SnakeySnakey wrote:Science has always been the same from the start. Instead of being close minded to evolution, it is evolution.
Not quite ... the religious argument was only one group disputing Darwin initially. The only way your statement can be even close to true is if you arbitrarily claim that science only began in the 1800's. Most people take it back a great deal further and include in its birth alchemy, early medicine, etc.
While religion, it changes its philosophy every day. Ever since before christ or buddha or moses or mohammad appeared, there were many old religions that people followed. New ones are still created as of this day, jsut to keep up with its time. All its been is a structure or backbone for a society at a certain point to behave. If you change religion, then its lost all its meaning.
There are possibly as many religions as there are people ... your point? Science is also diverse, conflicted and even, sometimes, arbitrary. None of this precludes the possibility that God might exist.
You see just about year ago the catholics had stopped believing in purgatory. What is up with that? You cant do that and say everything else is still sacred.
I'm not Caltholic. But churches are human institutions, not God himself. Humans are fallible. ... so is science. Admitting that makes each stronger, not weaker.
Then you got the holy wars. The bible and koran, pretty much violent on their own, caused that holy war
Oh and some trade routes, a few folks who lusted after power, some excess population needing to burn energy .... People have absolutely used religion to justify all kinds of evils.... and religion has spurred others on to do great good. This is a failing of humanity, not religion.
More recently, Hitler was an atheist.
. Guess what? Some people got smart enough to go "wait a second, killing is wrong." Unfortunately for the people that weren't smart, we still got that stupid mess over at the middle east.
People are stupid, people are greedy. And some people are actually pretty decent. Unfortunately, the greedy ones sometimes are in control.
So instead of admitting there is a fault with their religious texts, or a contradiction, they either try to play it off as some fundamentalisms and continue to kill for their faiths, or some just try to deny the violent passages. You might as well call them "sacreligious heathens."
We didn't get into this war for religion. Some extremists are now fighting us using claims of religion (and fighting each other, I will add)... and here, some Christians still burn crosses on black folk's lawns, think lynching should be legal. Just because a few idiots want to use religion as their excuse, doesn't mean the religion actually is justification for their actions. Other than that, I won't talk about an on-going war except to say thank you to the soldiers who are fighting and I wish you all home safely.
So good luck believing you omnipotent god, who's also pretty much a contradiction on its own.
The bottom line is none of this in any way disproves the existance of God. They show why you might dislike religion. They show that you blame religion for a lot of bad things. You seen enough to convince yourself God doesn't exist, (which is fine), but you have not proven this in a scientific and empirical way. It is a matter of belief, just like our belief in God is a matter of belief.
MR. Nate wrote:MeDeFe: As a pure naturalist, you would argue that everything should have a natural, physical explanation. In neuroscience it is a pretty well documented phenomena that if a conscious person has their physical brain stimulated in ways that cause physical reactions (moving their arm, moving their leg) they will respond with something like "Hey, I'm not doing that"
If there is nothing other than physical universe, the stimulation in their brain shouldn't cause that reaction.
Mr Nate, I will answer you as a Christian and a scientist. I am sorry, but this is not really proof of anything. I, of course, do believe there are mysteries out there, but ironically, the way an arm or leg moves is pretty well known.