Does anybody else here ever get the feeling that we constantly argue outside topics that we have grounds to support? I'm not talking about specific posters here; I'm thinking more of a general quirk of the human mind. This is a bad example, but look at the obnoxiously ongoing is-there-a-god argument. If god does exist, s/he is naturally going to stand at such a basic level of reality as to be indeterminate by any methods. I've said this before and didn't really get an answer, but how do you test for the presence of an omnipresent being? How do you base a test for which there is no possible way of receiving negative results? If god is everywhere, s/he is part of the scenery, so to speak, and by accustomed presence might very well be imperceptible. The answer comes back: "the existence of god is ridiculously improbable." How does one get odds for that sort of thing? Out of a survey of 3000 parallel universes, how many were discovered to have come into being as a result of deity-related circumstances? Here it's just a trick of semantics that causes the problem, but hopefully you get my point. It's a fundamental aspect of reality we don't have the experience to measure. That's just an example that came to mind-I'm not trying to harass atheists specifically. It's much easier to identify fallacies in others than it is to see your own.
Or evolution. It cannot be proved or disproved sans time travel. And the idea that there are two possibilities(god made it versus organisms with disadvantageous traits and/or mutations are killed off in a gradual process of refinement of traits of a species, combined with advantageous traits being propagated, all within the context of environment-specific stimuli) are all there is, well, it seems absurd. Lamarck was definitely wrong, so far as we can tell; the effects of exercise or effort are not transmitted between generations. But it feels odd that there are no other possibilities besides those two. The theory is far too convoluted to be proven by any means as a mechanism of biological development, and there could be some other, equally bizarre explanation. Who knows? Do we just argue unfounded specifics for our own peace of mind, or is there another reason?
I think I've been reading too much Shakespeare. Blame the class.
Or evolution. It cannot be proved or disproved sans time travel. And the idea that there are two possibilities(god made it versus organisms with disadvantageous traits and/or mutations are killed off in a gradual process of refinement of traits of a species, combined with advantageous traits being propagated, all within the context of environment-specific stimuli) are all there is, well, it seems absurd. Lamarck was definitely wrong, so far as we can tell; the effects of exercise or effort are not transmitted between generations. But it feels odd that there are no other possibilities besides those two. The theory is far too convoluted to be proven by any means as a mechanism of biological development, and there could be some other, equally bizarre explanation. Who knows? Do we just argue unfounded specifics for our own peace of mind, or is there another reason?
I think I've been reading too much Shakespeare. Blame the class.
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