the scientific method of analysis is superior to the religious method therefore the idea of the existence of a Deity cannot be true.
Surely there's a logical fallacy there somewhere ?


Sounds like a strange mixture of denial of the antecedent and the fallacy of anecdotal evidence to me, but not sure. I think I've also spotted converse accident, non causa pro causa, dicto simpliciter, reification, argumentum ad ignorantiam, argumentum ad populum, ane bifurication fly by on the thread as well. Mostly by those with theistic leanings, but certainly not all of them.

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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 1:49:30 AM   
meatcleaver


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quote:

ORIGINAL: seeksfemslave

We are told by many posters that the scientific method of analysis is superior to the religious method therefore the idea of the existence of a Deity cannot be true.
Surely there's a logical fallacy there somewhere ?


Hmm The fact that we are communicating on here and can fly around the world amongst many, many other things, rather than having to communicate through uh-hum pray, is a good reason to consider scientific reasoning is superior to religious reasoning.

But on a side note, explain religious reasoning for I have failed to identify any coherent train of thought when it comes to religion.

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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 1:50:30 AM   
luckydog1


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OK I am not an expert on Ancient Jewish Paternity laws, so I will concede that point.  If you want you can consider Jesus to be a Mazmer.  But Deuteronomy 21 says nothing about bastards at all.  Perhaps you are refering to Chapter23, where it says that bastards and others can not be of the Lords People(Jews).  But this is in a long list of discussions of civil and citizenship laws.  It has nothing to do with Salvation or entry to heaven.  If he were legally a mazmer he would have been considered not Jewish and not allowed in the Temple, but according to the stories he was allowed in, hence was not legally considered a Mamzer.  Judged as a Jew Jesus was a terrible Herretic( he was killed for his crimes, perhaps pretending to not be a Mazmer was one of them), that is part of the premise of Christianity, and I don't think your argument will change anyone.  And Jesus did teach a new Path to heaven as well as relax the food codes, the Jews did not accept what he was teaching.  But if this argument works for you, thats ok, I know I can't change anyones mind.

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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 2:01:02 AM   
meatcleaver


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There was a thousand years between Jesus and David, the chances of a recorded geneaology are pretty damn slim to none existent or at least one could only say Jesus was of the lineage of David as much as I could say I'm of the lineage of Alfred the Great. The gospel writers or at least, those gospel writers whose work were considered not to be so far fetched that even someone with a modicum of common sense wouldn't believe them and so their work could be considered fit for the bible (even then none agree with each other), lived long after Jesus. They could not have known him and obviously didn't by the pure fiction we know they wrote. Apart from the probablity that there was an historical Jesus, we know damn all about him other than fictions written by people who could not have known him.

This is probably why the images made of Jesus in western culture are really images of Zeus!

< Message edited by meatcleaver -- 1/2/2007 2:06:10 AM >


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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 2:07:03 AM   
luckydog1


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Luckydog – Your use of the terms subjective and objective reality bear scant resemblance to any definitions I am aware of. In fact you have them interchanged. Subjective reality is the experience of being we have after we have filtered it through our senses and interpreted it with our minds. Objective reality is the theoretical state of the stimulus before it was received and processed by the observer. Objective reality can only exist as a concept because as soon as it is observed it becomes subjective.

So objective reality can only exist as a concept, ie only in the mind of an intellect.  So untill something is percieved it does not have a reality?  After it has been percieved it takes on a Subjective reality( I agree with you there), but untill it is percieved it has no reality( either subjective or objective)...?  That would imply there was no reality untill there was an mind to percieve it, correct.  I don't buy it.  I think a rock under the ice of antartica, never seen by a living soul still exists, it has an objective reality.  But if your assertion is correct and untill there is perception there is no reality, it implies that the world was created in an instant with the first Human thought( a nonsense form of creationism) or there had to be a perciever at the time of the big bang, and percieving all the events in the universe that preceeded the first human asking why, which indicates some sort of God.

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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 2:10:33 AM   
Chaingang


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quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver
...we know damn all about him other than fictions written by people who could not have known him.


Apart from the excitement of seeing certain religious ideas taken apart even on their own terms, that's a point that bears much repeating: there is no historical evidence of a Jesus from Nazareth from an actual witness that knew him. It's all second hand from fifty to hundreds of years later.

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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 2:11:06 AM   
luckydog1


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Hmm The fact that we are communicating on here and can fly around the world amongst many, many other things, rather than having to communicate through uh-hum pray, is a good reason to consider scientific reasoning is superior to religious reasoning.   In another thread you were certain that Modern Living, based on scientific thinking, is going to heat the planet and destroy mankind, perhaps its not so superiour.

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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 3:04:41 AM   
LadyEllen


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quote:

ORIGINAL: seeksfemslave

We are told by many posters that the scientific method of analysis is superior to the religious method therefore the idea of the existence of a Deity cannot be true.
Surely there's a logical fallacy there somewhere ?


The main fallacy at work in this thread, is that which says we ought to live only according to science, and thus hold ourselves to be nothing more than chemical reactions or even further down the Razor, bizarre collections of particles, ignoring that it is that which permits and even inspires us to understand our chemical or particle nature, which we thereby must abandon.

The secondary fallacy at work in this thread, is that we can only have this discussion in terms of a single interpretation, and a false one at that in my estimation, of the most basic form of one religion, which whilst being perhaps the cultural definition of what religion is and therefore the default setting in debate, not only lacks the ability in itself to define a worldview outside its time and place, also lacks by comparison to science, any qualified proponent in this thread.

What is clear, and always becomes clear eventually in debates such as this, is that religion, whilst useful and interesting as an ancient form of sociological and psychological science, can tell us little or nothing about purer sciences such as biology, chemistry and physics. And equally, that the purer sciences are of little or no use in understanding what it means to be human.

Given that the scientifically minded will always refer to the Razor in order to beat out religion, and the religious will always refer to psychological and sociological justifications to damn pure science, these debates rarely go anywhere. But in the end, they are describing different things - both of which are useful, dependent on circumstances.

I happen to be very sure that there is more to life, the universe and everything, than particle/wave/string theory holds to be the case. This doesnt mean that I must or even do reject those theories or the science behind them. Its not an either/or, its not a true/false.

E





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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 3:06:30 AM   
eyesopened


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i'm trying to figure out how there could have possibly been (and still are) brilliant scientists who also hold to religious beliefs?  Why do the two have to be mutually exclusive?  There's no hard evidence that people can't have both, that we can think in theories.  It is starting out with a "belief" a "theory" that one applies scientific method to that creates scientific proof.  i fail to see the conflict except when one tries to make science and religion mutually exclusive and then tries to convert others to linear thinking.  Does one have to deny God to invent the airplane or the computer or the internet?  Does one have to believe in God in order to have a moral code of conduct?  Of course not!

That we use technology to communicate i would submit that it has made communication faster and easier but hardly better.  Not all technology has been good.  Let's face it, if we had to chase down the pizza delivery car in order to get our pizza we would not get fat but that's a whole different subject.  my point being is that neither religion nor science is good or evil on its surface but only how people apply each.


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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 3:55:21 AM   
meatcleaver


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quote:

ORIGINAL: luckydog1

Hmm The fact that we are communicating on here and can fly around the world amongst many, many other things, rather than having to communicate through uh-hum pray, is a good reason to consider scientific reasoning is superior to religious reasoning.   In another thread you were certain that Modern Living, based on scientific thinking, is going to heat the planet and destroy mankind, perhaps its not so superiour.


I absolutely didn't say anything of the sort. I said over current way of life is causing global warming and that has nothing to do with some fallacy of 'scientific thinking' whatever that is. Science has given us knowledge, how we use that knowledge is not a scientific question but a philosophical, moral and ethical issue.

Since 95% of people in the world are still religious, one could say the problem is to do with religious people refusing to think rationally since it is the scientists that are saying we need to change the way we live. And no, that doesn't mean going back to the year blob.

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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 4:11:12 AM   
meatcleaver


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quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyEllen

quote:

ORIGINAL: seeksfemslave

We are told by many posters that the scientific method of analysis is superior to the religious method therefore the idea of the existence of a Deity cannot be true.
Surely there's a logical fallacy there somewhere ?


The main fallacy at work in this thread, is that which says we ought to live only according to science, and thus hold ourselves to be nothing more than chemical reactions or even further down the Razor, bizarre collections of particles, ignoring that it is that which permits and even inspires us to understand our chemical or particle nature, which we thereby must abandon.

The secondary fallacy at work in this thread, is that we can only have this discussion in terms of a single interpretation, and a false one at that in my estimation, of the most basic form of one religion, which whilst being perhaps the cultural definition of what religion is and therefore the default setting in debate, not only lacks the ability in itself to define a worldview outside its time and place, also lacks by comparison to science, any qualified proponent in this thread.

What is clear, and always becomes clear eventually in debates such as this, is that religion, whilst useful and interesting as an ancient form of sociological and psychological science, can tell us little or nothing about purer sciences such as biology, chemistry and physics. And equally, that the purer sciences are of little or no use in understanding what it means to be human.

Given that the scientifically minded will always refer to the Razor in order to beat out religion, and the religious will always refer to psychological and sociological justifications to damn pure science, these debates rarely go anywhere. But in the end, they are describing different things - both of which are useful, dependent on circumstances.

I happen to be very sure that there is more to life, the universe and everything, than particle/wave/string theory holds to be the case. This doesnt mean that I must or even do reject those theories or the science behind them. Its not an either/or, its not a true/false.

E



No one is saying anyone should live according to science whatever living according to science means. What those questioning the existence of god are saying, is that we should think and make decisions rationally and not based on some fairy tale. Like God telling Bush that invading Iraq was the thing to do.(Whether it is true or not who knows).

If a false discussion is asking religion to prove what it claims to be true, then it is. Religious people want society to be run according to their beliefs yet they cannot put forward any evidence that their beliefs have any factual foundation. We have had sevral threads where people have shown how much they abhor Islam and say what a terrible and violent religion it is but the same people refuse to look in the mirror at their own religion.

Not even religion can tell us what it is to be human but science doesn't try to tell us what it is to be human, science is about knowledge, some of that knowledge might help us understand the human condition but that is not its aim. Religion tells us even less about the human condition because according to religious people, religion is A, B and C and its not to be questioned. That sort of thinking takes us nowhere.

Religion says it is describing something different because religious people know their beliefs don't stand up to scrutiny. Science can quite confident it is treading on the same ground as religion in the sense that one of its concerns is how the universe came into being. There are very few people left who believed god made the unicverse in 7 days, that the earth is no longer the centre of the universe etc. Religion has been in retreat from substantial questions for so long that now it claims to be beyond science, reason and rational scrutiny.

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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 4:14:27 AM   
meatcleaver


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quote:

ORIGINAL: eyesopened

i'm trying to figure out how there could have possibly been (and still are) brilliant scientists who also hold to religious beliefs?  Why do the two have to be mutually exclusive? 


Eminent scientists that are religious as far as can be assertained from any polls are the exception that prove the rule.

Religion and science collide because science involves reason and rational thought while religion involves no reason and no rational thought.

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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 4:46:25 AM   
Zensee


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quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyEllen

And equally, that the purer sciences are of little or no use in understanding what it means to be human.

I happen to be very sure that there is more to life, the universe and everything, than particle/wave/string theory holds to be the case. This doesnt mean that I must or even do reject those theories or the science behind them. Its not an either/or, its not a true/false.

E


Personally, I find the science of being human far more inspiring than any amount of religious speculation.

Knowing about the nuts and bolts, the inner workings of the universe in no way diminishes it's mystery or wonder for me. I don't need myths to inspire respect for existence. A flower doesn't stop being beautiful just because I know its physiology. In fact it is more amazing the more I know about it.

Religion is not the only spiritual path. I'd suggest that path is far too personal and risky to travel with someone elses out dated map. I'd rather enter the unknown with my wits and the ability to make my own maps (always keeping in mind that the map is not the territory).


Z.

< Message edited by Zensee -- 1/2/2007 4:49:19 AM >


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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 5:16:06 AM   
seeksfemslave


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quote:

ORIGINAL: aSlavesLife

quote:

ORIGINAL: seeksfemslave

We are told by many posters that the scientific method of analysis is superior to the religious method therefore the idea of the existence of a Deity cannot be true.
Surely there's a logical fallacy there somewhere ?


Sounds like a strange mixture of denial of the antecedent and the fallacy of anecdotal evidence to me, but not sure. I think I've also spotted converse accident, non causa pro causa, dicto simpliciter, reification, argumentum ad ignorantiam, argumentum ad populum, ane bifurication fly by on the thread as well. Mostly by those with theistic leanings, but certainly not all of them.


I wish I could understand this then I would know if you were for or against what I said.
Or should I say pro or contra ?

< Message edited by seeksfemslave -- 1/2/2007 5:18:44 AM >

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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 5:18:51 AM   
LadyEllen


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quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver

No one is saying anyone should live according to science whatever living according to science means. What those questioning the existence of god are saying, is that we should think and make decisions rationally and not based on some fairy tale. Like God telling Bush that invading Iraq was the thing to do.(Whether it is true or not who knows).

Living according to science, says that we ought not to think or act in any way which cannot be rationalised. However, we are people and we are not always rational, for we are also emotional beings. If science wishes to dismiss God (and I use that term loosely) and religion for being irrational, then science must first demonstrate that our emotions and imaginations are equally fallacious. Since science seems to hold that God arises as a fallacy from our emotions and imaginations, then it would be much more simple to dismiss God by way of honest scientific endeavour directed at these two areas, than to attempt an impossible validation or invalidation of proof of God's existence. Pure science tells me that my emotions and imagination are merely chemical reactions, and so solves this question partially - indeed, emotion and imagination can be rationally explained in this way; how is it though, that easily explicable, quantifiable, pure scientific, chemical reactions which lack God, can then lead to an impression that God exists? Were these chemicals and reactions replicated in a test tube, would the contents of the test tube also be spontaneously possessed of emotion, imagination and thence an impression of the divine? I suggest not, which if true would tend to suggest something special and not understandable by pure scientific means, occurring in the human system; not the "God hiding" sort of situation, for that would be a fallacy in itself, but a situation which demonstrates that science cannot and will never tell us everything that there is to know, and that science cannot and will never be able to assess everything according to its methodology. The scientific method is wonderful; it brings forth demonstrable truths and is indispensable - but it is not the right tool for every job.

If a false discussion is asking religion to prove what it claims to be true, then it is.

This is a misunderstanding based on reliance on scientific methodology. Religion as we are discussing here, is a function of faith, which in turn relies on emotion and imagination. Religion does not have to prove it is true according to any scientific method, any more than science must adhere to the principles of scripture for its veracity.

Religious people want society to be run according to their beliefs yet they cannot put forward any evidence that their beliefs have any factual foundation. We have had sevral threads where people have shown how much they abhor Islam and say what a terrible and violent religion it is but the same people refuse to look in the mirror at their own religion.

I totally understand your frustration, and agree that much of what is termed religion is absolutely inadequate in our times. This is a problem with the religions in question in that they are fossilised relics of bygone times, whose followers even, do not understand that, for instance, a belief in creation is as irrelevant to faith in Jesus as indeed the scientific explanation is. Until we get rid of the Judaic faiths, (paradoxically perhaps, excluding Judaism itself), as the primary religious models of our society, we will be stuck with ancient and inadequate models throughout our culture. It is a tragedy, that we and everything around us has evolved over millennia, and yet our religious paradigm has not. Perhaps, more optimistically, the scientific angle might yet prove the driving force whereby that changes too. But, all in all, humans need religion and so there will have to be something other than science which replaces what we have now.

Not even religion can tell us what it is to be human but science doesn't try to tell us what it is to be human, science is about knowledge, some of that knowledge might help us understand the human condition but that is not its aim. Religion tells us even less about the human condition because according to religious people, religion is A, B and C and its not to be questioned. That sort of thinking takes us nowhere.

I fear you have run into the second fallacy I identified with this entire thread; that religion is defined far too narrowly in our culture. It appalls me whenever I visit a bookshop, that under Religion are books about Christianity, and even more, western Christianity of the catholic, nicean variety. Everything else, even different sorts of Christianity, is under Myths and Legends. Religion is about the totality of how we live - it not blind obedience to diktat and belief in some ancient story, it is not attending church on Sunday, it is about who we are and what we do and how we do it. I agree, that religiosity is unprofitable bunkum and sadly I also agree that religion too often produces religiosity in our culture.

Religion says it is describing something different because religious people know their beliefs don't stand up to scrutiny.

See above; they dont have to stand up to scrutiny. One could form a valid, viable religion based on the belief that fairies live at the bottom of the garden and purple people eaters lived last century. Such a religion would function just as well as any other, so long as it provided an internally coherent structure to provide a view on life, the universe and everything.

Science can quite confident it is treading on the same ground as religion in the sense that one of its concerns is how the universe came into being. There are very few people left who believed god made the unicverse in 7 days, that the earth is no longer the centre of the universe etc. Religion has been in retreat from substantial questions for so long that now it claims to be beyond science, reason and rational scrutiny.

Youre right. This is where religion has failed - because it has not evolved, because in our culture it is fossilised into a worldview from centuries ago that cannot be changed, according to the religious. And yet, why is it important in any way whatever to salvation through Christ, that God made the world in seven days et al? It isnt important, quite simply. What you identify is the inadequacy of religion as we understand it according to inadequate models, by comparison to a world which has long since moved out of the worldview and culture in which that religion and model was formed. When and if religion catches up in evolutionary terms, it will incorporate that which science has shown us, for this is the concern of religion with cosmology - not the particle wave theories and so on, but how does what is now known relate to the human experience and what does it say about our presence in the cosmos? 


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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 5:39:12 AM   
seeksfemslave


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With regard to rationaliy and science, Quantum Mechanics  has reached such levels of absurdity, leastways those bits I have read and can understand, examples...
(a) whether the cat in the box exists until it has been observed
(b) there is a finite possiblity that absolutely anything is possible
Both no doubt based on rigorous mathematical analysis.

I would not be confident that, in total, science is as rationally based as is commonly believed. The prestige of science rests on the succes of technology. For example Science does not explain magnetic force it simply creates so called Laws based ulimately on observed facts.

The complexity of the Universe is an observed fact, why is it so irrational to infer the existence of a Deity ?

Not knowing any advanced maths. I can still give an example of definitions made to fit the situation.
Factorial (n) = n.n-1.n-2....3.2.1...so, what have we got if n = 0
The answer is 1, why, because mathematicians say so. They do not say undefined, they say 1.

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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 5:47:14 AM   
meatcleaver


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quote:

ORIGINAL: seeksfemslave

With regard to rationaliy and science, Quantum Mechanics  has reached such levels of absurdity, leastways those bits I have read and can understand, examples...
(a) whether the cat in the box exists until it has been observed
(b) there is a finite possiblity that absolutely anything is possible
Both no doubt based on rigorous mathematical analysis.



Quantum mechanics is in its infancy and quantum mechanics doesn't say anything, it is a theory that scientists are working on and are far from reaching a conclusion.

However, you say it is absurd. It is far from the absurdity of the god hypotesis, the omnipotent, omniscient (an impossible paradox) being that knows every being's inner most thoughts, who is supernatural but can invade the natural universe at will. The god who will intervene for little Johhny at No.6 The Mews and make his cold better but allows millions to starve and die prematurely. Some loving god, some diety, such nonsense.

I really wouldn't knock quantum mechanics, it is the only straw a diety has to hang on to.

< Message edited by meatcleaver -- 1/2/2007 5:49:56 AM >


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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 7:19:39 AM   
seeksfemslave


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Repeating myself only because others do

The contradictions and unlikelyhoods to be found in the main  religions do NOT invalidate the idea of a Deity.
It seems to me that those who persistantly use that line of argument do so because it is they whose minds are closed.

As an example it would be very difficult to argue that a Deity has any interest at all in human beings. Surely this is as would be expected given the extraordinary nature of the Universe, both "out", to the galaxies and  "in", to the interior of the atom.


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RE: Dawkins on "God" and the Flying Spagetti ... - 1/2/2007 7:44:12 AM   
meatcleaver


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I've been warned off this thread by the mod. so I can't answer you.

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