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09-10-2002, 04:57 PM | #111 | ||
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09-10-2002, 05:06 PM | #112 | |||||
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09-10-2002, 05:31 PM | #113 | |
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Now, can we agree on exactly how many Greamlins are on the line above? Can we count them? Do we both come up with the same number? Will we both come up with the same answer every time? Will an impartial judge come up with the same exact number? QED, the Number 2 is a rock solid empirical entity. [ September 10, 2002: Message edited by: Asha'man ]</p> |
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09-10-2002, 05:38 PM | #114 |
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"-- Why is there a weak and strong nuclear force? Why are they important phenomena?"
If Van you are so complacent to answer this question with a simple "Goddidit" just cause you haven't really looked at it, you will be throwing away the last 50 years worth of theoretical physics. Actually, these aren't seperate forces. Electromagnetism and the weak nuclear force were linked into the Electroweak force by Feynman; later, Gel-mann figured out Quantum Chromodynamics and linked the Electroweak with the Strong nuclear force. In the end, real scientists expend real effort to answer these questions that you in your simplicity assign to supernatural intervention. BTW - if you are going to keep down that path of "whys" and ask why this single force exist at all or as they are, I would recommend you read something by Witten or Green on String Theory which is attempting to ask that very question. Of course, I doubt you will - these damn physicists all have biases imposed on them by their restrictive use of methodological naturalism - right? |
09-10-2002, 05:45 PM | #115 | |
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09-10-2002, 05:47 PM | #116 | ||||||||||||||
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Notice the "at some level of granularity". I defy you to come up with an answer to the question "why is there something rather than nothing" to which you cannot keep asking "but why is it that way". This is my point. Quote:
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The problem is we have no recourse. No one has ever been able to articulate what a non-empirical toolset looks like. I have stated repeatedly, and you have not disagreed, that all non-empirically verifiable explanations are equally unprovable, and therefore equally worthless. If you disagree with this statement, show me how I'm wrong. Quote:
[ September 10, 2002: Message edited by: Skeptical ] [ September 10, 2002: Message edited by: Skeptical ] [ September 10, 2002: Message edited by: Skeptical ]</p> |
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09-10-2002, 06:17 PM | #117 | |||
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Science could empirically confirm the prescence of any non-natural thing that even partly affected the natural world. This is why I say that science can have non-natural hypotheses, but can only use empirical evidence. I suppose this means you could say that some non-natural things can theoretically also be empirical things. |
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09-10-2002, 06:43 PM | #118 | |
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09-10-2002, 07:36 PM | #119 | ||||||
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This raises a serious question: does everything HAVE to have a purpose? Quote:
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Merely getting bigger brains could have been all that was needed, though some other changes in brain architecture could have been needed, such as improved ability to learn. Quote:
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[ September 10, 2002: Message edited by: lpetrich ]</p> |
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09-10-2002, 07:40 PM | #120 |
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Possibly none, but it is a false dichotomy. If we have a hypothesis that god created all life, and find heaps of evidence for that god, but which COULD have been left by an advanced natural creator, we should not say 'it is more likely that advanced aliens pretending to be god left this evidence'. That is as bad as a theist saying 'it is more likely that god left evidence for evolution to cover his tracks, or temp the faithless'.
Let me give an example: the progressive creationist hypothesis is that god seperatetly created various groups of organisms from nothing, at various times in history. If we could witness this happening today, complete with booming voice and choirs of angels, then science could confirm, by empiricism and basic extrapolation, the hypothesis that this probably happened in the past as well. Science still could say nothing about the supernatural thing itself, but it could confirm that one is at work. |
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