mcflystargirl
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Jesus.how do u kno god is a dude
Jesus.how do u kno god is a dude
who are you talking to iron?now now fallout boy, no need for profanity
I believe the thought process to apply goes something like: At the begining, the very begining, something needed to have caused what caused what caused what caused something to happen to get the ball rolling. That something as far as the eye can see mustn't have been bound by the laws of science as we presently understand them. Therefore if such a force did intervene on earthly matters it would be capable of circumventing what we consider to be the basic rules of science atleast temporarilly .Did you just read what you posted... Because come on, no sane person can honestly rationalise any of those events.
Jesus.
now now fallout boy, no need for profanity
who are you talking to iron?
"Dawkins himself, in a book meaningfully titled River out of Eden (1995) addresses the issue squarely, uncompromisingly, and without pulling any punches. For a start, Dawkins argues that part of the problem with the question of the meaning of life comes not from life or from evolution (not directly at least) but from ourselves. "We humans," he says, "have purpose on the brain"(96). The evidence of this, I would say is ubiquitous, from mindless sayings such as "Everything happens for a reason" to Rorschach tests and coincidental phone calls. The problem is not evidence of purpose or meaning, but rather a psychological propensity to project them onto the world.I believe the thought process to apply goes something like: At the begining, the very begining, something needed to have caused what caused what caused what caused something to happen to get the ball rolling. That something as far as the eye can see mustn't have been bound by the laws of science as we presently understand them. Therefore if such a force did intervene on earthly matters it would be capable of circumventing what we consider to be the basic rules of science atleast temporarilly .
That is all very reasonable but I think you are confusing, or perhaps deliberately merging cause with purpose. It might have been completely random, apathetic, non-conscious yes but if you, as I certainly do, subscribe to the notion that before any matter whatsoever existed there must have been influence from a force not bound by the laws of science as we presently understand them you accept there is(or was) something that our ordinary ideas of impossible and possible did not or does not apply to. Considering this the notion that Mary was impregnated by this higher power whilst apparently far fetched is not irrational.Dawkins himself, in a book meaningfully titled River out of Eden addresses the issue squarely, uncompromisingly, and without pulling any punches. For a start, Dawkins argues that part of the problem with the question of the meaning of life comes not from life or from evolution (not directly at least) but from ourselves. "We humans," he says, "have purpose on the brain"(96). The evidence of this, I would say is ubiquitous, from mindless sayings such as "Everything happens for a reason" to Rorschach tests and coincidental phone calls. The problem is not evidence of purpose or meaning, but rather a psychological propensity to project them onto the world.
...[C]hildren and primitives and possibly higher animals such as cats and dogs, share the propensity for projecting onto inanimate things and nonliving processes-such as thunder, wind, tumbling rocks and eclipses- mind and intentionality.
...If not mind and purpose in these things, the propensity is to think that there must be a mind and purpose behind them.
...But, says Dawkins, the mere fact we can ask a question- in this case, "What is the meaning or purpose of this?"- does not mean there has to be an answer. Like it or not, it might just be the case that there really is no meaning or purpose. In other words, the question might be the wrong question right from the start, maybe even an illegitimate question to begin with.
(Stamos, D 2008, 'Evolution and the Big Questions: Sex, Race, Religion and Other Matters', Blackwell, MA USA.)
Yes, I did jump the gun, I assumed you were implying cause=purpose. Not that it is a vile assumption to make, given the Christian paradigm loves to start with an "argument from design" etc and then make the illogical leap to assuming positivistic elements about a creator- that "he" loves us, can intervene in the natural world, is omnipotent/omnibenevolent etc and eventually arive at "the bible is true". Any reasonable person knows that even if evidence from design proved an intelligent "first-cause" this provides no further evidence for the claims of Christianity then it does for say Islam or any other of the 20000 religious traditions throughout history. Also you treat it like a dichotomy; if not a natural cause so far, therefore it is a supernatural one. This is an illogical leap.That is all very reasonable but I think you are confusing, or perhaps deliberately merging cause with purpose. It might have been completely random, apathetic, non-conscious yes but if you, as I certainly do, subscribe to the notion that before any matter whatsoever existed there must have been influence from a force not bound by the laws of science as we presently understand them you accept there is(or was) something that our ordinary ideas of impossible and possible did not or does not apply to. Considering this the notion that Mary was impregnated by this higher power whilst apparently far fetched is not irrational.
Sup Iron? I'm not in the mood for a debate (doing 2 assignments) but I just want you to cut the verbosity and explain your point here (is there one?).Thousands of centuries ago huge, very heavily armoured creatures were evolved. If anyone had at that time been watching the course of Evolution he would probably expected that it was going to go on to a heavier and heavier armour, but he would have been wrong. The future had a card up its sleeve which nothing at that time would have led him to expect. It was going to spring on him little, naked, unarmoured animals which had better brains: and with those brains they were going to master the whole planet. They were not merely going to have more power than the prehistoric monsters, they were going to have a new kind of power. The next step was not only going to be different, but different with a new kind of difference. The stream of Evolution was not going to flow on in the direction in which he saw it flowing: it was in fact going to take a sharp bend.
In the same way, the virgin birth and Christ Himself brought to the world not only difference, but a new kind of difference. It does not speak of man's increasing dominance and power over all things, but rather offers peace and love and hope which gives endurance and strength to all who find it.
lolBc ours is a God with a human face
Previously i've resisted such temptations as this but your so worth it as such in response to your commentary I say : Duh, he's God he can do anything he wants.Let me give you guys a scientific end all answer to this.
IF Mary was a virgin, when jesus was born, where did the other 23 chromosomes come from?
There's two possiblities, she either wasn't a virgin at all
OR
Jesus was a clone of mary (it does actually happen in nature, although very rarely, females impregnate themselves) but this would mean jesus was a woman.
/end thread
sorry for who's faith i'v shaken, and beliefs i'v dismantled.
(Not really, shame on you for believing that stuff and while being old enough to browse the net)