Well, science deserves the same skepticism as theism and atheism, imho.While I appreciate your style of skepticism, mine is different from yours,
You aren't yet in a position to agree or disagree. What's the big rush?There are too many of your premises with which I disagree,
Ok, fair enough. So test the quality of my mind by challenging the proposals I'm articulating and seeing if you can defeat them. You will discover that's not as easy as it might first appear.Here I am suspicious of the quality of your mind.
If I don't have a reasoned argument, it should be easy to defeat. Go for it! I'm hoping you will challenge my remarks, and not content yourself with just characterizing them.You refuse to set a standard for conversation, yet claim to have a reasoned argument.
Where exactly is the reasoning by which you conclude that all of us are ignorant about the ultimate nature of everything?
Please define "everything". What is it's size, shape, coordinates, boundaries etc, that would be a start. If you can not define "everything" in even this most basic manner, upon what basis would you then make big assertions about this "everything" which you can not define?
Yes, of course. There are many things we are not ignorant of. However this is a religion thread, and religion concerns itself with questions of "infinite scale" that is, questions about the ultimate nature of all reality. As example, does reality spring from some form of intelligence?Where are your evaluations of ignorance, which seems to me to be a relative term?
You are comparing our intelligence to the other life forms around us, and it's true beyond doubt that we are more intelligent than donkeys.
I am comparing our intelligence to the scale of the questions that religion addresses, and it's clear to me that hairless apes that were only recently living in caves, apes with thousands of nuclear missiles aimed down their own throats (a situation we rarely find worthy of comment), a single species on one little planet in one of billions of galaxies, are quite unlikely to understand the ultimate nature of everything. Thus, I reason that we are ignorant, in regards to such questions.
This is the classic science arrogance at work. Please show us the proof that fundamental physics and other natural laws apply to EVERYTHING in all of reality, the arena you wish to address, but can not define in even the most basic manner.Because you are ignorant of fundamental physics, does that mean that everyone else is equally ignorant?
Yes, this lack of interest in the fact of our ignorance (in regards to this set of questions) is very common. It's a very understandable form of bias built in to human beings which has to be overcome if one wishes to squarely face the reality of our situation and deal with that reality constructively.I've asked you for a conversational standard. You reject science and logic, and seem not to understand the relevance of mathematics. The only thing that you propose as a standard is ignorance. I'm not interested in ignorance.
I know this is supposed to be a clever remark, but if you did actually live inside a wildlife hospital as I do (really) then you would see that you are actually on to something with your comment. A subject for another day perhaps...If I wanted to communicate by such a standard I would buy a gerbil and argue with it.
You clearly have not known me long enough to know what I am, and are quite eagerly jumping to conclusions based on very little evidence, the same mistake you appear poised to make in regards to "everything".You are clearly a religionist, pretending to be a philosopher.
You will soon see that your core assumptions are built upon a foundation of faith just as the religionists are, and that the religionists at least are clear minded and honest enough to know they are using faith.I think that religion is important to people who cannot think analytically for themselves, who have no problem with cognitive dissonance, or who cannot understand science.
Please show us the evidence of my religion.I can only hope that you've chosen your religion wisely, after having considered the thousands of conflicting alternatives. The choice of religion is important, because it will determine the outcome of all life decisions that you imagine to actually be choices.
You and I should not exchange information again.
Run and hide if you wish, I don't object, it's your reading/writing experience to manage.
Please provide evidence of my dishonesty, or admit that yet again you are jumping to huge conclusions based on little to no evidence, and then proclaiming yourself loyal to reason.I have made it clear that I have a philosophical agenda, whereas you have been dishonest about yours.
Run and hide little boy, run and hide. That's probably best if it will embarrass you to not be able to keep up with my inferior abilities.Therefore I do not trust you, and this will be my last reply to you.
Yes, I voted for Obama. And George Bush, both of them. What this has to do with anything is a mystery to me.Clearly you are a liberal progressive, an Obama voter. I am so dreadfully tired of such people, having found my fill of them on Fox News.
Good luck hiding from challenges you don't know how to meet, and calling that philosophy.Moreover, when I request standards, you demand evidence. I've argued with guys like you before. To your credit, you had me going for way too long. Goodbye. Good luck on your quest for irreconcilable cognitive dissonance.