i'm always amazed at how much science has accomplished in understanding our universe.
the one thing that i never could get an answer to, however, is WHY - why does does this universe exist? (or universes, depending on what you fancy).
i'm looking at the big picture here. one might ask, why are we here? well, billions of years of moving particles, evolution, ideal conditions, and the constants that make life possible tell us how we got here, and by that alone, the question of why can be considered irrelevant.
i'm not interested in the how, however, and it doesn't even have to concern life (because as science would like to tell us, we're pretty insignificant). i'm not asking how the universe functions. i don't care that it's possible for non-carbon based lifeforms to exist provided our universe was fine-tuned differently.
i'm asking WHY. why we have physical laws. why there exists matter. why the big bang(s) had to occur. why all that is, is?
is science just not there yet? if so, what can we guess based on our current knowledge? what does science and philosophy have to say about this? i don't want to insert God if God is not necessary to answer this question.
so the question is "why"
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Post #51
as i said earlier then, our definitions are different. thinking that the stars revolve around the earth is more than just earth-centric, it's believing the earth is special because mankind is special and we in habit the planet, therefore the stars revolve around the earth. it is then it becomes human-centric.Beastt wrote:Earth-centered would be "geocentric". Human-centric is obviously, human-centered. But any thought from humans is likely to be only from a human perspective. Being nothing other than human, how are we to hold the perspective of a non-human? I believe we can hold any of innumerable human perspectives, but not any non-human perspectives.
seems to be a lot of hubris amongst scientists and intellectuals to think they are close to the key of unlocking "everything." there's reputable work out there to show that we know far less than science would like to portray and that much of science can be a commitment of faith. to think OUR times is at the point of unlocking the mysteries of life seems to be jumping the gun a bit, and if you ask me, is falling victim to a "human-centric perspective" as if we are special when in reality, it is likely that there will be generations to come who will know more than we ever will at the rate our knowledge-base and technology increases.We have determined much about the universe and likely have far more to figure out. However, having reached a point where we can even conceive of an "answer to everything", it would appear ignorant to assume there is a God, yet to be discovered via science. What science continually demonstrates is that the universe operates on cold, hard, indifferent principles, many of which can be modeled with a significant degree of accuracy, via mathematics.
now i'm not saying that we aren't close to that point. if scientists can prove me wrong by providing that answer, by all means bring it. i'd love to hear that answer of everything myself

so what math is there to understand from a blank file compared to the math in the software for microsoft word? it doesn't matter that the same kind of physical matter exists for both programs. in a materialist world that scientists claim, matter is ALL that exists. therefore, ideas should be just a bunch of labels "created" by neurons in our brain. i think you're dodging the question by your reductionist approach.And yet one should consider that a "blank file, without any code", still contains the same kind of physical matter and electro-magnetic information as a file containing data. In fact, the arrangement of flux we can convert to data is actually more highly ordered than a "blank file". Since order is easier for us to understand, perhaps it is the file containing data which is less complex.
Again, "complex" tells us about the capacity of the observer to understand what he is observing. It tells us little (if anything), about what he observes.
which is why i put "create" in quotes and also coupled the term with the word "apply."Do we really "create" ideas, or do we link together what we have observed in ways which explain more fully, those things we see? I'll grant you that humans engage in the processing of input and sometimes, this results in extensions to human understanding. But the idea of "creating" anything tends not to hold much merit upon close examination.
but you admit that there is some sort of "criteria," i.e., it is not PURELY subjective. which was the only point i was trying to make. like i said, if similar techniques are being used around the world in art, is art completely subjective or is there at least SOME consistency in ideas?Speaking from a strictly human-centric perspective, then there is a level of aesthetic appeal which is evolutionary and in most cases, innate. But people can also become fascinated with non-symmetry and find beauty within it, even in faces. If we assume the majority is the natural model, then aesthetics are partially programmed through genetics. But in that some individuals, often those who seek a greater understanding of visual appeal, can break such boundaries, I don't know that we can genuinely find a true logical basis.
RE: complexity and amazement
now i totally understand your perspective on how as we begin to understand something, our amazement can decrease. however, i still contest that the level of amazement is soley dependent on our grasp of the complexity. now it's my turn

you are a programmer, i am a dancer, more specificaly what you would call a "b-boy". now, b-boying (or breakdancing if you will) was a cultural phenomenon that impressed people for its acrobatic and dynamic movement.
now whether that amazes you or not is a matter of much subjectivity, although i can attest to experience (both witnessing and my own) in b-boying that the public will be very impressed by what a b-boy does. but i can watch this video (and witness b-boying through any other video or in person) and continue to be amazed, and be MORE amazed the more i understand the dance. there are complexities to the dance you could never possibly understand until you've been doing the dance for years, and your amazement to the dance only increases with understanding as you begin to understand the intricacies of the dance.
i can also use an example from this forum. someone created a thread where atheists mostly agreed that their understanding of the universe and how it works and how it came to be allows THEM to consider it with MORE amazement than a theist who simply attributes "God" as the answer to everything. if i ever find the thread i will post it here.
and so once again, i disagree that complexity and amazement are related ONLY by ability to understand.
i have skipped the consciousness issues because i have to go to work

- daedalus 2.0
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Post #53
Why not?ken1burton wrote:Beastt.
So now you want to blame man for creating God. But if that were the case, How can someone who evolved be responsible for what they do? Or think?
Ken
Imagine the people who believe ... and not ashamed to ignore, totally, all the patient findings of thinking minds through all the centuries since the Bible.... It is these ignorant people�who would force their feeble and childish beliefs on us...I.Asimov
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Post #54
Daedalus.
I thought you used the Ignore button?
Do we blame a fish for eating another fish, or accept it as the way they are? With no God, we have No real rules. Just ones we make for those under our control.
Countries have followed being an atheist. Usually with blood baths. Why not? If mankind just evolved, What do we owe each other? Really?
Ken
I thought you used the Ignore button?
Do we blame a fish for eating another fish, or accept it as the way they are? With no God, we have No real rules. Just ones we make for those under our control.
Countries have followed being an atheist. Usually with blood baths. Why not? If mankind just evolved, What do we owe each other? Really?
Ken
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Post #55
This is the second time today I've heard this absurd claim. Do you really believe atheists are immoral?ken1burton wrote:Daedalus.
I thought you used the Ignore button?
Do we blame a fish for eating another fish, or accept it as the way they are? With no God, we have No real rules. Just ones we make for those under our control.
Countries have followed being an atheist. Usually with blood baths. Why not? If mankind just evolved, What do we owe each other? Really?
Ken
TC
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Post #56
Thought Criminal.
Do I think that Atheists are immoral? Not really a valid question. They can be, or they might not be. It is not like we have not seen countries which do not accept God.
Christians can not really follow Christ and accept another person as having no value. Babies as being ok to abort. Etc. But an understanding that all are created in the image of God, All special in His sight.
An Atheist on the other hand, has no reason to believe a human or a fish are different, Both evolved. Just chance life for either of them. With no God, There are no rules. Survival for a fish is to eat it’s young. Many do, and humans are just other creatures which evolved. So cook your grandmother.
I do not remember a lot of Atheists moving to Russia or China so they could be in a God-less country (or at least that is the way their government would have liked to have it.)
The Differences between Christians and Atheists are quite plain to see in this world. Either in lives, or in control of other’s lives. And far too many Atheists have no value for other human lives.
I am saying those who are followers of Christ, not saying Christian and not really being one. Like the Protestants and Catholics who were killing each other in Ireland, Those doing that were not following Jesus at all. Nor the ones forcing Christianity (their view) upon others, Some with convert or die.
Ken
Absurd claim? Go and dig up some of the mass graves. Genocide is not a concept taught by Christ.
Do I think that Atheists are immoral? Not really a valid question. They can be, or they might not be. It is not like we have not seen countries which do not accept God.
Christians can not really follow Christ and accept another person as having no value. Babies as being ok to abort. Etc. But an understanding that all are created in the image of God, All special in His sight.
An Atheist on the other hand, has no reason to believe a human or a fish are different, Both evolved. Just chance life for either of them. With no God, There are no rules. Survival for a fish is to eat it’s young. Many do, and humans are just other creatures which evolved. So cook your grandmother.
I do not remember a lot of Atheists moving to Russia or China so they could be in a God-less country (or at least that is the way their government would have liked to have it.)
The Differences between Christians and Atheists are quite plain to see in this world. Either in lives, or in control of other’s lives. And far too many Atheists have no value for other human lives.
I am saying those who are followers of Christ, not saying Christian and not really being one. Like the Protestants and Catholics who were killing each other in Ireland, Those doing that were not following Jesus at all. Nor the ones forcing Christianity (their view) upon others, Some with convert or die.
Ken
Absurd claim? Go and dig up some of the mass graves. Genocide is not a concept taught by Christ.
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Post #57
It's an entirely valid question, given that you claim religion as the basis for morality.ken1burton wrote:Thought Criminal.
Do I think that Atheists are immoral? Not really a valid question. They can be, or they might not be. It is not like we have not seen countries which do not accept God.
This is the True Scotsman Fallacy. As for abortion, no babies are involved in the process, and the only person is the woman.Christians can not really follow Christ and accept another person as having no value. Babies as being ok to abort. Etc. But an understanding that all are created in the image of God, All special in His sight.
All life evolved, but not all life evolved into moral agents capable of considering whether it's right to eat grandma. And, for the record, it very rarely is.An Atheist on the other hand, has no reason to believe a human or a fish are different, Both evolved. Just chance life for either of them. With no God, There are no rules. Survival for a fish is to eat it’s young. Many do, and humans are just other creatures which evolved. So cook your grandmother.
Russia, by which you mean the Soviet Union, might have been officially atheistic, but it merely substituted communism as the state religion. More to the point, I would want to live in a country whose laws embody humanism, which would make it necessarily secular.I do not remember a lot of Atheists moving to Russia or China so they could be in a God-less country (or at least that is the way their government would have liked to have it.)
First you say it's an unfair question, then you give a ridiculous answer anyhow. If we put aside the special pleading of the True Scotsman fallacy, the world is very clearly full of moral atheists, immoral theists, immoral atheists and moral theists. It does not appear that theism, as such, indicates morality, nor a lack of theism indicates immorality. As it happens, theists are overrepresented in prisons and underrepresented among the ranks of the educated; draw your own conclusions.The Differences between Christians and Atheists are quite plain to see in this world. Either in lives, or in control of other’s lives. And far too many Atheists have no value for other human lives.
Yes, and no true Scotsman eats oats.I am saying those who are followers of Christ, not saying Christian and not really being one. Like the Protestants and Catholics who were killing each other in Ireland, Those doing that were not following Jesus at all. Nor the ones forcing Christianity (their view) upon others, Some with convert or die.
Apparently, it's one learned by Christians. Those mass graves weren't all dug by atheists, I assure you.Absurd claim? Go and dig up some of the mass graves. Genocide is not a concept taught by Christ.
TC
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