Wow Stealth3si I had a TON of time on his hands! GEEEEZ!
Ha. This is the only time I have on the forum.
Why do you care?
I already stated this-- I just want people to look at the big picture rather than sit in their little box of irrational hatred to anyone who thinks otherwise. Religious extremists do this very well. Basically I just find this a major problem with humanity in my eyes-- "Don't believe what I believe? Well you're going to hell then!". It's much worse when they have power. ![Sad :(](//d1o9fadw0wez7f.cloudfront.net/Smileys/Lots_O_Smileys/sad.png)
I did not see any one here in this forum hating others.
All I saw was you calling people irrational for being irrational.
But you also seem to me looking down on others who aren't being logical as you would be, or especially, believing in something you don't like.
Why do you care?
Oh and about the dinosaur/ark thing if you're still curious about why I said it...I see it preached massively within the confines of creationist science websites and books. Hell, my neighbor even spurted it at me a while back. It's just ludicrous. So I just thought with all the people in this post saying that they believe the ark happened and quoting CS websites, that some probably believe that as well. An assumption? Sure. Don't overthink it.
Seems like extreme fundamentalism.
I would think the global flood of Noah, followed by an ice age due to climactic shifts, could have well driven them to extinction.
Really, I view them as just another extinct species, like the dodo.
Hence, from a biblical worldview it seems like a large reptile would not fair too well in a world chilled. However, why is the saber toothed cat gone? I have no idea, but extinctions have always occured and fairly rapidly, which would explain why we see greater bio-diversity within the fossil record. Without intervention from governments, our generation would have spelled the end to the elephant and tiger, and many of the mightiest of beasts. Earlier generations have generally been crappy conservationists; hence, an extinct mighty beast seems very plausible from human or natural causes, but after a global flood, we would expect a climactic shift in much the same way the huricanes in FL kept Chicago unseasonably warm until one morning.
Homer said "Facts are meaningless. They can prove anything that is even remotely true."
All of these seem like a rather petty obstacle when compared to creating and organizing the cosmos from scratch.
The whole main point of my frustration with ark-believers is their unwillingness to be rational when trying to prove it happened.
You must take into account that this particular story involves the Christian belief in a biblical God. A God who stretches beyond science, knowledge and understanding. A God who is believed to have made the sun sit still in the sky, a God who created the universe, created heaven, made man out of dust and woman out of a rib, a God who parted a sea...the list of unbelievable stories goes on. The supporters of this story believe in that. To try and use the argument that "the story isn't logical or probable" holds no ground in a discussion involving a very strong belief in an extraordinary God. To use that argument one would have to first disprove the existence of a God, and rid all belief of him in the believers.
Whether or not it happened wouldn't be an issue if god is presupposed.
It just perplexes me how they will defend something they've probably been thinking since childhood and never questioned it. You'd think once you hit a certain age, you'd do so.
I think you're perplexed because unbelievers can try to smuggle empirical thoughts into a theistic worldview and materialize raw proven facts like "no geological proof" but when directly faced with a Christian narrative that arches a biblical thread of continuity of the "flood epic" of Noah's Ark they will run into the same impasse because they are approaching the question with drastically different presuppositions. Every single piece of evidence, every single argument presented will necessarily be interpreted differently by each side. For one who assumes naturalism and does not allow for the possibility of a supernatural explanation, of course a supernatural event will be thought to be impossible. His argument is necessarily circular, going back to his ultimate commitment to naturalism. Likewise, the Christian's argument will necessarily be circular, as he will continually go back to his ultimate reference point, his belief in God. If it were not so, it would not truly be his ultimate commitment. "Raw proven facts" simply will not do, as the facts mean very different things to the theist and the atheist.
It's like you telling me your grandpa is completely right about 2=1 after you've matured and there's no way he could be wrong. End of story. Gate's closed. Don't say anything else. I won't take any other answer but that one.
My point was there was no problem with the story, but how people read into the story.
The world is full of morons until they finally bring in the light? Come on now, this is chronological snobbery. If you can't embrace all of history then you ought to suspect that you're being a bit too narrow in your judgment of history.
I'm not sure if you got my point so I'll make this example quick-- The discovery of bacteria meant we should alter our way of thinking about..a doctor handling newborn children after...handling a diseased cadaver by cleaning himself so the disease cannot spread. We were 'brought into the light' as you put it and it improved our way of doing things. But what if doctors kept doing things the old way despite the new evidence and just shut their ears yelling "LALALALA I CAN'T HEAR YOU I AM NOT LISTENING!"? Not good! My point was simply to show that the old way of thinking isn't necessarily the most logical way of thinking (a lesser example? the ark story). This just ties into my paragraph above I guess
I got your point, which is you're actually showing an elitist mindset of Enlightenment dogma. It is this 21st century post-modern understanding of paradigm shifting in scientific discoveries that parades itself as your standard of human progress but really dehumanizes people and waters science down.
And my point is, look, even at least be a little less harsh on a person like Aristotle. He was the greatest scientist of all time (arguably?). He worked in astronomy, meteorology, physics, geology, biology, and psychology. (Not to mention philosophy, logic, poetry, literary theory, rhetoric, politics, political theory, and training Alexander the Great...) Instead of treating the senses disparagingly (as have most people who have said that they wanted to "shun traditional dogmatisms," your characterization of the Enlightenment of science, like the early Greek philosophers, Descartes, etc.), he
used them, filling his Lyceum with specimens, engaging in experiments, etc.
Granted, at some point he trusted his "reason" a bit too much -- for instance, he assumed that a large stone would fall more quickly than a small stone -- but when you're not only writing the Encyclopedia Brittanica but inventing the disciplines and doing all the scholarship that the Encyclopedia studies, there's only so much you can do. A thousand years from now we'll have plenty of comparable reasons to "mock" Galileo, and perhaps the 20th century will be painted at the idyllic era in which some thinkers finally broke the oppressive chains of modernist tyranny and finally started to "think for themselves" instead of trusting Enlightenment dogma. Hopefully my counterpart in that era will be unimpressed with that kind of talk?
Can you explain to me how we can observe 4.5 billion years of evolution?
Delorean + Flux Capacitor = Answer
Precisely my point.