Most have never agreed to be god's lovers, nor was god ever noticeably around, except to those who don't want evidence of his existence but believe he exists, because they have been taught to by their parents or gurus, who in turn have been taught by their parents etc.. Why shouldn't he expect his heart to be broken? Why does this god not want the intelligent beings he created understand things about the universe they're a part of and that this god also created?groktruth wrote: Did you get what I said about what the devil is up to? Why would guys like Faust sell their souls to the devil, if something "useful" (to a foolish purpose) weren't reliably offered as a reward? "Give the devil his due." goes the proverb. The confusion is limited to purpose and priority. Treasure on earth, not heaven. Success on worldly objectives, to the total neglect of what God thinks or feels about it. Can you get a lover to more horribly betray the beloved, then by getting them to ignore the feelings of the beloved? Can you break God's heart any more terribly, then by getting "His" scientists to work on nontheistic "technology" instead of His plan to solve problems?
How do you know that that's what the starving children hope I "get it"? Please show how prayer is more effective than sending them food, or materials to plant their own food, or, if their land has been rendered infertile by corporate monoculture from rich cuntries, teach them how to engage in non-agricultural economic activity and send them materials to do so.groktruth wrote: Of course, I am, with all the faith that, so I suspect I hear, has been granted to me. But you and everyone else has a similar "vocation," and most of the strife and starvation in the world is due to the failure of most people (and me, for much of my life) to "pray" (His meaning, not the Christian lie) as we were supposed to. So, I get local answers, here and there. The only way I can get the power to pray effectively for the problems that were originally assigned to you, for example, is for God to forsake you utterly, and give me your assignment. So far, both I and the starving children you care about hope you'll "get it" in time.
All of the events you've listed so far would have been likely to happen without prayer. Have you ever heard of any miraculous curse, that should've been totally impossible, like the re-growing of a severed limb?groktruth wrote: "Pray without ceasing" is a command everyone refers to when we consider the observation that we all are in sin. Haven't gotten even close. No. all of my answered experimental prayers were limited enough in time that there was a meaningful coincidence to amaze me.
On the contrary. Einstein saw the results of experiments that didn't make sense in the classical Newtonian world with the ether as absolute frame of reference. From this evidence he came up with first the special theory of relativity which explained the strange experimental results, and then general relativity, which resulted from the equivalence of acceleration of gravity. Some predictions of the latter theory were then confirmed by the gravitational lensing effect of the sun that you later mention.groktruth wrote: Like Einstein saw no evidence for relativity and forgot the theory. Or, oh yes, he saw an atomic bomb blast, and said, "Now I see it! E=MC**2!" C'mon blame, you know how it works!
Many old-earth creationists do look for this evidence, and have so far found none.groktruth wrote: You imagine something as weird as, "Oh my God, Newton was wrong!" and predict where stars will be in an eclipse. That Condors will fly at Palisades National Park. and then you see it, and believe. Darwin broke the rules for scientific theory, by invoking an assumption that was new to science, and unprovable, while neglecting what he and others were seeing all the time. If he (and modern evolutionists) were honest scientists, they would predict and look for evidence that God artificially selected the existing species to create them.
There are many serious theistic "evolutionists" who love god, and many others who don't believe in god, but don't hate him, since they don't believe he exists.groktruth wrote:But they hate God, and science, and you, and want only to be left alone with their head in the sand.(Not that creationists are any improvement. Talk about a narrow gate! Don't agree with me, if you are hoping for more than one friend!)
There are probably still many undiscovered species. But among the species known so far, there is no evidence. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.groktruth wrote:You've seen all the evidence? Your examination of evidence has been so thorough that you can claim, against all philosophical counsel, that there is none that reflects God intervention, in existence, in the whole world and all of history? I bow before you!
Natural selection is actually a pretty simple process that has been observed time and time again: As organisms multiply, some errors occur in the DNA copying process. Those organisms whose mutations is disadvantageous for them in their environment tend to leave fewer offspring than those whose mutations are advantageous.groktruth wrote:I don't work for the devil, so I analyze adaptation, time patterns, and the "selection" process as distinct problems. Yep, adaptation is a useful concept for understanding why organisms are shaped the way there are. yep, there's been a while since the "beginning." But natural selection? How would you ever know? The mathematicians have told us that it is impossible to know. The null hypothesis is never actually proven. Can't actually be true. But people can choose stupidity.
No it ain't.groktruth wrote:Free will is out there.
http://skepticwiki.org/index.php/Free_will
Incompatibilists Who Don't Believe In Free Will
The incompatibilist who rejects free will argues something as follows:
Let us neglect quantum effects for the moment, and take the universe to be deterministic. Suppose that I am then offered a choice, such as whether to eat asparagus. Then, the universe being deterministic, I am as fated to say "yes" (or, as it might be, "no") as certainly as a stone is destined to fall when I drop it: it is simply a result of the state of the universe (which includes my brain) and the laws of nature at the point when I am asked if I want asparagus, or at which the stone is dropped.
I may, to be sure, have the illusion of making a choice; and perhaps the stone believes that it's passionately in love with the ground and wants to be near it. The fact is that I have never made a choice any more than the stone chooses its trajectory.
[edit] Incompatibilists Who Believe In Free Will
Alternatively, we might accept the validity of the chain of reasoning in the argument above, take free will to exist, and so conclude that one or more of the premises of the argument is false. For example, we might reason as follows:
Determinism is incompatible with free will.
I know darn well I have free will.
Therefore, the Universe is not deterministic.
[edit] Randomness As Free Will
The syllogism given above may seem to have a lot going for it, not least the fact that the randomness apparently implicit in Quantum Mechanics has given scientific credence to the idea that the universe is not entirely deterministic. Whether such non-determinism could affect the workings of your brain is, so far as we know, an open question.
This sort of argument accounting for free will has a long pedigree: amongst the ancient Greek philosophers, the Epicureans supposed that the material universe was not entirely deterministic, but that it had, almost literally "wiggle room", which could account for free will.
It is not clear that this resolves the problem. The man who doubts free will might reply to such arguments as follows:
Now you attempt to console me with talk of quantum mechanics, and tell me that the universe is not deterministic after all. This is no use to me, for what is not deterministic is random. Do you suppose it is "free will" that a photon might dance this way or that way in my brain? Not at all! That is simply having my destiny determined by something which, being random, is out of my control. So, let the laws of nature be deterministic or random, you have not explained how free will is possible.
[edit] An Immaterial Soul As A Source Of Free Will
One response to incompatibilist arguments is to postulate an invisible intangible thing, sometimes called the "soul" but for which we will prefer the more neutral term "mind", and which has the faculty of free will.
This does not, in fact, solve the problem. The question of free will has traditionally been posed in terms of a material universe with a material brain doing your thinking; but this is not intrinsic to the problem.
If the materialist faces the problem that the future state of his brain is determined by the present state of his brain, the sense data received by his brain, and possibly some random factors not determined by the state of his brain --- then the immaterialist faces exactly the same problem, only substituting the word "mind" for the word "brain" throughout. The invisible, intangible world, just like the material one, is either deterministic in its responses to stimuli, or partly random. Either a particular set of stimuli perceived by the same frame of mind will always have the same set of results, or there is a spread of different possible results determined by something other than the frame of mind you're in.
The misconception that the immaterialist has an easier time than the materialist in accounting for free will is sometimes used as an argument in favor of immaterialism. It is, as we have shown, a mistake, and a common one: that of supposing that a difficult question can be solved by postulating the existence of an invisible man having the property of solving the problem.
[edit] Compatibilists Who Believe In Free Will
The argument may be presented as follows:
When Incompatabilists say that they have no free will, what they mean, in part, is that the state of their brain, or their mind, determines their choices. But this determination is exactly what I mean by the phrase "free will".
When someone demands that in order for his will to be free, it must be free of his brain, his mind, or whatever he imagines instantiates his will, what he is asking is that his will should be so free that it's free of his will. He is chasing after a chimera.
What evidence do you have that he used "evolutionist" principles when he had to make decisions about eliminating jews?groktruth wrote: Hitler seemed very confused. Maybe he was a creationist at 8, 10, and 12 every day, and an evolutionist whenever he had to make decisions about eliminating Jews. I have no hope that he was ever consistent.
No, I don't think he exists.groktruth wrote:You think the devil is stupid?
No. I never claimed all technology is always used for good. In fact, most technologies can be used for ethical as well as unethical purposes.groktruth wrote:He is smarter than you. and well able to combine truth and deception. Have you never seen something "work" until it cornered and destroyed you?
No thanks. I tried getting into Lord of the Rings but found it exceedingly boring after a few dozen pages or so.groktruth wrote:Read Tolkien.
What do you mean by "richer"?groktruth wrote:And think about what technology has done to make human life richer. Not less miserable. Richer. "It's only the good times you remember."
Done: http://www.apollowebworks.com/atheism/theomatics.htmlgroktruth wrote:theomatics. Look it up.
On the page http://www.theomatics.com/theomatics/proof.html, the theomatics author anticipates that some skeptical heathens will be critical of his work, so he "puts them to bed" immediately. He says, "The phenomenon only works in the Bible and nowhere else. No other work of literature ever written, never has, and probably never will, be able to consistently demonstrate anything like theomatics."
Balderdash. I just did it, didn't I? It didn't take that long, either. People who don't know how to write their own programs are just easily impressed by a fancy argument backed up by a program.
It bears mentioning that the Dave Rhodes letter is approximately two pages of text. Yet I effortlessly found more than half a dozen phrases using each of the important numbers. Now suppose you apply the same technique to the Bible, which is about 1000 printed pages. Do you think you'll find a lot of meaningful phrases? You betcha. Is it a miracle? Actually, it would be a miracle if you didn't find anything at all, especially when you get to fudge the numbers (such as 888 really means 111).
Finally, I would like to make note of another very important statement on this last page: "It is absolutely, completely, and totally impossible to mathematically disprove theomatics."
This is a straight declaration that theomatics is not falsifiable, which by definition means it is not a science. Not only that, but it has no predictive power. You arbitrarily pick which numbers are important to you, then you crop out phrases that look good, but there's no way to tell ahead of time exactly what phrases you'll find. Therefore, theomatics is completely useless.
Okay, but it still doesn't solve the problem of the first host.groktruth wrote:Well, drinking water would eliminate the virus reproductives in the host's mouth, so that when they bit others, there would be fewer viruses to spread.
No I haven't. What evidence is there for this?groktruth wrote:You seem to have agreed that more virus is worst for the new host.
Aren't most dead cells pooped out? I guess you need some water for that too.groktruth wrote:And my health authorities remind me that a virus infection produces lots of destroyed cell parts, that need lots of water for excretion.
True, but people tend to not lie when it's not in their interest to and when the reprecussions are substantial when they're found out. What would the immunological community gain by lying about water combating the rabies virus?groktruth wrote:Remember, there are few honest men or women, according to Diogenes. Lots of liars who will tell you what you want to hear. They charge you on the 1-900- numbers, but lots of liars are free.