b.k. barunt wrote:Not answered very well.
Rational thought dictates that life did not come "from nothing"
Rational thought also dictates that the origin of life is not automatically some Supreme Being.
Move on.
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b.k. barunt wrote:Not answered very well.
Eye of the beholder bud. The guy that painted his house pink with lime green trim thinks it's beautifull. Somewhere in the world there's more of them.benmor78 wrote:Why is it that the evangelical atheists are so much more irritating than evangelical Christians? Oh, yeah, it's this obnoxious sense of intellectual superiority.
benmor78 wrote:Why is it that the evangelical atheists are so much more irritating than evangelical Christians? Oh, yeah, it's this obnoxious sense of intellectual superiority.
vtmarik wrote:benmor78 wrote:Why is it that the evangelical atheists are so much more irritating than evangelical Christians? Oh, yeah, it's this obnoxious sense of intellectual superiority.
Versus the obnoxious sense of moral entitlement?
benmor78 wrote:Possibly, but the bizarre obsession atheists have with religion is puzzling. It's like the 14 yo boy obsessed with the homecoming queen.
vtmarik wrote:benmor78 wrote:Why is it that the evangelical atheists are so much more irritating than evangelical Christians? Oh, yeah, it's this obnoxious sense of intellectual superiority.
Versus the obnoxious sense of moral entitlement?
And Jamie, humans lose a couple of grams when they die? Our bodies are like 97% water. That ain't a couple grams dude.
the work of Dr. Duncan MacDougall, who in the early 1900s sought to measure the weight purportedly lost by a human body when the soul departed the body upon death. MacDougall weighed dying patients in an attempt to prove that the soul was material, tangible and thus measurable. These experiments are widely considered to have had little if any scientific merit, and although MacDougall's results varied considerably from 21 grams, for some people this figure has become synonymous with the measure of a soul's mass. [1].
vtmarik wrote:benmor78 wrote:Why is it that the evangelical atheists are so much more irritating than evangelical Christians? Oh, yeah, it's this obnoxious sense of intellectual superiority.
Versus the obnoxious sense of moral entitlement?
And Jamie, humans lose a couple of grams when they die? Our bodies are like 97% water. That ain't a couple grams dude.
Colaalone wrote:vtmarik wrote:benmor78 wrote:Why is it that the evangelical atheists are so much more irritating than evangelical Christians? Oh, yeah, it's this obnoxious sense of intellectual superiority.
Versus the obnoxious sense of moral entitlement?
And Jamie, humans lose a couple of grams when they die? Our bodies are like 97% water. That ain't a couple grams dude.
Jamie was referring to this:the work of Dr. Duncan MacDougall, who in the early 1900s sought to measure the weight purportedly lost by a human body when the soul departed the body upon death. MacDougall weighed dying patients in an attempt to prove that the soul was material, tangible and thus measurable. These experiments are widely considered to have had little if any scientific merit, and although MacDougall's results varied considerably from 21 grams, for some people this figure has become synonymous with the measure of a soul's mass. [1].
Although generally regarded either as meaningless or considered to have had little if any scientific merit... In the end however, his practices were considered fallible due to shakey methods.
vtmarik wrote:benmor78 wrote:Possibly, but the bizarre obsession atheists have with religion is puzzling. It's like the 14 yo boy obsessed with the homecoming queen.
Atheists are no more obsessed in the idea of No God than evangelicals are with the idea of God.
As towards no Christians having moral entitlement issues, how many atheists come knocking on your door telling you that if you don't repent now that you'll be burning in Hell? How many atheist pundits say that it's ok to walk around with tableaus of murder around your neck?
Religious fervor is proof of the Barnum Effect: There's a sucker born every minute.
Jamie wrote:vtmarik wrote:benmor78 wrote:Why is it that the evangelical atheists are so much more irritating than evangelical Christians? Oh, yeah, it's this obnoxious sense of intellectual superiority.
Versus the obnoxious sense of moral entitlement?
And Jamie, humans lose a couple of grams when they die? Our bodies are like 97% water. That ain't a couple grams dude.
I'm not talking about decay, or the bowels emptying themselves at death. I'm saying at the EXACT moment of death, for no reason science can explain, a human being loses a couple of grams. The exact moment in this case being when brain waves cease. It has been proven time and again. When anything else dies, this effect does not happen.
Jamie wrote:It has been proven time and again. When anything else dies, this effect does not happen.
Colaalone wrote:vtmarik wrote:benmor78 wrote:Why is it that the evangelical atheists are so much more irritating than evangelical Christians? Oh, yeah, it's this obnoxious sense of intellectual superiority.
Versus the obnoxious sense of moral entitlement?
And Jamie, humans lose a couple of grams when they die? Our bodies are like 97% water. That ain't a couple grams dude.
Jamie was referring to this:the work of Dr. Duncan MacDougall, who in the early 1900s sought to measure the weight purportedly lost by a human body when the soul departed the body upon death. MacDougall weighed dying patients in an attempt to prove that the soul was material, tangible and thus measurable. These experiments are widely considered to have had little if any scientific merit, and although MacDougall's results varied considerably from 21 grams, for some people this figure has become synonymous with the measure of a soul's mass. [1].
Jamie wrote:Colaalone wrote:vtmarik wrote:benmor78 wrote:Why is it that the evangelical atheists are so much more irritating than evangelical Christians? Oh, yeah, it's this obnoxious sense of intellectual superiority.
Versus the obnoxious sense of moral entitlement?
And Jamie, humans lose a couple of grams when they die? Our bodies are like 97% water. That ain't a couple grams dude.
Jamie was referring to this:the work of Dr. Duncan MacDougall, who in the early 1900s sought to measure the weight purportedly lost by a human body when the soul departed the body upon death. MacDougall weighed dying patients in an attempt to prove that the soul was material, tangible and thus measurable. These experiments are widely considered to have had little if any scientific merit, and although MacDougall's results varied considerably from 21 grams, for some people this figure has become synonymous with the measure of a soul's mass. [1].
actually, that was one of the first ever experiments done in this field. With ultra modern, ultra accuarate equipment, the weight lost at death is consistently two grams. I watched a video on this while in college. It showed people dying while on a scale and hooked up to several machines. When the brain stopped functioning, and electrical activity ceased, in almost everycase, two grams came off the weight, though in a few cases it was 3, and in others it was one. Other clips showed Dogs being put down. When brain activity stopped, no weight was lost at all. No science to date can say why this occurs, so for now, it goes beyond science.
benmor78 wrote:Most of my online interactions in this regard are with obnoxious atheists, and of course Richard Dawkins' extremely public fight against religion doesn't really speak strongly of his mental health.
Either way, I subscribe to the theory that there are three sides to the human self: a physical side, a mental side, and a spiritual side. One must exercise all three of these aspects to be a complete person.
vtmarik wrote:benmor78 wrote:Most of my online interactions in this regard are with obnoxious atheists, and of course Richard Dawkins' extremely public fight against religion doesn't really speak strongly of his mental health.
So if someone strives to take religion out of the public sphere and make it more of a private event (which wouldn't be terrible) they're crazy?Either way, I subscribe to the theory that there are three sides to the human self: a physical side, a mental side, and a spiritual side. One must exercise all three of these aspects to be a complete person.
There's a difference between spiritualism and religion. I know plenty of spiritual atheists who have reached that phase of their existence through philosophy and introspection. They are still atheists though.
Jamie wrote:With ultra modern, ultra accuarate equipment, the weight lost at death is consistently two grams. I watched a video on this while in college. It showed people...blah...blah...blah
benmor78 wrote:Why should religion be taken out of the public sphere? We, as a society, accept that sexuality is part of the public sphere. Why should religion be a private, closeted issue while whether you stick your penis in a man's anus or a woman's vagina is something suitable for prime time TV?
benmor78 wrote:Jamie wrote:Colaalone wrote:vtmarik wrote:benmor78 wrote:Why is it that the evangelical atheists are so much more irritating than evangelical Christians? Oh, yeah, it's this obnoxious sense of intellectual superiority.
Versus the obnoxious sense of moral entitlement?
And Jamie, humans lose a couple of grams when they die? Our bodies are like 97% water. That ain't a couple grams dude.
Jamie was referring to this:the work of Dr. Duncan MacDougall, who in the early 1900s sought to measure the weight purportedly lost by a human body when the soul departed the body upon death. MacDougall weighed dying patients in an attempt to prove that the soul was material, tangible and thus measurable. These experiments are widely considered to have had little if any scientific merit, and although MacDougall's results varied considerably from 21 grams, for some people this figure has become synonymous with the measure of a soul's mass. [1].
actually, that was one of the first ever experiments done in this field. With ultra modern, ultra accuarate equipment, the weight lost at death is consistently two grams. I watched a video on this while in college. It showed people dying while on a scale and hooked up to several machines. When the brain stopped functioning, and electrical activity ceased, in almost everycase, two grams came off the weight, though in a few cases it was 3, and in others it was one. Other clips showed Dogs being put down. When brain activity stopped, no weight was lost at all. No science to date can say why this occurs, so for now, it goes beyond science.
If you can link to the studies, that would go a long way towards backing this up. My response, really, would be that lung capacity generally is about 6 liters, and air masses 1 gram per liter, roughly. However, there is a lot of water vapor in the exhaled breath, and CO2 is higher in exhaled breath than in ambient atmosphere, so it's not inconceivable that we could just be talking about the loss of mass from the lungs flattening.
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