First, sorry for the length everyone. I need to start choosing a core set to things to go after, but sometimes I can't help myself.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
I work in science and we do not reinvent the wheel every generation but instead stand on the shoulders of those who did. No one publishes papers on the reality of gravity. Knowing it functions doesn’t require hours of research same as we don’t keep discovering penicillin. It is called the advancement of knowledge.
As usual, we seem to not be understanding each other
I didn't ask if you understood the concepts of gravity and happily respect it's nature in day to day living.
What I'm asking is in relation to the difference between
belief and
knowledge.
I personally
believe in the concepts taught in science class about gravity. I don't have to do any further research on my own if I'm happy with my
belief.
However, I don't personally
know all the details about how gravity works beyond what science I have read on the subject. I have not done any research
on it myself. In other words, if scientists manage to come up with a new theory of how gravity is actually working, then I will happily take on that
new belief as long as it comports with my reality.
As for no one publishing papers on gravity a quick google search will dispel that:
https://www.nature.com/subjects/general ... avity/srep
If you
know all the details about gravity, I'm sure many of the above paper authors would love your feedback for peer review.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
Now it’s an interesting challenge because I wager you didn’t yourself conduct any experiments establishing your position on evolution. You simply believed what others told you. Yet you ask me if I did.Do you see two different measures here?
No, because we are talking about 2 completely different things as usual.
You are correct. I did not conduct any experiments around evolution. In fact, I hated biology in school. However, I have researched the subject to
some extent and my
beliefs are based on that reading I have done. I
believe the current theory of evolution (in broad terms since I'm no evolutionary
biologist) is correct. I will be happy to update my
beliefs on the matter if newer science on the matter emerges and it is properly peer reviewed.
Notice carefully I have not said I
know the theory of evolution is correct. Do you see the difference?
This is what I was asking you about gravity. Unless you are a gravity researcher, most of your beliefs about gravity (like mine for evolution)
have come from (hopefully) peer reviewed science and in the case of gravity - lived experience of falling down
Feel free to convince me that you know all the details about gravity instead of just believing.
Keep in mind I'm not talking about blind faith here. I'm talking about informed belief - based on understanding the scientific method, how the
peer review proces works, and the power of verifiable, observable evidence.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
Perhaps this God is the one that pushes objects around in a way that appears to be gravity
No, He made the natural world to function under laws. Your suggestion is the view that everyone but christians had which prevented everyone else from advancing. Only christians thought the was a LAW Giver and so the natural world functioned under law, not luck.
I think what I was talking about completely sailed overhead.
This also sounds like you think only Christians found science and natural laws (this is wildly funny knowing how some Christians - not necessarily you - view the world).
For someone who is continually going on about working in science, you seem to have a lack of understanding of the history of it.
While wikipedia is certianly not the best source, this article should give some things to look into:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_science
My point again is that you likely don't actually
know the intricate mechanisms of how gravity is working, yet you seem to claim you do rather than just
having an informed belief about it.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
I realize I may appear to be splitting hairs here, but we have to be careful in debate so that we are clear what we mean.
I know I just saw a ball fall to the ground. I observed it. I believe it was the effect of gravity (attraction of large bodies of matter with other matter). I don't believe it was fairies, gods, invisible goblins, or anything else. I don't know this beyond all doubt, but I'm reasonably confident in my belief (99.99999% confident, but if we scientifically observed 'gravity fairies' then science would change and so would my beliefs).
But it won’t because there’s a law giver and that’s a law.
Are you saying no new knowledge about gravity will be found? I refer you again to the many papers above on just this subject.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
Ummm, no. How many children have asked Santa for a toy and then got that exact toy on Christmas morning?
Since they are taught to write Santa and Mom “delivers” those letters, it’s not even close.
How is it "not even close"? It's
exactly the same.
Person A asks B for C.
C appears.
Therefore B made C appear.
That, in a nutshell is
your logic. This is of course flawed. To see how these are exactly the same insert "Child/You" for A, "Santa/God" for B, and
"toy/healing" for C.
I know for a fact that my Mom and Dad brought gifts "from Santa". I saw the presents under the bed the week before. I was crushed
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
People of all cultures and religions pray to their favorite dieties and witness what appear to be miraculous healings. Are you saying now that all these gods are real based on this?
You’re making that up. They don’t, How many obvious healings did your church see?
Which part do you think I'm making up? That people of other religions pray? Surely that's not in debate or you need to study other religions.
People claim to be healed of this or that all the time in church settings. It is funny though that you insert "obvious healings". Those do
seem to be completely lacking anywhere. No one ever walked out of a wheelchair in my church though it wasn't for a lack of trying.
Plenty of people loved to claim God healed them of this or that though. Coincidentally none of these things are the type of things anyone else
can verify. i.e. no limbs grew back, no blind saw, no lame walked, etc.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
If a dead person rises and walks around, definately.
Definitely what? I will agree that something happened, but claiming this or that god did it is pure guess work unless you observe this or that god actually doing it.
You don’t work in science I take it.
Wrong. Nice try though. I'm an engineer in a semiconductor company. I'll let you now decide if that is 'real' science.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
In science we don’t generate a hypothesis, test it, find out it is true and decide it’s not true because we didn’t see the atoms or cells actually do what was postulated, we just saw the outcome. In science you only need the outcome. If your Mom brought in a cake, you wouldn’t say she didn’t bake it (even though she says she did) because you weren’t in the kitchen. What you demand of God or other's reports of Him, you don’t demand in your own life.
I'm hoping your scientific rigor doesn't end with "it's true because we saw the outcome we wanted". If so, I might have to ask if you actually work in science.
Generally if the data matches your hypothesis, you can certainly be more confident the hypothesis is correct. However, it my not be complete or you may have gotten lucky.
That's what peer review and the need for others to reproduce your results is for. Surely I shouldn't have to explain this.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
Same as someone lame who suddenly walks. Is there any other logical conclusion?
Yes. The logical conclusion is that something happened to cause this 'miracle'. Jumping to your favorite deity is NOT logical given we have no observable evidence of any gods (if we did religion wouldn't be religion, it would be science).
Again, working in science has been a tremendous asset in understanding God. I don’t refuse the obvious. When God is asked and the asked for occurs, the logical conclusion is He had a hand in it. You allow yourself to consider something totally out of the initial step.
See discussion above. It is not logical, simply possible. You sidestepped Santa and other gods in this logic, but somehow your god is 'obvious'. Hmmmm...
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
Agreed! People recover for unknown reasons all the time. Maybe it was Vishnu. If someone prayed to Vishnu right before it happened would you convert on the spot? Be honest.
He doesn’t do that and adherents don’t say he does. You need to limit your answers to the beliefs of those who know about Hinduism. They don’t say that.
I suggest a few simple google searches before claiming knowledge like this. Feel free to take this up with these people:
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/rel ... 205237.cms
Bolding mine.
Lord Dhanvantri is one of the most popular manifestations of Lord Vishnu. Lord Dhanvantri emanated from the milky ocean when the gods and demons churned it in pursuit of the immortal nectar. Lord Dhanvantri is considered the Father of Ayurveda medicine. He is the ultimate healer and the most benevolent Lord who removes all fears and diseases from the face of humanity. Chanting some of the most powerful mantras of Lord Dhanvantri will help alleviate the sufferings of humans and promote happiness and prosperity
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
Now, WHAT you read and believed that spoke against the faith was your choice you admit.
No, please read my replies more carefully.
I admitted that I choose what to
read. My whole argument has been we don't choose our beliefs. I can't believe that's not clear by now.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
Now I was premed so took a great deal of biology etc courses. And I’ve read quite a bit on evolution and also the various arguments against the belief in God. We could discuss this on a different thread. But I’ve found that one needs to think and educate oneself deeper than the evolutionary theory to come to the truth. If one reads only the atheist one, of course one becomes an atheist and one is not innocent of that outcome.
You seem to be conflating multiple things here.
The theory of evolution is a scientific theory on the evolution of life and has zero mention of gods in it. It also has zero mention of how life started.
What are you talking about "the atheist one"? The atheist one what? Theory of Evolution? I've never heard of that. Link to paper please.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
And then there’s the untrained atheist who blindly believes all they read that agrees with their chosen position. They avoid the highly trained scientists who reject the tenets of evolution. This is very common among atheists. I know because when I challenge the science (easy), they just get mad and call me names. Some send a link. But They cannot defend their view. They swallowed the view and don’t or can’t think about the holes.
Wait. Let me get this straight. You don't believe the current science on the theory of evolution? All this talk about science this and science that
and you don't accept the overwhelming mountain of data for it?
If I understand you correctly, since you are in the science field, you better start publishing then so your "correct" view can be peer reviewed. You may have a Nobel in your future!
At this point your argument is with evolutionary biologists not me. I'll side with massive consensus of the biologists until your peer reviewed research
overturns the field. At that point you will definitely win me over. See, I'm not religious, I'm happy to update my beliefs based on solid research,
data, and the consensus of experts in the field. Let me know when your paper goes up. Would love to read it even if I may not understand it all.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
Your position is no one ever believes lies? How do scams work? And you think i on ever rejects truth? Really? How come people disagree?
You really seem to have a hard time determining my actual position. No, that is not my position. My position is that people don't purposely
(in general) choose to believe in what they already believe is a lie.
Example: I believe the statement "Santa is real" is a lie. I don't then turn around and express "Santa is real" thereby
choosing what I already believe to be a lie as my truth.
In other words, people believe what they think is true. It may not actually be true, but as far as they can tell it is.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
Though you and I disagree, I don't think you are just purposely choosing to disagree with me because you choose to believe in lies.
And I don’t think you’re purposely disagreeing with me because you refuse to believe the truth.
So you do understand me then? I'm confused about your confusion
Mae von H wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:07 am
I think everyone believes they are choosing the truth. It may not be the actual truth, but I like to think most people are not simply choosing to believe what they believe are lies just for giggles.
It’s but at all uncommon to hear people say that they just something wasn’t true but believed and acted on it anyway and now regret ignoring their gut feeling. So no, people sometimes suspect they’re believing a lie.
And? I said above "most people" not "all people".
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
If you are trained in science then surely you've heard of a hypothesis? If you saw 'something' (clearly flying pigs are really not working for you) you had never seen before, how do you process it? God did it? Maybe there is a natural explanation? Remember your science training. Does God show up in any science textbooks (reputable ones anyways)?
Science does not pursue known lies. You need to deal with this.
What are you talking about? I ask you a direct question and now you are telling me to "deal with this". Deal with what?
Please answer this simple question I asked above.
How do you deal with something you haven't seen before?