B
buffalo
Guest
Correct, the odds are indeed small.Despite the admittedly small odds, there is at least evidence that it happened, which is far more than you have to support your hypotheses. Relatively speaking, evolution is infinitely more likely than IDC - evolution has evidence supporting it, no other hypothesis has any. Non-zero divided by zero is infinity. So you’re not really in a position to go citing the odds. And against the backdrop of time over which the universe has existed, the odds are not so remote as they first seem.
I have no idea what you mean by this comment. Are you still equivocating on the meaning of “faith?”
God clearly does not subject himself to any kind of test whatsoever for his existence! Given your claimed (but not evident) support of science, I wonder why you believe in him.
And I have to ask - how do you know what God’s intentions are? You’re confidently claiming that he’s decided not to prove his existence, one wonders how you’ve come by this privileged information. In fact, one might almost suspect you are making stuff up in an attempt to justify an irrational belief in a non-existent phenomenon.
But no such rational reasoning has ever been published - just wishy-washy philosophical car-crashes of faulty logic and baseless assumptions. As for Revelation - what is that other than someone’s personal conviction? Why should the rest of us be convinced just because you are? If I were convinced that everybody had an invisble head in addition to their visible one, would that be enough for you to believe it too?
Hello - IDvolution is the conclusion reached by connecting the dots. The conclusion is reached by drawing on most of the very same science you use to claim micro-evolution, aka adaptation (we now are starting to understand exactly what programmed adaptation can do). In comparison science does far more work than is published in fields other than origins. It just so happens all the musings about forbidden subject_____ is well publicized. Actually we have more common acceptance of science except for the narrow areas of human origins and molecules to man belief.
Baloney - the odds are insurmountable. And the age of the earth just lost .6B years further increasing the odds.
Yes - faith - you have it - against insurmountable odds you cling to materialism.
Why I believe in God and still in science? Faith and reason cannot be opposed for they flow from the same God. The “word” of God cannot be in error. Revelation has a guarantor in the Holy Spirit. Truth cannot contradict truth. Now science is the study of the world around us. The reasoning of science is fallible as it is done by limited humans. It is limited by its own definition. Over and over again we see science overturn its own findings. To cling to such a shaky system as a complete description of the world is irrational. Between that and the odds I cannot see how you can cling to it. Perhaps the low numbers of atheists should speak for itself.
There is so much evidence for God from reasoning. Couple that with Revelation and it is very persuasive.
God has shown His existence and at least one time did subject Himself to an empirical test. This was when He appeared to the Apostles after His resurrection and Thomas did not believe until He put his fingers into His wounds.
Why do Catholics understand God not to be empirically testable? Think about it - if He came down and appeared in all His glory you may submit, but in what fashion would you submit? His show of force would be convincing, but like a father and a son He would rather you love Him freely.
If you like we can revisit the Arguments for God and discuss them one by one. My guess is you will summarily dismiss them due to a priori bias.
No - to the invisible head. This type of argument is bogus and you could do better.