R
rossum
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And Buddhism goes back to at least the Buddha Dipankara, 32,000 years ago. There were many earlier Buddhas, but I don’t have dates for them.Christianity goes back to the garden of Eden
rossum
And Buddhism goes back to at least the Buddha Dipankara, 32,000 years ago. There were many earlier Buddhas, but I don’t have dates for them.Christianity goes back to the garden of Eden
You are probably correct about DNA, but you are certainly incorrect about RNA. RNA can be “useful and operative” outside of a living organism. Google “ribozymes” for an example. That is the reason for a lot of abiogenesis research being focussed on the RNA World.DNA is the blueprint of life. DNA points beyond itself to life; it is ordered to life. DNA, to be useful and operative, itself requires a living organism.
We have made a start on the origins of consciousness. Various animals, mostly mammals and a small number of birds, have been shown to possess self-conciousness.You are pretending as if there is anything remotely like an adequate materialist theory to explain the development of conscious experience or consciousness; or even one that explains it as it is.
Biological life (that is material life) is much less of a mystery. Vitalism has long been disproven. I am Buddhist so there is no mystery attached to the soul: souls does not exist so there can be no mystery attached to them.Life remains a scientific mystery, rossum; and especially those aspects of life traditionally associated with the classical doctrine of the soul (i.e. the life-principle).
In all my years at universities across the United States and in France, I never remember anyone asking about the limitations of science. I have taken many courses in science and engineering, and philosophy was not part of the curriculum. Even the history of science emphasizes achievements in scientific knowledge rather than doubting the applicability to human affairs.No. The limits can be mentioned briefly at the start, and repeated whenever a pupil askes a question outside those limits.
Not opposed, merely point out that the scientist is talking outside his or her area of expertise. That does not make the scientist either right or wrong, merely not an expert in the topic at hand. Some scientists write pro-religion books while other scientists write anti-religion books.
Probably at university level. It is a complex subject and needs a lot of background in philosophy before it can be fully appreciated. You don’t teach Bessel Functions to ten year olds.
rossum
You are quoting St. Paul who never met Jesus. He may have been an apostle, but he is interpreting the teachings of Jesus before the Gospels were written. This is highly conjectural.Romans 1:20: For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even his eternal power and Godhead; so that they are without excuse:
Whether or not the Gospels record the Lord preaching about the orderly goodness of Creation is irrelevant: it is a belief already well-testified to in the Old Testament and a doctrine that the Apostles continued in their preaching.
Again, Romans 1:20, “For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen… so that they are without excuse”.
I was not thinking so much about direct questions, which are indeed rare, but about indirect questions, “What does science tell us about…” where the topic is outside of science.In all my years at universities across the United States and in France, I never remember anyone asking about the limitations of science. I have taken many courses in science and engineering, and philosophy was not part of the curriculum. Even the history of science emphasizes achievements in scientific knowledge rather than doubting the applicability to human affairs.
Catholics believe that the entirety of the Scriptures, including that which St. Paul penned, is the Word of God. Not just what Jesus proclaimed.You are quoting St. Paul who never met Jesus. He may have been an apostle, but he is interpreting the teachings of Jesus before the Gospels were written. This is highly conjectural.
You do a disservice to Christian non-Catholics. All of Christianity respects the New Testament.Catholics believe that the entirety of the Scriptures, including that which St. Paul penned, is the Word of God. Not just what Jesus proclaimed.
At any rate, it is only through the Catholic Church that you can know what Jesus even said, so if the Church says something came from God, then you have the same assurance that it came from Christ.
Of course.You do a disservice to Christian non-Catholics. All of Christianity respects the New Testament.
I, too, am a confirmed skeptic.Whether you respect it or believe every word as it has been translated into English from the original Greek is not valid for a Biblical scholar who is trying to determine the veracity of that text. Scholarship takes a skeptical attitude, which is different from a credulous attitude ready to believe anything from an authoritative figure, whether supported by solid evidence or not. I’m a confirmed skeptic, so your words make little impact on me.
He met Jesus on the road to Damascus:You are quoting St. Paul who never met Jesus. He may have been an apostle, but he is interpreting the teachings of Jesus before the Gospels were written. This is highly conjectural.
Firstly, our intellects were given to us to understand and to judge and to draw conclusions. I don’t need a scientist to tell me whether or not God exists or whether or not the entire universe, from the beginning of time, has functioned in an orderly fashion according to His Divine Will to accomplish His Divine purpose ( i.e. that it reflect as closely as possible his Goodness).And you have no evidence to disprove the existence of Russell’s Teapot. That is not how science works.
It is obvious that you have no substantive evidence, and that all biological systems function so as to bring about the end goal of reproducing successfully. Natural selection is a sufficient explanation for that goal. Any assertion of a designer needs to be supported by independent evidence of the existence of the designer(s) at the appropriate time and place.
You are falling back, yet again, or “It sure looks designed to me”. I have already told you that I do not accept your statement. I can explain the existence of MRSA. Are you telling us that your proposed designer wants to kill hospital patients by infecting them with the specially designed MRSA bacteria?
rossum
Look at that “given”. Who gave? Vishnu? Thor? Durga? What is your independent evidence of the existence of any giver? I hope you realise that assuming what you have to prove is not the way to win an argument.Firstly, our intellects were given to us to understand and to judge and to draw conclusions.
And all are biological. Were they designed by your proposed designer? If they were not designed, then what processes gave rise to them?Of course MRSA, Aids, Thyphoid, etc. are horrible afflictions.
Those who are seeking the truth will recognize the truth. So I’m not worried.Look at that “given”. Who gave? Vishnu? Thor? Durga? What is your independent evidence of the existence of any giver? I hope you realise that assuming what you have to prove is not the way to win an argument.
And all are biological. Were they designed by your proposed designer? If they were not designed, then what processes gave rise to them?
You are giving me a lot of opinion and non-biological arguments. Those do not cut a great deal of ice in a discussion about biological design.
rossum
Right. And the aliens in Starship Troopers are at least 20 billion years old.And Buddhism goes back to at least the Buddha Dipankara, 32,000 years ago. There were many earlier Buddhas, but I don’t have dates for them.
rossum
Actually he did meet God.You are quoting St. Paul who never met Jesus. He may have been an apostle, but he is interpreting the teachings of Jesus before the Gospels were written. This is highly conjectural.
Acts 9 KJV said:9 Then Saul, still breathing threats and murder against the disciples of the Lord, went to the high priest 2 and asked letters from him to the synagogues of Damascus, so that if he found any who were of the Way, whether men or women, he might bring them bound to Jerusalem.
3 As he journeyed he came near Damascus, and suddenly a light shone around him from heaven. 4 Then he fell to the ground, and heard a voice saying to him, “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting Me?”
5 And he said, “Who are You, Lord?”
Then the Lord said, “I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting.
No, rossum, neither RNA or DNA means anything outside of a living organism.You are probably correct about DNA, but you are certainly incorrect about RNA. RNA can be “useful and operative” outside of a living organism. Google “ribozymes” for an example. That is the reason for a lot of abiogenesis research being focussed on the RNA World.
No, rossum: again, if we have, claim your Nobel Prize.We have made a start on the origins of consciousness.
Stating the obvious, rossum. It’s not the fact that they have consciousness; it’s the fact of consciousness that is “the problem” for modern science. As one of the fathers of Quantum theory put it, the mechanistic world-view leads to “a strange situation…” (Schrodinger).Various animals, mostly mammals and a small number of birds, have been shown to possess self-conciousness.
Oxymoron. You are asking the readers here to pretend there is no difference between a rock and a tree. By “biological life” you mean animate matter. You can’t explain the animate bit anymore than any scientist can.Biological life (that is material life)
False.is much less of a mystery.
Vital means the difference between the living and the dead. There is no chemical formula that equals ("=") life; otherwise, every atheist who hates Catholicism would be here giving it. And there’s no shortage, even if they were atheists turned Buddhists like a few people I know (and you are starting to explain why some atheists I knew became “Buddhists”) who would be here proclaiming it to dismiss us Christians.Vitalism has long been disproven.
Naturally since the quote you gave us earlier from a Buddhist (apparently not so ‘spirtual’) text denies it even exists at all! It’s easy (or just intellecually lazy) to dismiss the fact that your imagination, e.g., represents the likeness of bodies without those physical bodies actually being physically present in your brain (or wherever). You are also pretending that what you know as “red” is explicable in terms of modern mechanistic ‘science’; but it is actually not. Once more you are pretending as if the mind-body problem did not exist. It does. And you can keep up your protests after you claim your Nobel Prize for solving these problems. You have not.I am Buddhist so there is no mystery attached to the soul:
Which is like saying blue does not exist and, therefore, there can be no mystery attached to it. Actually, for your style of eliminativism, it doesn’t exist.souls does not exist so there can be no mystery attached to them.
I assume the points you wanted to make are those in red.Self-delusion can be responsible for the reporting of miracles and revelations. . . . (Some have interpreted St. Paul’s temporary blindness as hysterical.) . . . there was no scientific evidence of animal magnetism and that the cures attributed to it may have either happened through a normal remission of the problem or that the cure was some form of self-delusion.
That depends on a person’s conviction that skepticism of the Church’s teachings is bad. Being skeptical of revelations and miracles says nothing about a person’s faith in God. It is a good habit, because it protects one from being hornswoggled. Also, believing every word in the Bible even though it is not generally read in the original Hebrew and Greek by English speaking people, often results in uncertainties of the real meaning of the words. This has been pointed out by many biblical scholars and is noted by Karen Armstrong in “The Bible: A Biography”.You are not going to be taken seriously by Catholics.
Watching someone repeatedly repudiating God and His Word is worse than seeing a train wreck.
Please stop.
Pretty much every religion has its stories – parables if you will. Those stories make a valid point, but are not always to be treated literally.Right. And the aliens in Starship Troopers are at least 20 billion years old.
False. Your sources are misinforming you. Google “ribozyme” and “Spiegelman Monster”. Do not believe everything you get from those sources, they are scientifically incorrect.No, rossum, neither RNA or DNA means anything outside of a living organism.
It is equally a problem for theology. Is God conscious? What is the theological explanation for the origin of consciousness?Stating the obvious, rossum. It’s not the fact that they have consciousness; it’s the fact of consciousness that is “the problem” for modern science.
You are projecting here. Just because you cannot explain it, does not mean that other people cannot explain it. Vitalism was discredited a long time ago.Oxymoron. You are asking the readers here to pretend there is no difference between a rock and a tree. By “biological life” you mean animate matter. You can’t explain the animate bit anymore than any scientist can.
Shall we agree that we do not insult each other’s scriptures? Buddhism is not Christianity, so of course their scriptures differ.Naturally since the quote you gave us earlier from a Buddhist (apparently not so ‘spirtual’) text…
Blue is an adjective, it is not a noun. You can show me a blue object; you cannot show me blue on its own, detached from anything else. Similarly, life is a property of certain objects. It is not something that stands on its own; you cannot show me life detached from everything else.Which is like saying blue does not exist and, therefore, there can be no mystery attached to it. Actually, for your style of eliminativism, it doesn’t exist.
The Matrix was external. Our illusions are internal. Just like a mirage, there is no water in the external world, but our brains and senses misperceive the world and think that there is water when there is none. A lot of Buddhist meditation is designed to rid ourselves of our internal misperceptions.So, from your representation of Buddhism, I am supposed to believe that the human experiece as we live and breathe it is a grand illusion. Buddhists are, apparently, the inspiration of the Matrix.