PixyMisa
Persnickety Insect
Yes.
P.S. Juluis?
P.S. Juluis?
Absolute rubbish. This is not how things are. This is a strawman of evolution. Luck (or, more accurately, randomness), does have a part to play in evolution: genetic mutation, but it's only a small part. The overwhelming drive behind evolution is natural selection, and there's nothing random about that at all. For example, gazelles have long, powerful legs for fast running. This is not chance; in previous generations, gazelles with short legs all ended up in lions' stomachs, and hence did not procreate. Their short-leg genes dies with them, whereas gazelles with long-legged genes lived to procreate another day.Akots said:We can look at the idea of a hosue assembling itself out of sheer luck, and we can easily say "Well, that's ridiculous. it's not the way things are." And yet, we look at evolution, and of course it's how things are.
PixyMisa said:Yes.
P.S. Juluis?
Yup. All sense, all the time, that's what you get from meneutrino_cannon said:Oh I get it now, you're in agrement with sensibility (no sarcasm). I get it![]()
Uh, no. Check your sig.No, not Juluis, nor am I Julius, which I assume is the more common spelling, If that's what your wondering (PM to specify?).
PixyMisa said:But that particular abuse of the Second Law has irked me since high school.Uh, no. Check your sig.
Joshua Korosi said:Though I'm certainly not Christian, the Book of Jonah happens to be one of my favorite books of the Bible. The way the Gentiles are described, and the way God deals with Jonah and Nineveh are so completely opposite of what the rest of the Old Testament says, it should be clear to even the casual reader that the Book of Jonah simply doesn't belong in the Bible - and may even be satire.
neutrino_cannon said:
Doh! Hey, we haven't much evidence for his existance either then do we? But I doubt Gould ever said that.
UnrepentantSinner said:
That reminds me to do the "There's more evidence Jesus lived than Julius Caesar (or George Washington or Napoleon or other famous historical person)" bad apologetic later. Thanks!
If Gould did say that, he's probably making a play on the Caesar claim while still being correct in his assertion.![]()
PixyMisa said:Well, no. Not if you know anything at all about evolution or thermodynamics. (Hint: the second law of thermodynamics is a law of physics, not a metaphor you can apply wherever and however you choose.)Why on Earth would it be?Well, consider yourself blasted.
Akots said:Evolution does not account for how life first came into being, out of completely inorganic material. We can look at the idea of an organism assembling itself out of inorganic material, and we can easily say "Well, that's ridiculous. It's not the way things are." And yet, we look at life, which is nessecarily made up of living cells, made of [physical matter, just like any other inorganic material.
Well, that's what the second law is - albeit rather more strictly defined. If you were not leading there, I apologise for my "blast" (not that it was much of a blast); I've seen many a creationist wander down the same road, and my trigger-finger got itchyAkots said:Didn't realize the error of my ways, PixyMisa. I was using the house as a very crude metaphor for how things generally procede from a state of activity or order towards a state of neutral evenness, or lack of discernable order. I didn't realize i was crossing thermodynamic territory... in fact, i never brought the subject up at all. My example was only supposed to convey progression of order towards chaos.
Well, yes, life is complicated. But order is hardly the exception. The Universe is a very very orderly place compared to how it will be in a googol years or so. It's not just life - look at a crystal some time, even a snowflake. There's beautiful, lovely, crunchy order all around you.I certainly understand that lifeforms interact and encourage or discourage properties amongst each other, and I apologize for underestimating the importance of that factor. However, it cannot be denied that life is extremely.... extremely sophisticated, in a world where order is the exception to the rule.
The Theory of Evolution does not, no. This particular event is referred to as abiogenesis, and is a separate area of research.Evolution does not account for how life first came into being, out of completely inorganic material.
Indeed it is.We can look at the idea of an organism assembling itself out of inorganic material, and we can easily say "Well, that's ridiculous. It's not the way things are." And yet, we look at life, which is nessecarily made up of living cells, made of [physical matter, just like any other inorganic material.
And of course it's how things are.
Well, yes, we do. We die, and we get buried in the ground, and we rot.EDIT:
On the subject of mountains rising up to replace hills, well, after a million years, if there are hills, they are likely not the same geological formations; new hills form, looking just the same, and for the same reasons the other hills formed. If Mountains rise up, that is not really the introduction of chaos; simply a natural change in the underlying tectonic plates. Mountains are no more structured or unnatural than hills; they simply exist under different conditions. And even the way those underlying conditions change is not completely random; tectonic plates and molten rock obey their own laws of entropy.
And as for my opinion that evolution is evidence of god, well... we know things procede from order to chaos. And yet, we do not.
Uh, why not?We are made of physical matter, and yet building a complete homunculous out of identical matter would not render a new organism.
Akots said:Evolution does not account for how life first came into being, out of completely inorganic material. We can look at the idea of an organism assembling itself out of inorganic material, and we can easily say "Well, that's ridiculous. It's not the way things are." And yet, we look at life, which is nessecarily made up of living cells, made of [physical matter, just like any other inorganic material.
Ipecac said:
This completely underestimates the effect of randomness over billions of years, with thousands (millions?) of different chemicals interacting on earth in various natural processes. If you don't give all that time and all the interactions any consideration, sure life seems unlikely.
Originally posted by PixyMisa
Well, yes, we do. We die, and we get buried in the ground, and we rot.[/B]
Originally posted by PixyMisa
Uh, why not?
Whodini said:The 'man can't come from a bannana' one is interesting..
I think the strongest argument they have is (even though the burden of proof seems to be one them) that no one can pove that god(s) doesn't exist.
It is true that there are some logical problems with demanding that, but still, that is their strongest argument.
(considering some negatives can be proved. There are no rats in my shoe, etc)
Agammamon said:
This argument is at the core of why I am an atheist. Not being able to disprove God's existance (for a given value of God) is not de facto proof of his existence.
I can never prove that there is not a man standing behind me with a gun to my head. If I turn around he mey be able to move quicker than me and evade detection. If I ask someone else to look they could be lying. But I don't waste a whole lot of time worrying about it either (also consider, of all the things that could be behind me, how much more likely is it that a man with a gun is behind me than say Selma Hayek getting ready to give me a massage?).
But life has the unfortunate habit of dying. It struts and frets its hour upon the stage, then croaks.Akots said:Can we define "decomposition" as a passing from order and structure into a state fo chaos and neutral evenness? I did say this was the natural way of things... and that the existance of life in the first place is the exception to the rule.
A corpse is by definition not in "absolute, perfect" state. It's dead. There's an important distinction there.Well, ok... in your professional opinion, could a corpse in an absolute, perfect state health spring back to life?
What evidence is there of perfect replicas of living things being created but not being alive?An obviously loaded question, yes; there is more evidence for this test failing then there is for it suceedingit
What else can we be?but it assumes completely perfect conditions. The real question would be, "Are we the sum of our parts and systems?"
Well, crystals are a favourite of mine. I think I mentioned them beforeEDIT:
Sinner, i just read your statement about 2LOT, and i do agree. I never mentioned them, except for mysomewhat imappropriate house example.
I wsa certainly hard pressed to come up with anothre example of an ordered physical system that generaly does not occur naturally, but obviously exists.
Why does this require an unsupported belief in a paranormal entity? If there is an organisation that you think is worthy of your support, why not simply give it your support?Akots said:God, as an entity, however, purportes to need no scientific proof; it requires a decision based on personal judgment, with an analasys of what a specific fait hor religion has done, and how it behaves towards it's followers. Examine a faith or religion, and if you judge it to be beneficial, you commit your time and energy towards supporting it.
Ah, no. Atheists do not direct anger at God. That would be just a touch pointless.What disturbs me is the anger and frustration many athiests seem to express.. at a God they do not believe in. Arguments that start with "Why would God do this if..." baffle me.
PixyMisa said:But life has the unfortunate habit of dying. It struts and frets its hour upon the stage, then croaks.
A corpse is by definition not in "absolute, perfect" state. It's dead. There's an important distinction there.
Life is a process. (Not being mystical here. Breathing, blood circulation, cell division, all that sfutff.) Stop the process and you have a corpse. Get the process running again, and you have life. Leave it too long, and you have brain damage and other bad things.What evidence is there of perfect replicas of living things being created but not being alive?
What else can we be?Well, crystals are a favourite of mine. I think I mentioned them before![]()
Akots said:First, randomness is irellevant... now I can't ignore it?
PixyMisa said:Why does this require an unsupported belief in a paranormal entity? If there is an organisation that you think is worthy of your support, why not simply give it your support?
Ah, no. Atheists do not direct anger at God. That would be just a touch pointless.
Atheists do sometimes get angry when believers claim that their beliefs are founded in something other than personal faith. Or when someone suggests that [sacred book] has a special standing above all other sacred books.