Meef Chaloin wrote:
He is just yet another person of one faith telling people of another faith how to live. Evolution is still a theory, yes it does have evidence but there are still problems with it that get swept under the table.
Oh boy! A 'theory' is not a 'guess.' It is based on data, which does not change. Scientific theories have one thing in common: they are ALL falsifiable. Evolution is falsifiable. But in order to show that evolution is false, you must first show why is APPEARS to be true. Why is it that so many lines of converging evidence suggest that life on Earth has evolved over millions of years? The theory of evolution may be wrong. The data that supports it does not change.
I'll give you another example: for 200 years, people believed that Newtonian kinetics could describe all motion, and that time, as Newton believed, was constant. In 1905, Einstein showed that both of these assertions were wrong. In 1914, he showed that Newtonian gravitational theory was wrong. But in both cases, he showed why the Newtonian way of thinking APPEARED to be right (you don't see the relativistic nature of motion and time until you are moving far faster than speeds normally encountered). Put another way, Newton had a theory of gravity, and so did Einstein, but the apple falling from the tree didn't linger in mid-air until they sorted it out. Data speaks for itself; our theories describe systems, and they are falsifiable.
Is religion falsifiable?
Meef Chaloin wrote: People of different faiths can often get along in the same society, its extremists that are the problem and they hardly represent the average religious person. The thing that he chose to ignore is that most extremist religious violence is state sponsored and largely involves politics rather than religion. Its funny that he cannot appreciate the irony that he is an extremist himself telling people what they should be believing in.
They don't get along, and extremists are NOT the problem; moderates are. Moderates create an environment where people cannot criticize religion; where religion is immune from all critique, no matter how illogical and plain stupid its tenets are. Yes, moderates don't typically fly planes into buildings or burn heretics, but they create a culture where the underlying problem isn't a viable topic of discussion.
Meef Chaloin wrote: Also he doesnt stop with religion, he attacks any faith in god at all, which evolution does not and will never be able to disprove (for instance the creation of the universe, ie before the big bang, and how life actually got started which is still a very shaky part of evolution). The funny thing is that there is a lot of room for belief in both god and evolution, it just depends which god you choose to believe in.
There is plenty of room for god and evolution. The common discussion goes like this: the big bang was the beginning of time and space, which, as Einstein showed in 1914, are two parts of the same thing. There is no sense in discussing what came before the big bang, because there was no 'before'; time began with the big bang. What came before cannot be known.
Similarly, all things must arise from more complicated things; the natural progression of this argument is that the universe must have come from something more complex than itself (i.e. god). Of course, this just begs the question: what created god? If you believe the first tenet (that all things arise from something more complicated), then the rest logically follows.
There may very well be a god; no one will ever know. But if there is, there are a few things we know about it:
1) god has chosen to use natural selection as the mechanism of change
2) god has created a universe that, because natural selection is at play, is prone to errors
3) god has a fascination with insects, and especially with beetles, given the sheer number of different types of them.
4) there is absolutely no reason to think that, even if there is a god, that god takes a personal interest in my day-to-day life.
There is a huge difference between thinking that there is something out there beyond our comprehension (and it would be incredibly arrogant of us to think otherwise). But it is far, far more arrogant to think that god cares if we use certain words, or wear certain things, or sleep with certain people.
We have to permit an open dialogue on this; and make no mistake, it is the moderates of this world who prevent this. Once we shed the light of reason on religious belief, we may be able to stop this madness.