S
spectrm
Guest
Part 1 - this 7000 character limit is killing me…damned MySQL.
I’m older, but Sideline and mine backgrounds are pretty similar (@sideline: I fell away from the faith ~13). We grew up in different parts of the world/country (presumably, I don’t actually know) with (statistically) average parents of average intelligence and average dedication to their faith. But leading different lives, out of phase with one another, we came to (thus far) the same conclusions regarding a godhead and various properties of the world in which we live. I feel sideline is on the right track. He’s smart, processes and presents information well, and is clear on his beliefs even if not overtly assertive (stay that way…no sense becoming an intellectual bully). He’s a few years behind me on his ‘apostacy’, chronologically and in age, and I certainly can’t speak for where his philosophical endeavors may lead him (mine lead me to a form of pantheism/metaphysical-naturalism - I don’t like the term ontological), but at least when he finds his answers, they’ll be truly HIS answers. I takes a lot of courage to stand-up and be an atheist (assuming he’s ‘come out’ to his family/friends).
No…what you’re doing is drawing a logical fallacy. Lack of conclusive evidence (because there’s mounds of circumstantial and observational evidence) is not proof for the competing argument. And even at that, an immaterial mind is not proof of a godhead. Honestly, you’re not giving me anything I didn’t get out of philo101. And you might expand on what you mean by ‘unorthodox views’ - unorthodox compared to?That’s a terrible comparison. Scientists tell me they know what the brain’s made of and its basic structures yet there is nothing near an explanation. Here I am offering evidence for the existence of God. And you have yet to offer me anything more than I could find in a science book well except for those unorthodox views.
There is the problem of reportablity - I agree. That’s a matter of contention to be dealt with when we’re at a level to carry out that type of research. We’re nowhere near that kind of neural observation, yet. There’s also (always) the whole “observing without disturbing” principle, so there are a number of tricks to be worked out. But this is all well down the road.Let’s say we do, let’s say a fetus produces brain waves…
You just couldn’t be more wrong. Yes, morals are human illusions. I don’t think that cheapens them in any way shape or form. As he was saying that, he was well aware that it was that illusion that prevented a person from killing him where he stood. As for your statement of conclusiveness, you’re right. It’s not anything conclusive. But I follow a school of science that recognizes peer collaborated subjective observation - aka common sense - and can certainly distinguish behaviors that are without direct evolutionary or stimulated causes. If it looks like a fish and smells like a fish and tastes like a fish…we can’t be 100%, but I’d say it’s a fish.Don’t delude yourself. Atheism is inherently nihilistic. Are you forgetting the implications of no free will? Even Dawkins has stated how morals are human illusions. If they evidence indicates, it accept it don’t deny it. What we know does indicate that animals are nothing more than extremely complex automatons. Their behavior as you have stated may indicate some form of consciousness but that is in now way conclusive.
All animals brains function the same way? Animal brains vary in composition, size, regions present…some animals have frontal lobes, some don’t. Some have regions near their hypothalamus that respond identically to the same regions on a human given the right stimuli. There is plenty of reason to believe that animals are conscious, if not self-aware. Behavioral patterns, brain-wave patterns, hormonal changes to environmental stimuli - all similar or parallel to the same brain activities in human beings. It’s a bit of inductive logic (which is reason enough in most cases, usually in academia, but rarely in science and never with me), but we see a brain activity and various other physiological changes at times when a subject reports a feeling of happiness. With the same electrodes on the same lobes, a dog being rewarded with attention from a master shows the same physiological changes. The conclusion seems fairly easy to draw to me. I’d like so conclusive evidence myself, so if you ever figure out how to communicate with dogs or cats, let me know (I’d really like to know why my cat insists on hair-balling on top of my servers).If an earthworm is any bit aware of its environment instead of just a machine responding to it then it has consciousness. Now from what we see, animals brains are all function in basically the same way. Since all of these brains arrangements of nerves how can anyone possibly say which animals are conscious, or self aware? It just doesn’t make sense.
frankly, I don’t know why you’re so caught up in atheist ‘orthodoxy’. Orthodoxy is your people’s bag. It’s not like there’s a place atheists meet up to talk about how cool atheism makes us feel, and how much more empowered and special we are because we’re atheist (that, again, is generally the behavior of the religious). There would be no reason to think mine and sideline’s thoughts on the matter would be the same - not with what you know as I type this period.I’m just pointing out an observation, I mean don’t you remember sideline? He accepted no form of an ethereal mind whatsoever, now that’s what you see in the mainstream.
I’m older, but Sideline and mine backgrounds are pretty similar (@sideline: I fell away from the faith ~13). We grew up in different parts of the world/country (presumably, I don’t actually know) with (statistically) average parents of average intelligence and average dedication to their faith. But leading different lives, out of phase with one another, we came to (thus far) the same conclusions regarding a godhead and various properties of the world in which we live. I feel sideline is on the right track. He’s smart, processes and presents information well, and is clear on his beliefs even if not overtly assertive (stay that way…no sense becoming an intellectual bully). He’s a few years behind me on his ‘apostacy’, chronologically and in age, and I certainly can’t speak for where his philosophical endeavors may lead him (mine lead me to a form of pantheism/metaphysical-naturalism - I don’t like the term ontological), but at least when he finds his answers, they’ll be truly HIS answers. I takes a lot of courage to stand-up and be an atheist (assuming he’s ‘come out’ to his family/friends).