 Originally Posted by Xedan
No, you're silly for putting a far more complicated idea into place where a much simpler one actually explains it a lot better. The website is called COMMON SENSE ABOUT SCIENCE.com. In fact scientist have taken molecules and put them under 'early earth' conditions, and the molecules formed amino acids, which can form life. And said molecules were created from stardust. That is, the matter flung into space after a supernova. Before a supernova occurs, the star, through the process of nuclear fusion, creates heavier and heavier elements, starting with helium. Those stars are formed from gravity pulling together particles in space, causing friction, which eventually exceeds 20,000 or so degrees and a star is born. Those particles came from matter/anti matter explosions at the time of the big bang. Any other questions about how we got from point A to point B?
I didn't deny for a second that these rudimentary building blocks can't be made, only that they would make themselves without intelligence behind it.
 Originally Posted by Mario92
You want irrational? Which is more likely: that molecules began bonding in new ways and forming new structures, which ultimately got together in a sort of symbiotic relationship to form the early beginnings of life, or that some divine something-or-other has always been around, outside of time, popping up from god-knows-where, and interfering only at very select times? The first one really isn't that implausible at all, while the second one is what really borders on the impossible.
If you look at life, it is little more than a series of self-sustaining chemical reactions. Organisms receive signals from the environment to grow and adapt, the chemical processes keep one another alive and well, and each organelle in an organism has a specific function...namely, performing some sort of chemical reaction. Life does not need a guiding hand or some form of intelligence to continue living...it just needs the right conditions. If you put an amoeba in a solution of sulfuric acid, the harsh conditions will stop crucial chemical reactions and cause the amoeba to die...end of story.
Okay first of all what's up with you guys and these girl avatars!
You skipped over the big question, the chemical processes keep one another alive and well
Why? Molecules going out of the way to help other molecules survive, chaperones folding those strands into enzymes, etc, burning ATP to run things, all this wonderful engineered purpose-driven machinery is the product of something more than chance, that's my conclusion.
 Originally Posted by Hidden
Do you know how much more fun it is to say, "I used to be stardust" than "God created man"?
How about both??
 Originally Posted by Bonsay
Yes, it leaves a lot of questions. That's because we aren't afraid of not knowing. That's why we rather search for truth than base the world on complete assumptions, like the one I just quoted: "you need something that is intelligent anmd beyond this physical universe and is eternal in order to justify everything else."
I just don't think it's that unknowable.
A waste of time? To waste time you first need purpose. If there is no purpose other than the one we give ourselves, then no, nobody wastes their time except the ones that see themselves as wasting time.
You are the one giving up and not caring. Most atheist, as I said, strive to find out why things are the way they are. You just say "God did it". I don't know what kind of logic you use, but the first sentence presents "caring", as in searching for truth, the second one, saying, "God did it", is giving up on the search for truth. It is quite a hallmark of humanity: Surprise, surprise... at the time when atheism is on the rise, we're seeing the greatest achievements and discoveries in history. That's called not giving up, if you actually need a translation. The extreme side of religions showed its potential in the dark ages. If we're tipping to the atheistic side of things, I think the differences are clear.
Alot of wonderful minds that contributed to science, like Mendel who layed the framework for genetics, was a believer in God...a monk in his case. The idea that denying God makes you a better scientisi isn't a fair thing to conclude. Atheism has also contributed alot of terror in the modern world, such as the Soviet Union with the killing of millions, and Nazi Germany, the killing of million also. Hitler and Stalin and Lenin, Mao, they were all atheists. Roseau, the leader of the French Revolution, was a blood thirsty butcherer also.
It's a fundemental part of the human being to accept that force that is beyond us as real, and to believe in something that's a heck of a lot better than chance, that's such an overplayed card that numbers and physics is what's behind all the stuff I keep saying.
 Originally Posted by Photolysis
It doesn't take balls, what you have displayed is intellectual cowardice. You have displayed the childlike inability to distinguish between what you like to be true and what you believe.
1. Someone suggested there is not god
2. I don't like this
3. Therefore there is a god
How childish can you get?
Saying "I don't yet know" takes balls. Admitting you don't have an answer for definite takes balls. Assuming one because your rampant egotism demands a purpose does not.
God is the rational conclusion, maybe there are other conclusions but in my opinion, not as rational.
Atheism is not "denying what you don't know". How you can manage to argue on a subject when you don't even understand the basic concept is beyond me. Well actually, that's not true: you're an ignorant idiot and you're deluded. Still, it's a large club so don't feel too bad.
You also fail to understand that agnosticism is not a belief in itself, despite what the general ignorant masses believe. Agnosticism is the belief that something cannot be known for certain. It has nothing to do with the belief itself. You could be agnostic over alien life existing for instance, yet still believe there is alien life out there
Man everything you say to me could describe yourself, or perhaps I'm from a different club. So can a man be both a post-enlightenment era rationalist and at that same token, believe in God. Look at our great minds like Kant, Newton, the founding fathers, etc...a proud tradition of a balance between science and God.
Don't put yourself on a pedestal, and don't mistake my hostility to your ignorance and childlike beliefs as you mounting a successful assault on my beliefs.
My hostility is towards you, your lack of curiosity, intellect, your ignorance, lack of reasoning, and the arrogance with which you assume an answer, something which does deserve contempt.
You assume an answer, there's no God, I assume an answer, there is God. Based on what though? Sometimes you can read something through it's creation, such as this wonderful thing called life, this vast ordered universe, this intelligence we have to even ask the question, to search for God. Then the whole mass experiences of the paranormal and supernatural, to dismiss it as nothing doesn't impress me as very progressive.
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