Are you saying that our biological, evolutionary need to reproduce our own DNA in offspring is so strong that sometimes it's expressed as an overzealous urge to save unrelated babies or adopt children?--that we've just evolved to have an inclination to save babies, willy-nilly? If so, then I'd point to the fact that people often jump into life-threatening situations to save elderly strangers too. Plus, I'm not sure how that postulated baby-saving inclination dovetails with the popularity of the pro-abortion stance. But that's a can of worms I'm already sorry I opened and that I will not pursue in this forum.BoimB son of BoB wrote:i said it's just a hint. at least you can see how such a reaction can evolve.pilcrow wrote:
I'm talking about saving a stranger's baby, not my own. Where's the evolutionary advantage to that, from the perspective of my DNA?
you know. people want children, if they can't get their own they even adopt children!!! where's he advantage in that! you can say it's wasting your energy. and in a cold/rational/non-human way that's actually, true!
but you can see where the need to [/i]WANT a baby comes from.
i hope that makes things more clear?
Richard Dawkins: The God Delusion.
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BoimB son of BoB
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BoimB son of BoB
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pilcrow wrote:If so, then I'd point to the fact that people often jump into life-threatening situations to save elderly strangers too. Plus, I'm not sure how that postulated baby-saving inclination dovetails with the popularity of the pro-abortion stance. But that's a can of worms I'm already sorry I opened and that I will not pursue in this forum.
hey man you win this one.
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BoimB son of BoB
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actually yes.pilcrow wrote: Are you saying that our biological, evolutionary need to reproduce our own DNA in offspring is so strong that sometimes it's expressed as an overzealous urge to save unrelated babies or adopt children?
but i'm no expert at matter (certainly not at the baby saving phenomen..
it takes courage to dare and think like this. you can see why this way of thinking isn't the most popular one.
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Meef Chaloin
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Meef...if you're going to use conspiracy websites to spread ol' anti-semitic tales, you could at least include these:Meef Chaloin wrote:There were certainly a few happy Israelis that dayshtreimel wrote:2) Flew planes in the world trade center
http://911research.com/sept11/israelispys.html
http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/fiveisraelis.html
http://www.rense.com/general18/werethe911hijackers.htm
http://www.conspiracypenpal.com/columns/arabs.htm
http://www.biblebelievers.org.au/holohoax.htm
Now that's they way you do it!
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BoimB son of BoB
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that maybe so, but there is no way of disproving te existance of the spaghettimonster either (citing dawkins here) or fairys etc...Meef Chaloin wrote:Novel wrote:There's really no way to prove or disprove 'God'.
yet nobody seriously believes in there existance... maybe some of the treehuggers do, i don't know.
the chance of there actually being a spaghettimonster are extremely slim, same with the biblical god etc.
so basicly that claim of yours does not imply the two possibilities to be considered as 50/50 percent chance of being true or not.
i'm finished with this topic. i have work to do.
all they say is: i believe. well good for you. may the force be with you then
personally i have better books to read than fairytale bibles. they bore me.
Science (apart from mathematics) can't "proove" anything. What it can do is propose theories whose predictive power can be tested by experiment. When the current best theory fails to agree with observed reality then it is ammended or if necessary replaced by a better theory. In this way scientists believe that they can get closer and closer to the truth.
Has has been shown by Godal, Turing and others, there are many things that are true but which can never be proved to be true and many questions which can never be decided - even in principal.
The difference between science and region (IMHO) is that scientists for the most part are open minded and humble enough to admit that they don't know all the answers, but they believe (and it is just a belief) that the scientific method is the best way we have of eventually discovering all that can be known. Religions on the other hand arrogantly believe that they already know the answers to the most fundamental questions and that they have a right to impose their view of the world on everyone else.
Personally I am an atheist - I don't believe in things for which I see no evidence - but if it did turn out to be true that there is a super intelligent all powerful entity that created the universe it would be no more surpising than things I see every day.
my 2p
Has has been shown by Godal, Turing and others, there are many things that are true but which can never be proved to be true and many questions which can never be decided - even in principal.
The difference between science and region (IMHO) is that scientists for the most part are open minded and humble enough to admit that they don't know all the answers, but they believe (and it is just a belief) that the scientific method is the best way we have of eventually discovering all that can be known. Religions on the other hand arrogantly believe that they already know the answers to the most fundamental questions and that they have a right to impose their view of the world on everyone else.
Personally I am an atheist - I don't believe in things for which I see no evidence - but if it did turn out to be true that there is a super intelligent all powerful entity that created the universe it would be no more surpising than things I see every day.
my 2p
"That very perceptive of you Mr Stapleton, and rather unexpected... in a G Major"
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BoimB son of BoB
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'all powerfull' ey, well well ... an all powerfull entity ... a lot of people will froun (how do you spell that) at you for that. you call yourself an atheist. agnost seems better. there are a lot of jokes going around based on the ridicule of that. there is a profound incorrectness in the possibiliy of an all powerfull entity.nolus wrote:Science (apart from mathematics) can't "proove" anything. What it can do is propose theories whose predictive power can be tested by experiment. When the current best theory fails to agree with observed reality then it is ammended or if necessary replaced by a better theory. In this way scientists believe that they can get closer and closer to the truth.
Has has been shown by Godal, Turing and others, there are many things that are true but which can never be proved to be true and many questions which can never be decided - even in principal.
The difference between science and region (IMHO) is that scientists for the most part are open minded and humble enough to admit that they don't know all the answers, but they believe (and it is just a belief) that the scientific method is the best way we have of eventually discovering all that can be known. Religions on the other hand arrogantly believe that they already know the answers to the most fundamental questions and that they have a right to impose their view of the world on everyone else.
Personally I am an atheist - I don't believe in things for which I see no evidence - but if it did turn out to be true that there is a super intelligent all powerful entity that created the universe it would be no more surpising than things I see every day.
my 2p
super intelligent... why not, doesn't mean god. i rather believe in aliens so powerfull and intelligent that 'created ous' of at least set the seed. than a god. SG-1 isn't that far fetched
i totally agree with the science comment, though.
well, I don't actually believe that such an entity exists, just making the point that the idea doesn't seem totally absurd when compared to everyday experience, but that is not a reason to "believe" in it.
If accepting the possibility of something, while at the same time thinking it to be very unlikely and not actually believing in it, makes me an agnostic then fair
enough. I don't want to get bogged down in semantics.
I'm not familliar with the philosphical argument that rules out something being "all powerfull" - or "allmighty" for that matter - I'll need to think about that.
I've enjoyed your posts on this thread, you have said most of what I've been thinking but was too lazy to post myself.
and since you ask - its "frown"
If accepting the possibility of something, while at the same time thinking it to be very unlikely and not actually believing in it, makes me an agnostic then fair
enough. I don't want to get bogged down in semantics.
I'm not familliar with the philosphical argument that rules out something being "all powerfull" - or "allmighty" for that matter - I'll need to think about that.
I've enjoyed your posts on this thread, you have said most of what I've been thinking but was too lazy to post myself.
and since you ask - its "frown"
"That very perceptive of you Mr Stapleton, and rather unexpected... in a G Major"
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Meef Chaloin
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