Finding More Effective Ways For Atheists And Believers To Communicate

guy incognito

Well-Known Member
Quantum fluctuations. Particles and anti-particles pop into and out of existence all the time everywhere. Negative energy in the force of gravity counters the positive mass of the universe. It's a zero sum.

I'm not 100% convinced that's true but it makes a lot more sense than saying god musta done it.
 

Encomium

Active Member
The precise mechanism for gravity? I don't know. I know it exists and is measurable though. I do not attribute it's effects to anything supernatural though. There is a natural explanation, I just don't fully understand it yet.

Stars work by fusing lighter elements into heavier elements under intense gravity. We haven't been to a star, but we can still measure it and understand what process is going on.

Yes we can measure and detect black holes, and we do.

Why is space a vacuum? Because there is very little mass in open space? I'm not sure I get the question.

The universe came to exist because of the big bang.
Gravity is known to be a force that exists between 2 objects with mass and is directly related to the distance between those 2 objects. We can measure the force, we are positive of it's existence but have we found the particle responsible for it (graviton)?

While there may be "very little mass" in open space the theory of the big bang (along with a couple of other theories like it) require a certain amount of mass in open space and gives rise to the term "dark matter" which is invisible and undetectable at our current technology level...
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
How does gravity work. How does space work. How do stars work. How do black holes work.

Have we ever been to a star? Have we ever seen a black hole? What causes gravity. Why is space a vacuum?

There are tons of questions out there that cannot be adequately explained by science. The kicker is how the universe came to be. Please explain that one to me.
Confusing currently unexplained with unexplainable
Because we do not currently have an adequate explanation for a phenomenon does not mean that it is forever unexplainable, or that it therefore defies the laws of nature or requires a paranormal explanation.
 

Jeffdt1966

Active Member
these religion post are so funny ... I dont even like the label athiest ... I just look at organized religion as herd control ... so your either a sheep or your not ... yes ..it can really be broken down that simple ..... sorry If I offend anyone but shit ... mankind has really progressed enough to just let these fairytales go .... they have caused nothing but trouble , hate between zelots , more wars than I can count ... common we should be smarter than this by now.....
 

Nitegazer

Well-Known Member
Dude you are certifiable.

We know exactly how stars, age of rocks, and computers work. You don't need any faith at all to believe these things, you can go learn exactly how they work. You claim that is not your point, but it absolutely is the point you highlighted. You are misusing the term faith. Trusting something that has been proved a million times over (like a computer - even if you are too lazy and/or stupid to understand how it works) and produces consistent results is NOT the same as having BLIND FAITH in something.
Please understand that if you ask someone who has been indoctrinated in a religion, they will say that they 'learned all about it' from experts and a trustworthy system. When you say 'we know exactly' how things work, you actually mean someone you trust knows exactly how it works, and you believe them; you have not proven or experienced these things for yourself. I would go so far to say that most people do not know how a computer works-- sure we can generalize, but do we know the essentials of binary logic, or silicone sub-straights? I challenge you to describe to me how the 'real time clock' in a computer functions without looking it up and parroting what someone else has written.

You believe what the institution of science has told you because you personally find it credible, and others you respect believe it. You have only personally experienced a tiny fraction of what you accept as fact, and so have I-- that requires faith for each of us, faith in the institution of science. That's not a bad thing, nor a slam on science. That we must accept as truth many things that we have not ourselves experienced is just a natural outgrowth of the number of things we want to understand and integrate into our lives.

Others express more faith in institutions other than science. Religious institutions have an impressive pedigree: they helped organize the society we now live in, at the very least. I am not saying that I favor one institution or the other. I am saying that the way each institution functions, perpetuating their own set of truths through faith and trust in them, is a commonality. I personally believe that this commonality is what must be recognized before the OP's desire to bridge the two can occur.
 

Luger187

Well-Known Member
Please understand that if you ask someone who has been indoctrinated in a religion, they will say that they 'learned all about it' from experts and a trustworthy system. When you say 'we know exactly' how things work, you actually mean someone you trust knows exactly how it works, and you believe them; you have not proven or experienced these things for yourself. I would go so far to say that most people do not know how a computer works-- sure we can generalize, but do we know the essentials of binary logic, or silicone sub-straights? I challenge you to describe to me how the 'real time clock' in a computer functions without looking it up and parroting what someone else has written.

You believe what the institution of science has told you because you personally find it credible, and others you respect believe it. You have only personally experienced a tiny fraction of what you accept as fact, and so have I-- that requires faith for each of us, faith in the institution of science. That's not a bad thing, nor a slam on science. That we must accept as truth many things that we have not ourselves experienced is just a natural outgrowth of the number of things we want to understand and integrate into our lives.

Others express more faith in institutions other than science. Religious institutions have an impressive pedigree: they helped organize the society we now live in, at the very least. I am not saying that I favor one institution or the other. I am saying that the way each institution functions, perpetuating their own set of truths through faith and trust in them, is a commonality. I personally believe that this commonality is what must be recognized before the OP's desire to bridge the two can occur.
ive made counters in electronics classes. all you need is some IC chips, a bread board and some wires. also whatever other diodes/resistors and things you need for the circuit. its just a bunch of what they call gates. each chip has certain kinds of gates in all different combinations. from what i remember there are and, or, nand, and nor gates. theres others too. those gates, wired in different combinations, can and do create timers along with TONS of other things.
 

Nitegazer

Well-Known Member
I believe in computers that clocks are made from crystal oscillators inside those ic chips. It's one thing to be able to chain together ready made parts, it's another to truly understand each component of the system.
 

Los Muertos

Active Member
So I'd like to start this thread to talk about the reasons why most atheists think believers are wrong and why most beleivers think atheists are wrong and how we can talk about these things without getting offended or feel like we're being attacked.

If you post in this thread, you subject your beliefs to criticism. Any reply or question someone else posts cannot be considered an attack on your beliefs.


OK, so why do I think believers are wrong?

-I think most of them haven't learned enough about the processes of the natural world so they just assume the supreme being of their faith is responsible for them

-I think most of them feel like science lies to them because it contradicts what their faith tells them is true. If they are already conditioned to believe that whatever their faith tells them is true no matter what, then anything that goes against that couldn't also be true

-I think most of them can't understand how life could have any meaning or purpose without believing in God

-I think most of them are afraid of death, and the thought of nonexistence

-I think the detailed processes science has the explanations for are too advanced for the average person to understand, so when they don't understand it, it's easier for them to dismiss it. The herd mentality plays a role in this as well

-I think deep down, believers feel embarrassed to hold certain beliefs because they know the only way they can rationalize them is by faith

-I think believers think atheists feel like they know everything, they have all the answers, but in reality, atheists are the only ones saying "we don't know". It offends believers because atheists know that nobody could possibly know, and we know they are just pretending to know, no matter how much they think they understand their specific god or how much they think they feel it
That about sums it up for me. The only thing I'd add is the willingness that (most) religious people have to modify or modernize their beliefs to suit their lifestyle or when facts contradict them. Getting harder to debunk evolution..just work it in somewhere and give God credit. Nobody'll notice. :wink:
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
I believe in computers that clocks are made from crystal oscillators inside those ic chips. It's one thing to be able to chain together ready made parts, it's another to truly understand each component of the system.
Moving the goalpost

Do you understand due diligence? Do you understand peer review? Do you understand that we have consistent standards for accepting claims? Do you see how having an accepted and consistent standard for accepting claims is easier than investigating each and every claim personally?

Having faith in science, since you insist on framing it in those terms, is simply trusting that a claim has been put through a rigorous and unrelenting system of doubt (the scientific method) before being accepted. The standard we currently have is that all attempts to make this claim false must be exhausted before accepting it. It is then put through peer review, where others replicate and confirm that this claim can not be falsified by any known means. Once a claim has thoroughly survived falsification attempts by many independent experts and researchers, it is then generally accepted by the scientific community as a true claim, with the condition that if new evidence emerges, the claim must again go through falsification.

Essentially the goal of science is to prove itself right by failing to prove itself wrong.

We set up this standard for claims so that it is not necessary to personally confirm each and every one. This pertains to the claim that the speed of light is 186,282 mps, or the claim that the configuration of materials in my modem will transmit data. It is for the very reason that religion can't hold up to these standards when making claims that skeptics reject them. You are basically saying that believing a claim that fails these standards, and believing a claim that succeeds these standards, requires the same type of 'faith'. You don't see the difference between trusting an agreed upon process and accepting faith as a reason to hold a conclusion?
 

mindphuk

Well-Known Member
I do not believe it is an equivalence fallacy. The definition of faith that I am working from is "belief that is not based on proof." There are very few things in our lives for which we have actually experienced proof-- we usually take for facts what others tell us (the constitution of stars, age of rocks, and workings of a computer). Since we have not worked out or experienced the proofs ourselves, we must accept these facts 'on faith.'
That you don't think you are equivocating on the word is irrelevant to whether or not you really are.

Nothing is actually ever proved, we all deal with levels of confidence. Some things we understand very well and we can express a high level of confidence, such as the sun will again appear to rise as the earth orbits our star. Some things we have less certainty but we don't pretend we need absolute proof/certainty in order to function in the day to day world.
Then we have things that we have no real empirical evidence such as the existence of an afterlife or the existence of fairies and unicorns or a spirit world. There is a continuum in between the two extremes. You would like to say it is the processes of the natural ordered physical world requires the same 'faith' that it does to accept elves or ghosts or gods when you know intuitively that there is a huge gap between them. In fact, normal people do not use the word faith for those everyday, high confidence level beliefs.

Quit lying to yourself and everyone else. If you really believe that the two versions of faith are the same, then you have a pretty piss poor evidence filter and you must believe in all sorts of weird shit.

[video=youtube;5wV_REEdvxo]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5wV_REEdvxo[/video]
 

Luger187

Well-Known Member
i was watching videos from the channel of the guy that made the video mindphuck posted and thought this was worth posting here

[video=youtube;SlaCq3dKvvI]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SlaCq3dKvvI[/video]
 

woodsusa

Well-Known Member
Just remember, Atheism is also based on faith. Faith that God does not exist. There is no proof that such is true or not true.
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
Just remember, Atheism is also based on faith. Faith that God does not exist. There is no proof that such is true or not true.
Perhaps one of the ways we could improve communications to actually read and consider what each other are saying. You apparently did not read the pages of discussion on faith that preceded your comment, which pointed out the error of this type of reasoning.

As for having proof that God does not exist, since when do we require proof for the absence of something? There is no proof that smurfs do not live in the forest, does it require any element of faith if I choose not to put my belief in smurfs?
 

Luger187

Well-Known Member
Just remember, Atheism is also based on faith. Faith that God does not exist. There is no proof that such is true or not true.
like heisenburg said, why would we have to prove god doesnt exist? shouldnt the ones providing the evidence be the people making the claim that he does exist? why dont you go ahead and tell me what the hell would prove god doesnt exist... would god himself have to come down and tell you he doesnt exist for you to believe it?

i have no faith im my beliefs that there is no god. ive yet to be shown anything that tells me he exists
 

undertheice

Well-Known Member
As for having proof that God does not exist, since when do we require proof for the absence of something?
over and over again you and others have waved this flag in the face of believers, seemingly secure in your false logic. what you discount, through blindness or perhaps just overweening pride, are the volumes of what many consider to be historical documentation. though twisted by centuries of interpretation, the various scriptures of mankind's religions provide accounts of the miraculous and the divine and you merely disregard them without any proof that they are false. there is no test you can put these claims to and no way of verifying or disproving them, so you merely call them lies. just because the works of man cannot reproduce those of the gods, you choose to ignore what the vast majority of humanity sees as basic truth. this is what requires proof or, lacking that evidence, one must be forced to conclude your opinions are based on nothing but faith in your own unsubstantiated refutation.
 

guy incognito

Well-Known Member
over and over again you and others have waved this flag in the face of believers, seemingly secure in your false logic. what you discount, through blindness or perhaps just overweening pride, are the volumes of what many consider to be historical documentation. though twisted by centuries of interpretation, the various scriptures of mankind's religions provide accounts of the miraculous and the divine and you merely disregard them without any proof that they are false. there is no test you can put these claims to and no way of verifying or disproving them, so you merely call them lies. just because the works of man cannot reproduce those of the gods, you choose to ignore what the vast majority of humanity sees as basic truth. this is what requires proof or, lacking that evidence, one must be forced to conclude your opinions are based on nothing but faith in your own unsubstantiated refutation.
So? If enough people step up and say my television manual is the word of god, does that make it true? Talk about false logic; just because you have a large volume of baseless opinions doesn't mean they aren't baseless, it just means you have a lot of them.

The default position that is assumed is that they are in fact false. If they are true there will be other supporting evidence which will all point in the same direction. That is not the case though.

"there is no test you can put these claims to and no way of verifying or disproving them"

Exactly.

 

ziggittyzag420

Active Member
none of us are going to know whats "beyond death" until we cross that bridge,all i have to say is i believe in God,i believe he's a stoner,on a cloud,in the middle of the universe,with a giant bong,and when God gets blazed he fucks with us on Earth lol im a lil blazed too:mrgreen:its silly to argue over religons,after all,we're all humans,with our own personal beliefs.i find it pretty ignorant when people dismiss other peoples beliefs when they're beliefs arent that convincing themselves...just my 2 centsbongsmilie
 

undertheice

Well-Known Member
Then it isn't science.

See the difference?
this is precisely what i've been trying to get through your head, the inability of science to measure certain phenomena. science, at least in its present state, is not the be all and end all of the quest for knowledge. just as twelfth century man was incapable of determining atomic structures and measuring the distances of the far universe, so too does twenty-first century man's science have its limitations. we may theorize from what we do know and extrapolate from the observable, but these methods do not justify the wholesale discounting of the supposed documentation.

your original post is filled with the stereotypical characterizations of religious ignorance and is a fine display of your own bias, but it entirely ignores the limitations that are inherent in the scientific method. if we are to remain objective and true to the tenets of scientific inquiry, those limitations must be acknowledged. this is something you continually refuse to do, imposing your own belief in science's eventual infallibility on realms it is incapable of fathoming. just as the creationist is a fool for denying those elements of evolution of which we are certain, so too does the scientist err in using his paltry means to determine the validity of the unmeasurable. falling back on what little we do know is a poor excuse for denying that which we don't in such an off-hand manner.
 

guy incognito

Well-Known Member
this is precisely what i've been trying to get through your head, the inability of science to measure certain phenomena. science, at least in its present state, is not the be all and end all of the quest for knowledge. just as twelfth century man was incapable of determining atomic structures and measuring the distances of the far universe, so too does twenty-first century man's science have its limitations. we may theorize from what we do know and extrapolate from the observable, but these methods do not justify the wholesale discounting of the supposed documentation.

your original post is filled with the stereotypical characterizations of religious ignorance and is a fine display of your own bias, but it entirely ignores the limitations that are inherent in the scientific method. if we are to remain objective and true to the tenets of scientific inquiry, those limitations must be acknowledged. this is something you continually refuse to do, imposing your own belief in science's eventual infallibility on realms it is incapable of fathoming. just as the creationist is a fool for denying those elements of evolution of which we are certain, so too does the scientist err in using his paltry means to determine the validity of the unmeasurable. falling back on what little we do know is a poor excuse for denying that which we don't in such an off-hand manner.
The difference is that the bullshit you are spouting is untestable in principle. It's not limited knowledge or resources stopping us, it is untestable period. Measuring atomic and cosmic distances has never been untestable in principle.
 
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