i see you posting anti-semitic messages on the board. i also see you quite frequently insulting and abusing people. how do you reconcile that with repenting and christ's teaching?No repenting means actually doing the right thing.
alasdair
i see you posting anti-semitic messages on the board. i also see you quite frequently insulting and abusing people. how do you reconcile that with repenting and christ's teaching?No repenting means actually doing the right thing.
second time of asking treezy. interested in your answer.i see you posting anti-semitic messages on the board. i also see you quite frequently insulting and abusing people. how do you reconcile that with repenting and christ's teaching?
Even atheists have to reassure themselves by saying, "Well I can't prove that a God doesn't exist".
It takes a lot more faith to believe in nothing, than to believe in God.
How much faith exactly does it take to believe that blue fairies aren't the ones responsible for the 3 fundamental forces + gravity in nature?
Well, they don't have to. Burden of proof lies on the one making the assertion. You don't have to disprove unicorns if I declare my belief in them. That's not how it works.
How much faith does it take to believe that blue fairy's are not responsible for the psychics of earth?
I guess less than believing in nothing lol.
Assuming psychics are real. Which is yet to be proved in a scientific and consequently peer-reviewed manner.
As far as real-world evidence goes, Neptune has as much going for him as does Allah. So why does (funnily enough, only after a certain point in time) believing in the latter seem absurd among other things to keen believers while in the case of the former it doesn't? The comment in the parentheses for the reason that same judgement would be applied to one if they expressed the same agnostic or atheist views back in the hayday of Greek deism.
Ironically Dawkins says, "We are all atheists about most of the gods that humanity has ever believed in. Some of us just go one god further." Meaning their God is the non-entity that explains the Whole which would be hydrogen and helium.
Except we cannot create infinite denseness and neither can we explode hydrogen and helium and get a universe -- thus excluding it from its own understanding.
Not sure I completely understand. Universe isn't just hydrogen and helium, although they make up the most of it...
"Exploding" hydrogen and/or helium doesn't necessarily create a new universe. Thermonuclear fusion goes on in every star and actually humans are very capable of doing it as well. However, the Big Bang theory is something completely different, and is not about "creating" infinite denseness whatsoever. One of current models proposes that the universe could have arisen as a sort of quantum fluctuation - the like we can detect in any point in space, the like that actually define most of what happens in reality. Just as particles can arise from nothing due to them, a whole universe can as well. If you want to claim that the probability is miniscule, the anthropic principle provides the solution - we don't really know what goes on outside our universe (assuming multiverse or the like), and how often such fluctuation events take place. There is no known limit on "time", so however unlikely the event, it can arise, and if it does, then we would find ourselves within such a universe, because... we couldn't exist in a different one. Pretty simple logic.
I mean, to me it makes much more sense than "skydaddy made us, end of story", and moreover it is based on principles that we have observed and proven.
If you want to go deeper, then some hypotheses claim that universes are created by pretty much all happenings within our universe, and they may as well be right, although I personally don't subscribe to them due to lack of sound proof and/or logic stemming from current proven models. Too much of a conjecture for me.