Chris - those points i made, somewhere in there i said i'm just going off your own points, not necessarily saying you have no basis and that I don't respect your own beliefs in the validity of your own points. i wanted to stress that i am not picking on you or seeking to debunk any of you beliefs and/or prove you wrong. I'm just following tangents based off what people said in this thread, and both you and Zephyrus made more comments ... so i had lots of responses.
ok, now:
1. Chris: " The reason that one isn't open to interpretation is because I just don't think it is - it's clearer than the others. It was a matter of opinion. I thought that much was obvious... "
It wasn't obvious. You said you didn't think it was open to interpretation and didn't say why. So now I know it's cause you think it's clearer. I still think though that "clearer" is relative and that based off my "translation" theories that a concrete and immutable understanding of the bible at all in its entirety or any one chapter (genesis included) is impossible unless God tells us himself.
2. Chris: "When I'm talking about not being able to believe it about millions of other species, I'm talking about this planet - I don't think there have been millions of mutated humans here on Earth that have died out - if you believe in Darwin's theories or most theories of evolution, that goes with it. Doesn't seem too likely to me. "
again, why? it's the likeliness factor i don't get. i ean, why is it unlikely? we don't know what god did or chose to do prior to our existence and he may have indeed had some practice shots. then again, he might not have. i'm not arguing for or against it, i'm just arguing it's as likely as anything else. it may seem extraordinary and unlikely to the christian from faith beliefs, but a belief in god is just as extraordinary to the non-believer.
3. Chris: "I understand that not everyone "blocks out" God because of their own sins, but I think plenty do. Some don't like the idea of someone more powerful and more in control than they are - they think a God means they have no control. Things like this can be concious or subconcious, and I think most Non-Christians have something similar to that going on. "
whoah, that's a real heavy generalization. that's why i had something to say on the topic earlier. but you're sticking to your guns, and that's your prerogative. feeling you have no control is not a natural conclusion to avoid responsibility for sin. to wish to avoid that responsibility you have to BELIEVE in sin. the only way to believe in sin is to believe in the bible and in god. how is that possible if you don't believe in god?
4. Chris: "It has always been human nature to jump to conclusions on scientific matters"
i would argue this against both science and religion. it is also human nature to jump to conclusions on religious matters. those conclusions are based on "fact" statements/lessons (and relative interpretations) from texts. the same goes for science. yet theories can be disproven, and, i believe, so can many of the theories that come from people (televangelists, pastors within churches, parents teaching their children) who draw ways of living (parallel to ways of science) from these texts. it is ALL relative. neither science nor religion will ever have it completely right until they both get all the data from the big boss man (or beings) himself.
so, to chris, i'd say: just because things can be disproven does not mean the whole thing (science) or most of it is bunk.
and to zephyrus: just because things have remained "true" and seem to "work" when tested again and again does not mean the whole thing (science) should be the rubric by which the world goes.
basically, i take both religion and science with a grain of salt.
5. zephyrus: "Sorry Miriam, have to disagree there. Math is invented based on observations of the universe around us. If you say it's not fact, can I therefore conclude that 1+1 is not equal to 2 because it is just fabricated to suit our needs? As far as light goes, it is hard to understand (which doesn't mean that it's inexplicable by mathematics). What it is basically is the wave/particle duality, because based on observations light sometimes behaves as waves (i.e. electromagnetic radiation) and sometimes as particles (i.e. matter). I can't really explain more without going into quantum physics... "
actually, who's to say that 1+1 does not equal 1? to better understand anything i think deconstruction is necessary. to see the whole picture you need to get out of the frame. that is all i am arguing here. what bests works for us now in this frame of reference might indeed wholly support that 1+1 is 2, and i would agree that it suits us in the living of our lives and the rules our currently civilization is based on. but what if at some point we evolve to beings that don't even need numbers? or where all knowledge makes sense on some other level or in some other way where 1+1 = 1 and nothing is separate and all things are equal?
i would phrase that for how things are now, you have stated it exactly: these things work "because it is just fabricated to suit our needs? " math is indeed invented. man created it. he created symbols to represent ideas that represent how the world works. man created the single line that represents a single object. perhaps that is why he trusts it more than he trusts religion - HE made it, not some voice in the sky. this may be why he depends upon the scientific domain rather than the spiritual. he is breaking it, as others have said here, into small parts that he can understand. the world may very well exist in such a way that small packets are not necessary and there is a larger scope (rather than numbers/formulae) to understand it in. i'm not saying it DOES. i think so. but i'm not so confident as to tell the world it must believe me.
as for quantum physics... dear friend, is spent an entire YEAR studying all and every facet of light. quantum physics included. i now know things that i will never be able to shake ... terribly useless but interesting information (for me
. anyway, i know how light works. at the basic level, i still believe it's all theory. to have the notion that light even behaves as a "wave" or as "matter" is invented in itself. i'm not saying it's untrue or not right or implausible. i'm just saying it's invented. which it is. cause only man invented that idea or those terms to couch it in.
more zephyrus: "Einstein's Theory of Relativity has been tested to such a huge extent (with no major flaws or violations of the universe being found) that it is considered to be more an axiom or fact(something that is assumed automatically without requiring proof) rather than a theory. And it works very well countless times in explaining what goes on on the atomic level, which can't otherwise be explained. "
"which can't otherwise be explained" - that's the clincher here. who's to say that in 20 years or 100 someone isn't gonna find another way to explain it that also works and doesn't seem to fail the requisite examinations? will it disprove Einstein? or will there just be multiple ways to see it? and the other point - man seeks a way to explain things and therefore makes up rules to fit that. that's what that phrase also implies.
6. ok, zephyrus quoted me talking about the universe: ". thmilin: "But we don't know the size of the universe nor our size in terms of it. Science can yap all it wants but if there are multiple universes around us then we've got a limited knowledge base. science is only trying to make sense of what it knows in it's limited space range (earth/any universes/galaxies we know of) and cannot presume that at any given time it's found it all. say we're a house in a fenced-in yard. scientists are sniffing all over the yard and may think they've got it all figured out but there's still a little gate that leads out to the street, and the neighborhood, and the next street, and ... etc."
Sorry once again, scientists actually do know the size of the observable universe, and every possible calculation shows that our universe is expanding at an increasing rate. We are not even a grain of sand in the desert of the universe, we're even less significant. "
your statement does not disprove mine. i said that scientists are sniffing in a YARD. and that science is only making sense of what it KNOWS. i did not say that scientists don't know (or think they know) the size of the OBSERVABLE universe. I'm saying there is an inherent flaw in determining the relation of things from the house (earth) to the yard (the observable universe) when there is an UNknowable universe beyond it. there is ALWAYS going to be something more that scientists haven't found, don't know, and for however much they find out, they won't know something else.
as for calculations that the universe is expanding, that's the knowable universe. what about the universe out there scientists haven't encountered yet? it's concentric circles and we don't know how far those rings go.
also, i made that statement in relation to YOUR comment:
quote Zephyrus: "But what they sometimes fail to realise is the actual size of the universe, and by this alone, every random event has a small probability of happening, which in a universe of this size can become significant. "
where it seems you're arguing that the size of the universe is rather constrained, at least enough to make some probability and it's happening "significant" where in this argument you've just posted that :" We are not even a grain of sand in the desert of the universe, we're even less significant. "
which i agree with, by the way, but this seems to contradict what you said before. which was what i was responding to before anyway. tell me if i'm wrong, but i'm making that link, between US being significant and random events/their probability being significant because you were speaking of random events in relation to humanoid races having just "happened" upon this planet and the likelyhood, which Chris thought was unlikely.
ok, my hands are tired ...