JoeyKnothead wrote: ↑Mon Oct 10, 2022 8:54 am
So God created everything because a book said God said he created everything? This data is also in a book that declares God hooked up with a married woman, and they had a human/god hybrid child that could walk on water.
This is what this entire thread is about - is the Bible trustworthy? So far, it's 147 pages long and we've touched on many areas on the truthfulness of the Bible, esp when compared to what is espoused as the mainstream views outside the Bible.
Do you accept all hearsay accounts, or just those that paint your preferred god in its best light?
As I've studied the Bible more and more, I find the accounts remarkably reliable and paints God in a light that gets brighter. We've touched on some of this already in this thread and we'll cover more areas later on in this thread.
Because that particular group can't show they speak truth regarding fanciful, often contradictory claims.
This is the genetic fallacy.
The genetic fallacy (also known as the fallacy of origins or fallacy of virtue)[1] is a fallacy of irrelevance in which arguments or information are dismissed or validated based solely on their source of origin rather than their content. In other words, a claim is ignored or given credibility based on its source rather than the claim itself.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetic_fallacy
You cannot dismiss an argument because it comes from Christians, just like I cannot dismiss an argument because it comes from a skeptic. What should be the grounds of debate is evidence and logical argumentation.
otseng wrote:
JK wrote:
Nor are there viable explanations that propose a god did it, when no god can be shown to be involved.
On the broad scope, there are only two explanations for fine-tuning - random chance or some entity that purposely created it this way.
False dichotomy.
You need to bring up alternative explanations to show it's a false dichotomy.
As well, you've not shown, nor will you ever show the universe couldn't have always existed in some form prior to the BB.
It's not up to me to support that since I've never made that claim. Now, if you want to make that claim, please provide your arguments for it and I'll then present my refutation.
I don't propose to know the prior conditions of a universe that many authorities consider to be some 14 billion years old.
Right, according to the BBT, the universe started around 14 billion years ago. This means our universe had a beginning.
Remember, it's the claimant's responsibility to support their claims, and there's no responsibility on my part to offer counter claims, as helpful as such may be.
Yes, I made the claim the universe had a beginning and that this is an inconvertable fact, which you disagreed with. We can go over sources which attest to this, but as you've already mentioned, the universe started around 14 billion years aso, so I see no point posting additional sources to support this.
otseng wrote:
When did the BB begin?
Beats me.
Well then the argument stands that the universe had a beginning.
When did gods begin having the ability to produce viable offspring through breeding with married middle eastern women?
If God created the universe, there is nothing outside of his power to do within the universe.
Arguments should stand or fall on their merits, not on who's the one telling em. If a world renowned expert in mammals told me a duck was one of em, I wouldn't set to making fur outta feathers.
Exactly. So, why be dimissive if a Christian says something?
Where you see design, I see stuff acting according to its properties. I contend mine is the more rational position.
It's the properties themselves that need the explaining. Let's put it this way, suppose I play a chess game against a computer and it always beats me. The design is not in the game itself, but in the computer program that is playing the game. There was a mind that created the computer program to be able to play so well. Likewise, God designed the properties of chemistry to lead to complexity we see in life and everything required to support life. Maybe we can have a deep dive into this later.
I just doubt their ability to show they speak truth about it.
I think we just might have to get into the book then.
otseng wrote:
JK wrote:
That's why I make no claims as to the earliest moments of the universe, as well as no claims regarding the multiverse.
If you reject the universe being a finite age, then the only alternative is an infinite age. So, you are in effect making the claim the universe is infinite in age.
I'm saying that since I don't know, I can't say either way.
Remember, you said...
JoeyKnothead wrote: ↑Sun Oct 09, 2022 3:56 am
otseng wrote:
That there is a beginning to the universe is an incontrovertible fact.
NO!
What we see is an expanding universe, and draw from that it once was once smaller. There's nothing in the BB theory that refutes my contention here.
You cannot say "NO!" to my claim and also say you don't know.
Remember, it's on the claimant to support their claims.
Of course.
The mere act of challenging a claim need not be considered a rejection of that claim.
I'm confused with your position on the claim there is a beginning to the universe. From what I can distill, it's "Even though scientists claim there's a beginning to the universe, there's no way that can be. I have no idea what the alternative is, but it sure ain't some creator god that did it."
So then we can quit fussing about folks having a priori beliefs as their reason to reject claims.
This is actually quite important. Our fundamental assumptions on interpreting evidence can lead us down the wrong path. Our a priori beliefs are often hard to see unless confronted and challenged.
As we've seen, there are many problems with modern cosmology, even to the point that it becomes unscientific.
"inflationary cosmology, as we currently understand it, cannot be evaluated using the scientific method."
https://www.forbes.com/sites/startswith ... 527e5cb45e
What is fundamentally wrong with modern cosmology that it even has to resort to ideas that have no evidence to support them? I believe it lies with wrong a priori beliefs.