Neonanocyborgasm
Deity
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2004
- Messages
- 4,695
There is no way to know or to have a shot at what is likely how a potential God is or other forms of potential supreme beings are
I think you should rephrase this in German.
There is no way to know or to have a shot at what is likely how a potential God is or other forms of potential supreme beings are
In other word's you are only an authority if you have enough peers behind you to back you up?
Yes, but lunacy is not the only or even the most likely outcome when one lessens the grip of rationality. An over indulgence of rationality can lead to psychopathic (?) behavior.Attriction limits movement, but without it, we also have no way to trigger impulse or to control direction. Immanuel Kant, in his Critique of Pure Reason, points out that reason (and induction - ergo, observation) are the anchors that prevents imagination from becaming lunacy.
Regards.
I'm not sure what a rational universe" is, but I know that most of us see the universe though a "rational lens, so it certainly appears rational. Your schizoid patients , I think, see the universe less rationally and might not agree that the universe is a rational place. I don't think we can just ignore the role of the observer. If we are looking for orderliness in the universe, we will probably find it and humans are exceptionally good at finding ways to organize things even if they are not really organized. Religion is a good example of this. We use religion to bring order to what otherwise appears to be chaos.Yes, it does. But you and I have a greatly different conception of the subconscious. As far as I can tell, our subconscious is also trained by observation & rationality. It's just that we don't interpret the signals from our emotional centers well. When I explain the neuroanatomy of the emotional centers, I point out that emotions are a sensory experience, they 'flavor' the percepts. Emotional computation, much like gut computation, is not completely integrated with our consciousness and thus interacts with incomplete signalling. The neuroanatomy of the emotional centers were designed by evolution and trained in the same rational universe that the rest of my senses were. You CAN use the subconscious to augment your perceived intelligence, but you have to be aware that it can be deceived just as easily as your primary senses.
Yes they have, but they have also cordoned off much of human experience as unproven and false because reason is not a good guide there. I do not dispute the value of science and what it can and will discover, but it does actively discredit what falls outside of its particular methodology.Eh? Observation, when coupled with rational thought, has lead to all discoveries and inventions that humans have ever made.
Precisely. If gods exist the effects of their actions will be observable and not explainable by any natural means. This leads to two possibilities:
1. If no effects of possible gods are observed, perhaps we're haven't found them yet. Perhaps, indeed. This is a called the God Of The Gaps reasoning. Many atheists consider this to be the last refuge of religious reasoning. I reject this idea as reasonable. It's like what happens when you turn off an old TV screen: At first the whole screen is alive and interesting, but then the only light is confined to a fast-retreating glow at the center of the screen, lingering for a half-minute, then finally gone. For good.
2. If an effect is observed but not yet explainable within the current framework of scientific understanding this does not automatically mean that gods exist. It simply means that we don't yet know why something happens. We now have a half-millenium (at least!) of experience with this situation. Given enough time, effort, and imagination, we eventually find a natural explanation for observed phenomena.
Yes they have, but they have also cordoned off much of human experience as unproven and false because reason is not a good guide there. I do not dispute the value of science and what it can and will discover, but it does actively discredit what falls outside of its particular methodology.
Yes. That's why academic texts have reference lists.In other word's you are only an authority if you have enough peers behind you to back you up?
The problem is that if a person claims that God has revealed himself to him/her, other explanations for such a supposed revelation are way more likely. Delusions. Yes this does mean that if God revealed himself in deed to a few people, they would be called crazy even thou they actually know an important truth. But if one considers all factors, it is still the safest bet. And that is what knowledge is about. Finding out what is the safest bet. Until at one point we'll just assume this bet as a truth and call it knowledge. I.e. if I see a chair I won't touch it and measure every time I see one. I'll just assume so. And rightfully so. Chances are too low that at one point there suddenly is no chair even though I see one to use up my time exploring that chance.Then one would argue back then there is no God, because of that very fact, that He does not choose to reveal Himself to all.
Why is that? As mentioned earlier I forgot to add "based on knowledge gained so far" and I guess I could write it in a more digestible manner. I'll take care of that.I think you should rephrase this in German.
Better?There is no way to know or to have a shot at the likely nature of a potential God or other forms of potential supreme beings, based on all the knowledge collectively gained by humanity so far
Even that is false. You people are defining how we determine who is an expert. Not what an expert actually is.No, when you've proven yourself to be one.
Again, I do agree that it is a good combination for discovery of how things work and inventing new things. If one accepts that in the end everything can/will be brought under the umbrella of scientific methodology, then there will be no place for irrationality and experience (or god) in our lives. Everything can be explained.How can science discredit anything though? Science is basically just a method, a way of doing things. You plug in data and reason -> you sometimes get results. Scientists do not forbid the exploration of other human experiences at all. How many scientists are spiritual? play in rock bands? and so forth?
I really have to stress the below as well:
All the human discoveries and inventions ever made happened when humans (or sometimes cats) used rational thought in conjunction with observational data.
Okay, so just kidding about the cats, but you agreed with that statement. It seems to be a pretty good combination of things when the result is every single invention ever invented and every single discovery ever discovered.
Yes, but lunacy is not the only or even the most likely outcome when one lessens the grip of rationality. An over indulgence of rationality can lead to psychopathic (?) behavior.
I'm not sure what a rational universe" is, but I know that most of us see the universe though a "rational lens, so it certainly appears rational. Your schizoid patients , I think, see the universe less rationally and might not agree that the universe is a rational place. I don't think we can just ignore the role of the observer. If we are looking for orderliness in the universe, we will probably find it and humans are exceptionally good at finding ways to organize things even if they are not really organized. Religion is a good example of this. We use religion to bring order to what otherwise appears to be chaos.
Yes they have, but they have also cordoned off much of human experience as unproven and false because reason is not a good guide there. I do not dispute the value of science and what it can and will discover, but it does actively discredit what falls outside of its particular methodology.
"If gods exist, the effects of their actions will be observable and not explainable by any natural means." I'm not sure this statement is true. While the exact nature of god comes into play in all this, let's ignore that for the moment. What if, at one level, god acts in the world through perfectly ordinary events to fulfill whatever is on god's mind. And then, at a different level, outside of the electro magnetic spectrum, gods sustains the universe in some godly fashion. In such a scenario, god and science might never cross paths and the need for debate would fade and we would all have discuss politics. Science would be free to push the limits of what it "knows" through observation and rationality and those who experience god in their daily lives get to explore the limits of what they can experience and imagine of god with or without the aid of reason.
Even that is false. You people are defining how we determine who is an expert. Not what an expert actually is.
BirdJaguar said:Again, I do agree that it is a good combination for discovery of how things work and inventing new things. If one accepts that in the end everything can/will be brought under the umbrella of scientific methodology, then there will be no place for irrationality and experience (or god) in our lives. Everything can be explained.
BirdJaguar said:Or, one can accept that science has it limits and there are things that we cannot/will not ever understand through science. In this instance irrationality, experience and perhaps even god have a place of importance among us.
Why is that? As mentioned earlier I forgot to add "based on knowledge gained so far" and I guess I could write it in a more digestible manner. I'll take care of that.
There
Better?
Sort of, but not really. In my opinion you're an expert on a subject when other people with a great degree of skill, training, and expertise in that same subject treat you as an expert.
I could be considered close to an expert in my field - I could teach a college level class, I could advise a graduate student. But I don't consider myself an absolute authority. Compared to the man on the street I'm an expert. Compared to my peers I'm at least average.
Yes, that would severely limit not only our knowledge, but also our *potential* knowledge and - most importantly - gods' potential powers. If gods are only capable of perturbing our neuronal firing patterns, then that fundamentally limits a god's freedom of action. In other words, that's not at all a god anything like the ones talked about in the bible.
speaking of which...
I'd say it's a common MYTH that the bible is the most sold book of all time. It could be true, but it's far from clear and depends on how you categorize the data. Besides, just because something's all over the place doesn't make it important. If that were the case Herpes would have more voting power in the US than people
EDIT: just re-read what you wrote.
Brain washing is decidedly not a way to gain knowledge. It's a method for imparting propaganda - which is pretty much defined as a skewed view of reality. So I don't think this counts. And if someone came up to me and said that they know something because the thought just popped into their head I'd be very skeptical of it. If, however, they said they believed something, well, that's fine. Go right ahead. You can believe anything you want. It may or may not be right, and you belief won't make a difference.
The problem is that if a person claims that God has revealed himself to him/her, other explanations for such a supposed revelation are way more likely. Delusions. Yes this does mean that if God revealed himself in deed to a few people, they would be called crazy even thou they actually know an important truth. But if one considers all factors, it is still the safest bet. And that is what knowledge is about. Finding out what is the safest bet. Until at one point we'll just assume this bet as a truth and call it knowledge. I.e. if I see a chair I won't touch it and measure every time I see one. I'll just assume so. And rightfully so. Chances are too low that at one point there suddenly is no chair even though I see one to use up my time exploring that chance.
I am still hoping for a response of you to my last post
Why is that? As mentioned earlier I forgot to add "based on knowledge gained so far" and I guess I could write it in a more digestible manner. I'll take care of that.
There
Better?
Even that is false. You people are defining how we determine who is an expert. Not what an expert actually is.
Most people who have come up with great ideas, usually credit an outside force.
God created the heavens (1st) and the earth (2nd).
You interpret this as a universe and a spinning world. I just say that it happened. Then God said let there be light. For those of you who think that this was a story from a stone age perspective, how else would they pass along the notion that this light was day and night?
There is no need for a spinning world to cause light and darkness if there is no sun sending that light to begin with.
The first day was not light from the sun and probably not even a reference to a spinning earth. The earth spinning did not result in night and day. The earth was just spinning in the darkness of space.
Seems to me that if a bright flash of energy (the big bang) that caused the universe to form and that formation was God, that if it started to make sense to people that those who reject God would start to discredit the Big Bang theory.
Do you speak German? Also I was (and to a degree till am) sure to have done a decent job this timeStill sounds like gibberish. I suggested German due to my perceived language barrier.
So hard that I wouldn't have dreamed that this post was supposed to be related to mine. Which is why I would wish you responded to it directly, as this makes it way easier for me to comprehend and otherwise I feel we will get nowhere. Because frankly - often you don't make the impression to know where you are actually trying to go with your posts. So I think me giving the direction is the only hope we have if the purpose of this thread is supposed to have a chance.Post #57 was my response, but I purposely avoided answering your question(s) directly. Not because I refuse to, but not sure common ground has been reached. According to most responses I get, it is hard to understand my post.
How so?Faith is not that much different from science. In fact, if faith is not realized (rationalized), then it does become a delusion and falsifies itself.
Again, how so?Just like science can be used to strengthen a person's rational, so can faith.
Do you speak German? Also I was (and to a degree till am) sure to have done a decent job this timeAt least if one wants to stay with one sentence.
So hard that I wouldn't have dreamed that this post was supposed to be related to mine. Which is why I would wish you responded to it directly, as this makes it way easier for me to comprehend and otherwise I feel we will get nowhere. Because frankly - often you don't make the impression to know where you are actually trying to go with your posts. So I think me giving the direction is the only hope we have if the purpose of this thread is supposed to have a chance.
How so?
Again, how so?
Did God create these twice? In the 1st verse and in later verses when God creates Heaven and Earth "again"? The first verse is more accurately interpreted as saying "In the beginning when God created Heaven and Earth", or, "In the beginning of God's creation of Heaven and Earth". Genesis doesn't start with the 1st verse, it begins with the 2nd verse and Heaven and Earth dont actually show up in the story until after the waters and the Light (day) and more.
And take note of how God "created" the Earth, He gathered together the waters into Seas and the land appeared - you will never find in the Bible a claim that God created the waters in Gen 1:2, that verse describes the situation as God arrives to "create" and Light was His first act of creation. But the 2nd verse also shows the Earth did exist in a prior form, submerged under the water (ie not dry). That means the planet already existed too (covered by water), God didn't create this planet, God created the land. Look at how God defines "Earth", after the waters recede He calls it dry land.
I interpret night and day as a spinning world within range of a star, not the universe. And I interpret the "darkness" upon the waters in Gen 1:2 followed by the Light to mean that a dark water, covered world was given an orbital spin (or a new one) and a new orbit closer to that star.
Genesis and these various creation myths are not stories about the universe, they are stories about how this planet came to have life, and most of these myths say the same basic thing - the primordial world was covered by water and "God" brought forth land and life. The science says the same thing, but the god of science is a celestial collision ~ 4 bya followed by plate tectonics and life.
I imagine the collision would have pushed the Earth closer to the Sun leaving behind a bunch of debris and water/ice, that makes the asteroid belt a possible location for the hammered bracelet called Heaven, a screen dividing the solar system into 4 inner and 4 outer planets, or 5 inner and 5 outer (counting the moon and Pluto) with the latter fitting the description of the planets in the Enuma Elish.
But the Sun did exist, God called the Light "Day" and the darkness He called "Night", we know what causes this phenomenon - a spinning world close to a star. The Sun only appears in Genesis later because it wasn't relevant to what happened to the primordial world in Gen 1:2...
Gen 1:2 shows it was in darkness and covered by water, and as a consequence of God's "wind" and the "Light", the world now had day and night. I'm not one to insist on literal interpretations since I dont even believe the 6 days of creation refer to actual days, but I'm having trouble finding a suitable metaphor to replace light/day and darkness/night. It sounds like you've replaced the Sun with God until the Sun appears in the story.
Some people have a hard time believing the creator of the universe came down here to write books, thats understandable.
1: IN THE beginning G-d created the heaven and the earth.
2 Now the earth was unformed and void, and darkness was upon the face of the deep; and the spirit of G-d hovered over the face of the waters.
6 And G-d said: 'Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters'.
7 And G-d made the firmament, and divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament; and it was so.
8 And G-d called the firmament Heaven And there was evening and there was morning, a second day.
9 And G-d said: 'Let the waters under the heaven be gathered together unto one place, and let the dry land appear' And it was so.
10 And G-d called the dry land Earth, and the gathering together of the waters called He Seas; and G-d saw that it was good.
14 And G-d said: 'Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days and years
It was not until there was a protective canopy of water surrounding the earth that He allowed the sun and the moon to exist.
Yes, but lunacy is not the only or even the most likely outcome when one lessens the grip of rationality. An over indulgence of rationality can lead to psychopathic (?) behavior.
I am derailing threads all the time.My apologies to SiLL if this is derailing the thread.