themusicteacher
Muse
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2009
- Messages
- 708
I will preface this by saying that I've read most of this guys blog and he makes many, many good points. He says he is all about rationality, scientific thinking and skepticism and there is evidence all over his blog that points to just that. I fact, I've had a few e-mail conversations with him and he is as candid in those as he is in his blog. He is very well-read and only talks about things he has studied or in areas of obvious breaches of logic and pseudoscience.
I'm going to post a link and I want you to read the entire entry before commenting on the last part of the quote at the end which reads:
I'm just not real sure what he's getting at here. He makes some very good points above:
It seems that he's making some sort of leap here but I will say that if you search around his blog he quite eloquently lays out why science and religion need not be in conflict and that they are, in fact, not in conflict. He does come out as religious but is not a Bible literalist.
Thoughts?
I'm going to post a link and I want you to read the entire entry before commenting on the last part of the quote at the end which reads:
* If you think God is a myth, you're an atheist.
* If you think God might exist, but that by twisting the evidence, getting key pieces excluded, making specious arguments and manipulating public opinion, you can win others to atheism, you're an unethical sleazeball, but you're not a magician.
* But if you think that by twisting the evidence, getting key arguments excluded and making specious arguments, you can make God not exist, you believe in magic.
I'm just not real sure what he's getting at here. He makes some very good points above:
* If you think OJ was innocent, you're just gullible, or grossly uninformed.
* If you think he was guilty but that by twisting the evidence, getting key pieces excluded, making specious arguments and manipulating the jury, you can get him off, you're an unethical sleazeball, but you're not a magician.
* But if you think that by twisting the evidence, getting key pieces excluded and making specious arguments, you can make him innocent, you believe in magic.
The rhetoric of the legal system provides abundant evidence that there are lawyers and clients in the first group, many in the second group, and a huge number in the third group. And they're not alone. Evidence of this sort of magical thinking is all around us.
* If you think global warming or energy shortages are myths, you're just gullible, or grossly uninformed.
* If you think global warming or energy shortages are real, but that by twisting the evidence, getting key pieces excluded, making specious arguments and manipulating public opinion, you can stonewall enough for the problem not to impact your life, you're an unethical sleazeball, but you're not a magician.
* But if you think that by twisting the evidence, getting key pieces excluded and making specious arguments, you can make global warming or energy shortages go away, you believe in magic.
It seems that he's making some sort of leap here but I will say that if you search around his blog he quite eloquently lays out why science and religion need not be in conflict and that they are, in fact, not in conflict. He does come out as religious but is not a Bible literalist.
Thoughts?