L
Lochias
Guest
I’ll go ahead and bow out of this particular discussion. Have a good n’.I have no problem adjusting them if there’s a good reason
Sarah x![]()
I’ll go ahead and bow out of this particular discussion. Have a good n’.I have no problem adjusting them if there’s a good reason
Sarah x![]()
Where can I find the peer reviewed papers on this - where the tissue was examined by unbiased patholgists, cardiologists and biochemists under strict conditions and they confirmed they do indeed have a piece of heart tissue that is alive and beating under the microscope?Lochias,
It is sometimes what you don’t know that causes a problem.
Pathology specimens can be in many forms…fresh, fresh frozen, in preservative…if you watch the video, at about 1:33…the specimen is placed in water…
Now this is a miracle. Any tissue placed in water will swell and become distorted and die…the other thing as to the tissue examine…there can be evidence of trauma from the stains…and what you see in the video is what is called H & E or Hemotoxylin and Eosin stain…you can see evidence of trauma and conclude that it was external…beaten, possibly…trauma yes.
Now the other thing is who did this work…notice that the Dr. referred to is…Dr. Fredericke Zugibe, he says is a Cardiologist, Pathologist and Biochemist…
e-forensicmedicine.net/
So, if it was a specimen in water, it is a miracle that it has survived…if it was examined by Dr. Zugibe, then he is not just some Pathologist…and when the video says the tech evaluated…he probably meant the Pathologist…OK
Sarah,Where can I find the peer reviewed papers on this - where the tissue was examined by unbiased patholgists, cardiologists and biochemists under strict conditions and they confirmed they do indeed have a piece of heart tissue that is alive and beating under the microscope?
Anywhere?
Has this work even been done?
Surely a scientific marvel such as a beating heart issue on a glass slide would be passed around for other scientists to examine and confirm - scientists with no invested interests unlike Dr. Zugibe, who personally met Sr Lucia one of the Fatima children and lectured to her community, and who was one of the participants of the first annual Rosary Congress at the National Shrine of Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Middletown , N.Y.
Sarah x![]()
Nope.Sarah,
Let me know what you come up with… I will look as well.![]()
Source?the kind we know that were present at the formation of the earth,
Oh there’s lots, as I’m sure you’re well aware, but here’s a great three part video series you can listen to in the background while you get on with other things:Source?
A highly speculative video.Oh there’s lots, as I’m sure you’re well aware, but here’s a great three part video series you can listen to in the background while you get on with other things:
youtube.com/watch?v=PqPGOhXoprU
Jack Szostak - and he comes with a stamp of approval from our very own Al Mortiz*
Sarah x
- I’m not saying Al agrees with him, just that he rates him as a credible scientist.
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No problem with that. It’s how we discover things and get to the truth.A highly speculative video.
I have no idea. It’s not my fieldDid we have a reducing atmosphere? or not?
At the least a neutral atmosphere with local reducing sources, but much more likely a fully reducing atmosphere, yes. See my article:A highly speculative video.
Did we have a reducing atmosphere? or not?
I only know two scientists in our company that probably (not certainly) are atheists, and I know of several who definitely believe in God. But of course, I have not done a study. Yet the anecdotal evidence does not at all support the notion that scientists tend to be atheists.BTW, Al, I keep reading studies that very high percentages of scientists do not believe in God. As a scientist has this been your experience talking to colleagues? I’m very distrustful of “studies” because the way a study is worded and conducted can have such a great effect on the outcome.
Sarah,
Let me know what you come up with… I will look as well.![]()
Any luck there CC finding anything to corroborate these claims in the peer reviewed scientific literature? I’ve drawn a complete blank. Like I said above, I can’t even find the name of this so called lab this all took place at.Nope.
Nothing.
Just the same one devout Catholic pathologist.
No peer reviewed papers, no evidence of other scientists looking at it, heck, why weren’t the news crews called to this lab to witness to the world this marvel of scientific and medical defiance?
I can’t even find where this ‘‘lab’’ is in New York that the discovery was made.
Total lack of credibilty - to me.
Sarah x![]()
Sarah,Any luck there CC finding anything to corroborate these claims in the peer reviewed scientific literature? I’ve drawn a complete blank. Like I said above, I can’t even find the name of this so called lab this all took place at.
Sarah x![]()
Hi Lochias,There’s just no pleasing some people.If science can explain it, then it can’t possibly be divine, and if science can’t explain it, well, purple monkey dishwasher too-ra-loo-ra-loo.
There are also other miracles that you’re leaving out of the equation; the Eucharistic miracles in which the Host turns to actual flesh and blood, the incorruptible bodies of the saints; these have been examined and re-examined.
It just goes to show that there are some people who really, truly, don’t want to believe. Given the human capacity for deluding ourselves in many walks of life, it doesn’t surprise me, to be honest.
Heya Vivi,Hi Lochias,
Why should we use science at all? Why not use logic entirely? As logic can tell us about supernatural things, and science cannot tell us about supernatural things, and we have no way of differentiating between what is natural and what is supernatural, shouldn’t we use logic exclusively and throw science out the window?
- V
An issue for me is that heart tissue decays like any other meat, yet when examined by Dr. Zugibe the famous pathologist, not only had it not decayed but was alive and beating. This would be front page news and of immense value to medical science, yet Zugibe doesn’t shout it from the rooftops, he doesn’t even mention it on his website, as if he’s never heard of it.I think there’s some questions raised about these miracles. I watched this video some time ago. I must admit, I didn’t find the chain of events secure for a start - but I’m wondering, can a coroner tell if someone was beaten up by looking at their heart tissue?
I posted the surveys about evolutionary biologists and atheism. If I remember it was in the 70% range.I only know two scientists in our company that probably (not certainly) are atheists, and I know of several who definitely believe in God. But of course, I have not done a study. Yet the anecdotal evidence does not at all support the notion that scientists tend to be atheists.
I guess there is much ado about nothing on this issue.
There are several threads here in which non catholics have shared thesis motivations. The reasons vary a good bit.This is a trenchant point, when one considers why non-Catholics have chosen this particular forum in which to dialogue.
Why not go to a JW forum?
I don’t know the answer as to why each individual comes here, but something draws them to Catholic Answers, and it is interesting to consider why…![]()
EXACTLY!!!An issue for me is that heart tissue decays like any other meat, yet when examined by Dr. Zugibe the famous pathologist, not only had it not decayed but was alive and beating. This would be front page news and of immense value to medical science, yet Zugibe doesn’t shout it from the rooftops, he doesn’t even mention it on his website, as if he’s never heard of it.
And instead of the news being splashed across world TV with a press release from the Vatican, we only get to hear of it through a YouTube video.