How is cosmology "evidence for Christianity"?
Christianity directly deals with cosmology. I will touch on it soon.
Posted 21 March 2014 - 01:34 AM
How is cosmology "evidence for Christianity"?
Posted 21 March 2014 - 07:19 AM
All religions deal with cosmology and creation as far as I can tell. Christianity got the origin of species and the great flood spectacularly wrong. The series of ice-ages in the last few hundred thousand years were not even mentioned. There seems to be no "divine" information in the bible, i.e. god-given facts that were unknown to people at that time but were later ascertained by scientific discovery.How is cosmology "evidence for Christianity"?
Christianity directly deals with cosmology. I will touch on it soon.
Edited by platypus, 21 March 2014 - 07:27 AM.
Posted 21 March 2014 - 05:45 PM
All religions do deal with cosmology. That is my point. We are asking which ones fit the Big Bang, the dominant cosmology currently held. We can later discuss the flood and Adam and Eve but right now it is a derailment. I hope you are paying attention to what is actually being discussed.All religions deal with cosmology and creation as far as I can tell. Christianity got the origin of species and the great flood spectacularly wrong. The series of ice-ages in the last few hundred thousand years were not even mentioned. There seems to be no "divine" information in the bible, i.e. god-given facts that were unknown to people at that time but were later ascertained by scientific discovery.How is cosmology "evidence for Christianity"?
Christianity directly deals with cosmology. I will touch on it soon.
Posted 21 March 2014 - 08:15 PM
Posted 21 March 2014 - 10:59 PM
Posted 22 March 2014 - 11:32 PM
You know this is very interesting, I've been seriously reading your posts for a few days now and there's a lot of interesting material to think about.
I would like to ask you a question tho which I might have missed: how did you go from denying atheism (which is philosophically very justifiable) to the veracity of christianity?
Again I'm not being sarcastic or anything, I'm very interested in your answer.
Edited by shadowhawk, 22 March 2014 - 11:54 PM.
Posted 23 March 2014 - 12:29 AM
“The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands.”
Psalm 19:1
Posted 23 March 2014 - 04:46 AM
Nothing in my life has ever been the same. God meet me there.
Posted 25 March 2014 - 12:07 AM
I am married and I can easily remember the first time I saw my wife. At first I just felt she was just another woman like many other women I knew. We became friends and started spending time together. I liked her a lot but still didn’t see her as someone I would Marry. One day she asked me if I would be interested in taking our relationship farther. She first approached me and after thinking it over I said yes.Nothing in my life has ever been the same. God meet me there.
As much as I hesitate to get involved in this kind of thing, I'm quite curious to know what it is that god did to you to convince you so thoroughly in that one instant.
Posted 25 March 2014 - 12:46 AM
Posted 25 March 2014 - 01:17 AM
Yes, yes, I'm familiar with the story of jesus christ, but the meat of my question is not how he came into THE world, but how he came into YOUR world. Of course, if the question is too personal you may decline to answer, but I know of jesus, what I don't know of is you, and your story. That, here, is what interests me the most.What did God do for me? God loved me so much that He sought me and came into my world.
Posted 25 March 2014 - 03:57 AM
Yes, yes, I'm familiar with the story of jesus christ, but the meat of my question is not how he came into THE world, but how he came into YOUR world. Of course, if the question is too personal you may decline to answer, but I know of jesus, what I don't know of is you, and your story. That, here, is what interests me the most.What did God do for me? God loved me so much that He sought me and came into my world.
Posted 26 March 2014 - 06:24 PM
Edited by shadowhawk, 26 March 2014 - 06:37 PM.
Posted 26 March 2014 - 08:31 PM
Edited by shadowhawk, 26 March 2014 - 08:36 PM.
Posted 26 March 2014 - 09:11 PM
So if we were just random members of a multiverse of worlds, we ought to have observations like that. But we don’t; which disconfirms the multiverse hypothesis.
Edited by Vardarac, 26 March 2014 - 09:18 PM.
Posted 26 March 2014 - 11:00 PM
Edited by shadowhawk, 26 March 2014 - 11:02 PM.
Posted 26 March 2014 - 11:13 PM
Perhaps, but show me your evidence. How do you know? I think you are misstating what I said. Brain theory is not against the Big Bang. This is not a defeater for our topic, nor evidence for Atheism.So if we were just random members of a multiverse of worlds, we ought to have observations like that. But we don’t; which disconfirms the multiverse hypothesis.
How do you know that we aren't a subset of Boltzmann brain observers, provided the other sort of observers proposed can actually exist? This argument is akin to saying that there are trillions of microbes, therefore it is unlikely to the point of impossibility that we should exist - because our state of existence is far more likely to be that of a microbe.
Posted 26 March 2014 - 11:40 PM
Perhaps, but show me your evidence. How do you know?
This is not a defeater for our topic, nor evidence for Atheism.
Edited by Vardarac, 26 March 2014 - 11:42 PM.
Posted 26 March 2014 - 11:45 PM
Perhaps, but show me your evidence. How do you know?
I don't know whether we are the only types of intelligence that exist or not. I do not have evidence for or against this idea.
I'm just pointing out that it's premature to conclude that no multiverses exist on the basis of Boltzmann brain existence/outnumbering, even if that idea is valid. (Odd how closely atheist and theist arguments mirror one another sometimes.)
Maybe I misunderstood your argument, though.This is not a defeater for our topic, nor evidence for Atheism.
My statement was not intended to be either of those things, it was just to show that it is reasonably valid to disagree with the conclusion you drew.
Edited by shadowhawk, 27 March 2014 - 12:03 AM.
Posted 27 March 2014 - 12:05 AM
What conclusions? What are you talking about? I was comparing the Bib Bang to various views. This was to see which position fit with the current standard view. There are hundreds of views but right now the Big Bang is the main one.
Nor' did I ignore the multi verse. https://www.youtube....=em-uploademail I know you don't listen to videos but you need to follow the discussion.
(iii) Multiverse scenarios face the troublesome Boltzmann brain problem. A finely-tuned universe like ours is incomprehensibly improbable on naturalism. The more you multiply worlds within the multiverse in order to make it likely that observers will appear somewhere in the multiverse of worlds, the more probable it becomes that we should be Boltzmann brains, isolated brains which have fluctuated into existence out of the quantum vacuum. For observable worlds like that are vastly more plenteous than worlds which are fine-tuned for embodied conscious agents. So if we were just random members of a multiverse of worlds, we ought to have observations like that. But we don’t; which disconfirms the multiverse hypothesis.
Edited by Vardarac, 27 March 2014 - 12:06 AM.
Posted 27 March 2014 - 12:16 AM
So. I don't hold to the multiverse. Little evidence. Off topic.What conclusions? What are you talking about? I was comparing the Bib Bang to various views. This was to see which position fit with the current standard view. There are hundreds of views but right now the Big Bang is the main one.
Nor' did I ignore the multi verse. https://www.youtube....=em-uploademail I know you don't listen to videos but you need to follow the discussion.
This one:(iii) Multiverse scenarios face the troublesome Boltzmann brain problem. A finely-tuned universe like ours is incomprehensibly improbable on naturalism. The more you multiply worlds within the multiverse in order to make it likely that observers will appear somewhere in the multiverse of worlds, the more probable it becomes that we should be Boltzmann brains, isolated brains which have fluctuated into existence out of the quantum vacuum. For observable worlds like that are vastly more plenteous than worlds which are fine-tuned for embodied conscious agents. So if we were just random members of a multiverse of worlds, we ought to have observations like that. But we don’t; which disconfirms the multiverse hypothesis.
Posted 27 March 2014 - 11:28 AM
Posted 27 March 2014 - 07:36 PM
Yes there is a text version rather long to post here.Is there a text version?
You appear to have confused Christianity, an entire religion, with theism, a mere position, a single premise. I hate it when these two are confused with each other.
Edited by shadowhawk, 27 March 2014 - 07:42 PM.
Posted 28 March 2014 - 01:53 AM
Posted 28 March 2014 - 02:45 PM
What did God do for me? God loved me so much that He sought me and came into my world. He died for me, that I might live.
Posted 28 March 2014 - 03:33 PM
Posted 28 March 2014 - 05:52 PM
Christianity is Theistic is it not? No confusion. What do you hate?
Posted 28 March 2014 - 07:10 PM
DukeNukem: The story of Jesus dying for us is kinda the dumbest thing about Christianity. Think of how many soldiers have died for us, to help keep so many of our nations free in the world. Why is Jesus in any way special? It's just one life.
Also, it's not much of a sacrifice when you get to come back to life a few days later. lol Big fucking whoop! I wouldn't care much about dying either -- even painfully -- if I knew the reward was coming back essentially as a god three days later. Jesus didn't sacrifice himself at all. Hell, practically any of us would have signed on for that deal. His so-called sacrifice for us is the biggest non-sacrifice in the history of human fiction.
Posted 28 March 2014 - 07:31 PM
Christianity is Theistic is it not? No confusion. What do you hate?
Right, but people tend to speak of atheism as though it's the opposite of Christianity, even though almost everyone knows that's not the case. Christianity is a complex system of beliefs, values, symbols, works and pratices with its own history, communities and even governing bodies (ecclesiastical polities), whereas negative atheism, positive atheism and theism are each a mere position based entirely on a single proposition. The "-ism" suffix notwithstanding, it's not an ideology.
There are some atheists who partake in Christian rituals, follow Christian ethics, read Christian scripture, enjoy Christian art, think of the world in Christian terms, hang out mostly with Christians and go as far as to call themselves Christians. Even Richard Dawkings calls himself a "cultural Christian."
https://www.youtube....h?v=5_o997pxc1U
Edited by shadowhawk, 28 March 2014 - 07:33 PM.
Posted 28 March 2014 - 08:26 PM
God did not invent sin. He invented choice. Hell is where you are alone because of your choice. You do not want to be with God, do you. Bad God as you say. OK. After death, You have only yourself to sin against at the same time knowing there is a God. That is torture.Also I find it odd that Jesus/Jahve had to sacrifice himself in order to save humanity from himself. After all, God invented sin and decided that it is such a terribly bad thing that he just has to torture people forever, just because he wants to.
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