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#431
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On Tuesday, October 30, 2018 at 10:22:12 PM UTC-6, Paul Schlyter wrote:
On Tue, 30 Oct 2018 07:01:55 -0700 (PDT), Gary Harnagel wrote: Paul wrote: I don't know anyone who motivate their religious belief on scientific grounds. Do you? I was mainly referring to atheists but some other religions do too. Apart from Christian Science, which religiond do that? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_Science https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scient...of_Scientology science today. Now, if the "One True Supreme God" would choose to reveal itself to us humans on a larger scale, the situation would become very different. But for some strange reason that hasn't happened in modern times, despite the description of numerous such revelations have been described, both in the Bible and in the Holy Scriptures of other religions. How come? Does the "One Supreme True God" enjoy playing hide-and-seek with us? I believe He HAS revealed Himself, it's just that YOUR definition of "reveal" is different from mine. A genuine revelation would also convince skeptics and non-believers. Highly doubtful. Like e.g. a total solar eclipse, after the eclipse only maniacs would deny that it happened. An all-powerful God who wants people to acknowledge his existence could easily do that. So why doesn't it happen? Perhaps you misunderstand what God "wants." There are many measurements of the universe confirming that the visible matter alone cannot account for the observed movements in and among the galaxies. And it is still unexplained. And some scientists disagree: Does it disturb you that there are phenomena for which we have found no scientific explanation yet? "Disturb" isn't the right word. "Challenge" is more like it. If science had explanations for everything, then there would be no new science left to do... Indeed. However, even if we don't yet know what dark matter is, there is still plenty of good evidence that dark matter does exist. As I said, some scientists disagree. Milgram and McGaugh, for example. The only measurement of a human body losing weight you can point to is one single measurement made by one individual in isolation. Even you admit that it is a very meager set of empirical data. More empirical data is needed before any reasonably reliable conclusion can be made, either way. You keep trying to dismiss the data. Why? Does it make you uncomfortable? Not particularly. But it is disturbing that you are so overly confident in it. It is like trying to talk to a UFO zealot. You seem to be in denial, even to the point of falsely claiming there was only ONE measurement. This is untrue. Just like atheists are. Only the hard atheists which claim there cannot be any suprebe being in existence. You cannot accuse the soft atheists for this, they merely claim we don't know if there is a supreme being or not. You're describing agnostics, not atheists. I was actually talking about non-theists in general. The hard atheists you refer to are a small minority. But they are quite vociferous. I'm mostly describing myself here. I consider myself an agnostic, but you have called me an atheist several times. Which means that in your vocabulary, someone who claims we don't know if there is a supreme being or not is an atheist. The Jews thought that they would gladly accept their Messiah, too, but they didn't. You believe that you would accept REAL evidence, but you demand "scientific" evidence. You require evidence on YOUR terms, not God's. And you strongly exaggrregate this probability, calling it "almost certain", "99%", "99.9%" or whatever. That's what a scientific analysis concludes. Haven't you investigated that? Why not? Is it because you can continue to think wishfully? Please describe your scientific analysis in more detail, and in particular how you handle the possibility of systematic errors. Confidence levels can handle only random errors, not systematic errors. Systematic errors have been and are being discussed. YOU brought up one (farting) and Mike Collins brought up another (evaporation). Both are too small and too slow to affect the data. MacDougall mentioned another (sensitivity of his system). Got any more? Here you sound like a Jehovas Witness. Are you a Jehovas Witness? No :-)) Well, your belief seems quite close to theirs, so perhaps you should consider joining them? No, my beliefs are very different from theirs. If you knew anything about them, you would know that. What's the difference? You criticise all contemporary churches and want to return to Christianity as described in the Bible. Jehovas Witnesses also want to do this. So in that respect you are very much like them. Do you think I believe that we are slaves? Btw do you, or do you not, believe in the trinity of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit? Or do you belive that the Father is the one and only god? We have already discussed this. Christianity, Judaism and Islam ARE polytheistic in one sense, but in another they are monotheistic. Judaism is older than the Christian doctrine of trinity. And Islam rejects it and considers it to be polytheism. Didn't you know that? I thought Islam accepted Genesis as well as the Prophets. I'm only trying to find out if your Christian belief is of the Nicaean or the non-Nicaean kind. If you are Nicaean, you accept the doctrines from the church council of Nicaea in AD 325, and if you are non-Nicaean you reject them. Some of it I agree with and some of it I don't. |
#432
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On Wednesday, October 31, 2018 at 12:45:27 AM UTC-6, Paul Schlyter wrote:
In article , says... On Tuesday, October 30, 2018 at 6:40:20 AM UTC-6, Paul Schlyter wrote: And you strongly exaggrregate this probability, calling it "almost certain", "99%", "99.9%" or whatever. That's what a scientific analysis concludes. Haven't you investigated that? Why not? Is it because you can continue to think wishfully? I have now found, and read, the Wikipedia article about this experiment, which can be found he https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/21_grams_experiment And I have to conclude that you're a fraud, a chead, and a liar. SInce you call yourself a Christian, let me remind you of the 8th commandment: "Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour" If you're not a hypocrite, you should take this seriously. So how did you lie? Well, you admitted that the data from MacDouball is meager, and has not been replicated. But you have falsely claimed that there is no data suggesting that the human body does not lose mass at death. And then you have, several times, asked "isn't one measurement more statistically significant than no measurements?". And you've been babbling about 99% confidence leve, "almost certain", and other nonsense. YOU are the one being taken in by lies and repeating them. There were FOUR measurements, not one. YOU are the one that glibly accepted what Wiki said instead of going to the actual source. YOU are the one who didn't consider who wrote that article and what his biases were. Well, guess what? There **are** measurements failing to show that the human body loses weight at the moment of death. To be more precise, these measurements were performed my MacDougall himself !!! MacDougall measured the weight of six different people while they were dying. In five of these six cases he failed to find any weight loss at the moment of dearth. In only one of these six cases did he find a weight loss at the moment of death. This is dead wrong. That's what comes from gullibly accepting material written by someone who is either ignorant or a liar. HERE is a copy of the original paper: http://spiritualscientific.com/yahoo....203123041.pdf The Wiki article is correct in claiming there were six patients, but there weren't six experiments. One patient died before MacDougall's equipment could be set up and another patient couldn't be measured properly because of interference by those opposed to the work. So right there is proof that the Wiki author is a liar. He is also a liar (and so are you by promulgating his lies) because the other three cases did NOT have zero weight loss. The FACTS are Patient #1: 3/4 oz. Patient #2: 1/2 oz. Patient #3: 1/2 oz. Patient #5: 3/8 oz. MacDougall himself stated that the experiment would have to be repeated many times before any conclusions could be made. But it has not been repeated by anyone else, so therefore we cannot conclude that the human body loses weight at the moment of death. In the available data, it did not lose weitgh at the moment of death in 5 cases out of 6. You write "That's what a scientific analysis concludes. Haven't you investigated that?" about your claimed 99% confidence level. Now, please share your scientific "analyssis" which concludes, with 99% confidence level, that the human body loses weight at the moment of death when in 5 of the 6 available cases it does **not**. Describe your method in enough detail so it can be repeated by anyone who wishes to do so. Of the four cases with results, the average of the four is 0.53 ounce. Find the variance for each case, sum them, divide by one less than the number of cases and take the square root. This is the standard deviation, which is 0.157. Find the confidence levels for 95, 99 and 99.9%: The range for the true population size is 0.38 to 0.58 at 95% confidence. The range for the true population size is 0.33 to 0.73 at 99% confidence. The range for the true population size is 0.27 to 0.79 at 99.9% confidence. The rest of your post is baloney. I've given you more than enough information and I've had enough of your defamatory behavior. Your description should include: 1. Initial assumptions. 2. The method you have chosen. 3. The initial data. 4. Your calculations. 5. Your result. 6. Your conclusion, including the motivation for your conclusion. I'm awaiting your description. If it doesn't arrive, I see that as a confirmation that you indeed are a fraud, a cheat, a liar and a con artist. |
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On Wed, 31 Oct 2018 14:59:57 -0700 (PDT), Gary Harnagel
wrote: On Tue, 30 Oct 2018 07:01:55 -0700 (PDT), Gary Harnagel wrote: How come? Does the "One Supreme True God" enjoy playing hide-and-seek with us? I believe He HAS revealed Himself, it's just that YOUR definition of "reveal" is different from mine. A genuine revelation would also convince skeptics and non-believers. Highly doubtful. Would an all-powerful God be unable to reveal himself in such a way that also skeptics became convinced? Like e.g. a total solar eclipse, after the eclipse only maniacs would deny that it happened. An all-powerful God who wants people to acknowledge his existence could easily do that. So why doesn't it happen? Perhaps you misunderstand what God "wants." OK, God wants to play hide-and-seek and that I find a bit childish. And definitely far below the dignity of an all-wise and all-powerful entity. But it is what could be expected from a "God" invented by humans in order to control other people - those who invented him knows he can never actually reveal himself since he does not exist, and therefore they must say he is invisible. However, even if we don't yet know what dark matter is, there is still plenty of good evidence that dark matter does exist. As I said, some scientists disagree. Milgram and McGaugh, for example. This is as it should be in science. May the best hypothesis win! Some 50+ years ago many respectable cosmologisos doubted the Big Bang theory. One of them - Fred Hoyle - even coined the phrase "Big Bang", as a ridicule, but it caught on. But then the cosmic microwave background radiation was discovered. Now Hoyle is dead but Big Bang - both the theory and the name of the theory - lives on. The Jews thought that they would gladly accept their Messiah, too, but they didn't. You believe that you would accept REAL evidence, but you demand "scientific" evidence. You require evidence on YOUR terms, not God's. Here you sound like a Jehovas Witness. Are you a Jehovas Witness? No :-)) Well, your belief seems quite close to theirs, so perhaps you should consider joining them? No, my beliefs are very different from theirs. If you knew anything about them, you would know that. What's the difference? You criticise all contemporary churches and want to return to Christianity as described in the Bible. Jehovas Witnesses also want to do this. So in that respect you are very much like them. Do you think I believe that we are slaves? Of course you do! Why else would you write things like "You require evidence on YOUR terms, not God's"... If God is unable to provide evidence on our terms instead of his terms, then he is a terrible teacher and that is far far below the dignity of an all-powerful, all-wise and all-knowing entity. Suppose you had a dog. You try to teach your dog higher mathematics which the dog of course does not understand. Then you punish your dog for not understanding that... I think you get the idea... Judaism is older than the Christian doctrine of trinity. And Islam rejects it and considers it to be polytheism. Didn't you know that? I thought Islam accepted Genesis as well as the Prophets. It does. Islam accepts Jesus too, but only as a great prophet, not as a God. In Islam not even Mohammed is considered to be a God. Near Ephesus there is a house where Virgin Mary is believed to have lived and died after the crucification of Jesus. Beside the house there is a wall where many Muslims write down a prayer on a small piece of paper and attach it to the wall. That wall is some 100 yards long and full of these small notes. Not far from there you can find the ruin of "Mr Jesus' Mosque". I'm only trying to find out if your Christian belief is of the Nicaean or the non-Nicaean kind. If you are Nicaean, you accept the doctrines from the church council of Nicaea in AD 325, and if you are non-Nicaean you reject them. Some of it I agree with and some of it I don't. Do you believe in the trinity? Do you celebrate Christmas and Easter on the commonly accepted dates? Do you think the current year is AD 2018? All these things were decided in Nicaea in AD 325. |
#435
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In the realm of astronomy where the individual and the Universal maintain a physical connection via inspiration with the greater life encompassing the temporal journey through life, there is a type of existence more intimate than those occupied with nonsense notions that begin and end in their heads..
It is not an endeavor to know more but rather to experience an intimacy which connects us to our local or celestial surroundings and ultimately to each other. Whether they are pseudo-Christian or pseudo-intellectuals, the great sense of Christian life is always there for those who look for it in places they don't expect to find it. "That it that is the pre-eminent Cause of all things intelligibly perceived is not itself any of those things. Again, ascending yet higher, we maintain that it is neither soul nor intellect; nor has it imagination, opinion reason or understanding; nor can it be expressed or conceived, since it is neither number nor order; nor greatness nor smallness; nor equality nor inequality; nor similarity nor dissimilarity; neither is it standing, nor moving, nor at rest; neither has it power nor is power, nor is light; neither does it live nor is it life; neither is it essence, nor eternity nor time; nor is it subject to intelligible contact; nor is it science nor truth, nor kingship nor wisdom; neither one nor oneness, nor godhead nor goodness; nor is it spirit according to our understanding, nor filiation, nor paternity; nor anything else known to us or to any other beings of the things that are or the things that are not; neither does anything that is know it as it is; nor does it know existing things according to existing knowledge; neither can the reason attain to it, nor name it, nor know it; neither is it darkness nor light, nor the false nor the true; nor can any affirmation or negation be applied to it, for although we may affirm or deny the things below it, we can neither affirm nor deny it, inasmuch as the all-perfect and unique Cause of all things transcends all affirmation, and the simple pre-eminence of Its absolute nature is outside of every negation- free from every limitation and beyond them all." Dionysius the Areopagite The mind cannot grasp the Eternal but the Eternal fills the heart in greater or smaller measure depending on the generosity of each individual. All genuine mathematicians would know this and so perhaps Pascal is left with the final word - “The heart has its reasons which reason knows nothing of... We know the truth not only by the reason, but by the heart." - Blaise Pascal” |
#436
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On Thursday, November 1, 2018 at 3:15:07 AM UTC-6, Paul Schlyter wrote:
Would an all-powerful God be unable to reveal himself in such a way that also skeptics became convinced? Of course not. But maybe He doesn't want to. So far, almost plausible. Where I start having problems is when the conclusion is that the all-powerful God has chosen to provide salvation only to those who are sufficiently credulous that they will believe in God because their local priesthood tells them He exists. This sounds more like what the local priesthood wants one to believe than what God wants to do. The fact that after this has been running for a while, some people who actually believe in this God managed to get into the priesthood, and if it was just them, it might look like a commendable institution for doing good works, instead of one set up to exploit the sheep... while it is an argument against religious persecution, it's not one in favor of the truth of their supernatural claims. John Savard |
#437
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On Thursday, November 1, 2018 at 2:28:53 AM UTC-6, Paul Schlyter wrote:
In article , says... On Wednesday, October 31, 2018 at 12:45:27 AM UTC-6, Paul Schlyter wrote: I have now found, and read, the Wikipedia article about this experiment, which can be found he https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/21_grams_experiment And I have to conclude that you're a fraud, a chead, and a liar. SInce you call yourself a Christian, let me remind you of the 8th commandment: "Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour" If you're not a hypocrite, you should take this seriously. So how did you lie? Well, you admitted that the data from MacDouball is meager, and has not been replicated. But you have falsely claimed that there is no data suggesting that the human body does not lose mass at death. And then you have, several times, asked "isn't one measurement more statistically significant than no measurements?". And you've been babbling about 99% confidence leve, "almost certain", and other nonsense. YOU are the one being taken in by lies and repeating them. There were FOUR measurements, not one. YOU are the one that glibly accepted what Wiki said instead of going to the actual source. YOU are the one who didn't consider who wrote that article and what his biases were. That Wikipedia article gave a link to a post of the original paper, which word by word agreed with the paper you gave another link to. Now, if you think that Wikipedia article is wrong, why don't you correct it? You do know that anyone can make any changes to any Wikipedia article they want, don't you? But you'd better give a good motivation, preferably to some reliable reference, for any significant changes you make or else they will very likely be changed back by others. But if you can give a good motivation for your changes, they will remain. So don't complain about Wikipedia being bad. It's not "complaining" when false claims are pointed out. YOU should be more skeptical of what you read. “The first principle is that you must not fool yourself and you are the easiest person to fool.” -- Richard P. Feynman Instead, change it to make it better! If we all do that, the quality of the Wikipedia articles will improve. There are thousands of incorrect statements and I'm not the internet police.. Why don't YOU clean up your own false claims: Well, guess what? There **are** measurements failing to show that the human body loses weight at the moment of death. To be more precise, these measurements were performed my MacDougall himself !!! MacDougall measured the weight of six different people while they were dying. In five of these six cases he failed to find any weight loss at the moment of death. In only one of these six cases did he find a weight loss at the moment of death. This is dead wrong. That's what comes from gullibly accepting material written by someone who is either ignorant or a liar. HERE is a copy of the original paper: http://spiritualscientific.com/yahoo....203123041.pdf Another link to that paper was given in that Wikipedia article -- DIDN'T YOU NOTICE THAT? The two versions of that paper agree with one another, word by word. SO WHY DIDN'T YOU READ THE ORIGINAL instead of parroting what the Wiki article claimed? The Wiki article is correct in claiming there were six patients, but there weren't six experiments. One patient died before MacDougall's equipment could be set up and another patient couldn't be measured properly because of interference by those opposed to the work. So right there is proof that the Wiki author is a liar. How? Quote from that Wikipedia article: "MacDougall disregarded the results of another patient on the grounds the scales were "not finely adjusted", and discounted the results of another as the patient died while the equipment was still being calibrated." Why do you think that correctly telling this is "being a liar"? So you lie by quoting the wrong quotation. The lie is THIS: "The experiment is widely regarded as flawed and unscientific due to the small sample size, the methods used, as well as the fact only one of the six subjects met the hypothesis." There were FOUR, not one: He is also a liar (and so are you by promulgating his lies) because the other three cases did NOT have zero weight loss. The FACTS are Patient #1: 3/4 oz. Patient #2: 1/2 oz. Patient #3: 1/2 oz. Patient #5: 3/8 oz. The sensitivity of the balance was 2/10 oz, so all his results are not that far from the inherent measurement errors of the balance. Not in the case of the two 1/2 ounce and 3/4 ounce measurements. They are all three sigma away from that number. Furthermore, although MacDougall claimed 2/10 ounce sensitivity, that was VERY conservative since: " If placed at balance one-tenth of an ounce would lift the beam up close to the upper limiting bar, another one-tenth ounce would bring it up and keep it in direct contact" So 1/10 ounce sensitivity is more realistic. Patient #3 lost 1/2 oz at the moment of death but a few minutes later he lost even more, one full oz. How could that be? It's called "evaporation." YOU were one of those babbling about that, remember? It couldn't have been the soul leaving the body since he already was dead and the soul supposedly already had left his body. So there you have a weight loss unexplained by that "soul hypothesis". If a human body can suddenly lose weight after death, without any solul leaving the body, why couldn't it lose weight right at death without any soul leaving the body? The same with patient #2 who lost 1/2 oz at the moment of death but an additional full oz plus 50 grains some minutes later. Babble, babble, babble. Can't you use your brain? Patient #5 seems to have gained weight after the weight loss at death. The language in the paper is vague here. There is an OBVIOUS difference between sudden (a few seconds) weight loss and slow weight change (many seconds to minutes). MacDougall himself stated that the experiment would have to be repeated many times before any conclusions could be made. But it has not been repeated by anyone else, so therefore we cannot conclude that the human body loses weight at the moment of death. In the available data, it did not lose weitgh at the moment of death in 5 cases out of 6. You write "That's what a scientific analysis concludes. Haven't you investigated that?" about your claimed 99% confidence level. Now, please share your scientific "analyssis" which concludes, with 99% confidence level, that the human body loses weight at the moment of death when in 5 of the 6 available cases it does **not**. Describe your method in enough detail so it can be repeated by anyone who wishes to do so. Of the four cases with results, the average of the four is 0.53 ounce. Find the variance for each case, sum them, divide by one less than the number of cases and take the square root. This is the standard deviation, which is 0.157. Find the confidence levels for 95, 99 and 99.9%: The range for the true population size is 0.38 to 0.58 at 95% confidence. The range for the true population size is 0.33 to 0.73 at 99% confidence. The range for the true population size is 0.27 to 0.79 at 99.9% confidence. But why do you exclude the weight losses of an additional ONE FULL OUNCE in two of the cases? And the weight gain a few minutes after death in one of the cases... More disingenuous babbling baloney. But you have, implicitly, given a partial answer anyway. Your method is called Cherry Picking: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherry_picking Completely dishonest babbling baloney. You ignore that two of the patients lost even more weight a few minutes after death, and one of them gained weight after death. Why? Because it does not fit your pet idea of a soul having mass leaving the body upon death. And you're not using your brain. The original paper says explicitly: "I am aware that a large number of experiments would require to be made before the matter can be proved beyond any possibility of error." So there you are - even the author himself says we cannot draw any reliable conclusions from his measurements alone. And the original paper says so. And I admitted that right off the bat. The problem is that you demand absolute scientific proof to five nines confidence. Sorry, old bean, I can only give you three nines. And your confidence leverls are baloney - you cannot disregard uncomfortable data if you want reliable confidence levels. Your monumental skepticism leads you to the point of dishonesty, particularly when you ignore sudden versus longer term changes. Why don't you apply this skepticism to AGW? :-)) ”I’m laughing at your superior intellect.” – James T. Kirk |
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On Thu, 1 Nov 2018 02:41:36 -0700 (PDT), Quadibloc
wrote: On Thursday, November 1, 2018 at 3:15:07 AM UTC-6, Paul Schlyter wrote: Would an all-powerful God be unable to reveal himself in such a way that also skeptics became convinced? Of course not. But maybe He doesn't want to. So far, almost plausible. Which means God might want some people to remain non-believers. Why? Perhaps because otherwise he would have created Hell in vain, for no purpose... An all-powerful God could of course do this. But would such a God also be all-bening, without the slightest trace of evil in him? And that brings us right into the classical theodice problem... Where I start having problems is when the conclusion is that the all-powerful God has chosen to provide salvation only to those who are sufficiently credulous that they will believe in God because their local priesthood tells them He exists. This sounds more like what the local priesthood wants one to believe than what God wants to do. The fact that after this has been running for a while, some people who actually believe in this God managed to get into the priesthood, and if it was just them, it might look like a commendable institution for doing good works, instead of one set up to exploit the sheep... while it is an argument against religious persecution, it's not one in favor of the truth of their supernatural claims. John Savard |
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On Thursday, November 1, 2018 at 3:15:07 AM UTC-6, Paul Schlyter wrote:
On Wed, 31 Oct 2018 14:59:57 -0700 (PDT), Gary Harnagel wrote: A genuine revelation would also convince skeptics and non-believers. Highly doubtful. Would an all-powerful God be unable to reveal himself in such a way that also skeptics became convinced? He COULD, but why would you think that is His goal? Like e.g. a total solar eclipse, after the eclipse only maniacs would deny that it happened. An all-powerful God who wants people to acknowledge his existence could easily do that. So why doesn't it happen? Perhaps you misunderstand what God "wants." OK, God wants to play hide-and-seek and that I find a bit childish. Again, you're demanding proof on YOUR terms, and you don't even realize how arrogant that is! “Ignorance and weakness is not an impediment to survival. Arrogance is.” ― Cixin Liu And definitely far below the dignity of an all-wise and all-powerful entity. But it is what could be expected from a "God" invented by humans in order to control other people - those who invented him knows he can never actually reveal himself since he does not exist, and therefore they must say he is invisible. Such arrogance, typical of a "fanatical atheist." "Then there are the fanatical atheists whose intolerance is the same as that of the religious fanatics, and it springs from the same source … They are creatures who can’t hear the music of the spheres." -- Albert Einstein However, even if we don't yet know what dark matter is, there is still plenty of good evidence that dark matter does exist. As I said, some scientists disagree. Milgram and McGaugh, for example. This is as it should be in science. May the best hypothesis win! Some 50+ years ago many respectable cosmologisos doubted the Big Bang theory. One of them - Fred Hoyle - even coined the phrase "Big Bang", as a ridicule, but it caught on. But then the cosmic microwave background radiation was discovered. Now Hoyle is dead but Big Bang - both the theory and the name of the theory - lives on. Not forever. The Jews thought that they would gladly accept their Messiah, too, but they didn't. You believe that you would accept REAL evidence, but you demand "scientific" evidence. You require evidence on YOUR terms, not God's. What's the difference? You criticise all contemporary churches and want to return to Christianity as described in the Bible. Jehovas Witnesses also want to do this. So in that respect you are very much like them. Do you think I believe that we are slaves? Of course you do! Why else would you write things like "You require evidence on YOUR terms, not God's"... So you believe arrogancy is independence and humility is degrading. If God is unable to provide evidence on our terms instead of his terms, then he is a terrible teacher and that is far far below the dignity of an all-powerful, all-wise and all-knowing entity. He is able, but his goals don't include satisfying the whims of arrogant atheists. Suppose you had a dog. You try to teach your dog higher mathematics which the dog of course does not understand. Then you punish your dog for not understanding that... I think you get the idea... I get the idea that you are promoting a straw man argument. God is trying to teach us to become like Him (which demolishes your assertion that he wants us to be slaves). Judaism is older than the Christian doctrine of trinity. And Islam rejects it and considers it to be polytheism. Didn't you know that? I thought Islam accepted Genesis as well as the Prophets. It does. And in Genesis the word often translated as God is Elohim, which is a plural. Islam accepts Jesus too, but only as a great prophet, not as a God. In Islam not even Mohammed is considered to be a God. Near Ephesus there is a house where Virgin Mary is believed to have lived and died after the crucification of Jesus. Beside the house there is a wall where many Muslims write down a prayer on a small piece of paper and attach it to the wall. That wall is some 100 yards long and full of these small notes. Not far from there you can find the ruin of "Mr Jesus' Mosque". Interesting, but non sequitur. I'm only trying to find out if your Christian belief is of the Nicaean or the non-Nicaean kind. If you are Nicaean, you accept the doctrines from the church council of Nicaea in AD 325, and if you are non-Nicaean you reject them. Some of it I agree with and some of it I don't. Do you believe in the trinity? Not in the sense of the creeds accepted by most Christian churches. Do you celebrate Christmas and Easter on the commonly accepted dates? Yes. Do you think the current year is AD 2018? Close to it, anyway. All these things were decided in Nicaea in AD 325. Decided by a bunch of apostates. |
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On Thu, 1 Nov 2018 04:38:42 -0700 (PDT), Gary Harnagel
wrote: Instead, change it to make it better! If we all do that, the quality of the Wikipedia articles will improve. There are thousands of incorrect statements and I'm not the internet police Nobody has asked that of you. But you could be a contributor to Wikipedia, if you want to. But instead you prefer to whine... Why don't YOU clean up your own false claims: I'd be happy to, but only if they really are false, not just because you dislike what I say. So you lie by quoting the wrong quotation. The lie is THIS: "The experiment is widely regarded as flawed and unscientific due to the small sample size, the methods used, as well as the fact only one of the six subjects met the hypothesis." There were FOUR, not one: Three of those four had additional weight changes, not explainable by a soul having weight leaving the body at death. If those additional weight changes could occur without souls involved, why not those weight changes at the moment of death? Patient #3 lost 1/2 oz at the moment of death but a few minutes later he= lost even more, one full oz. How could that be? It's called "evaporation." YOU were one of those babbling about that, remember? And you dismissed that explanation. Are you claiming that evaporation somehow ceases at the moment of death, to be resumed shortly afterwards? But why do you exclude the weight losses of an additional ONE FULL OUNCE in two of the cases? And the weight gain a few minutes after death in one of the cases... More disingenuous babbling baloney. But you have, implicitly, given a partial answer anyway. Your method is called Cherry Picking: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherry_picking Completely dishonest babbling baloney. Nice try, but those cheap con artist tricks cannot hide the obvious fact that you are cherry picking... So there you are - even the author himself says we cannot draw any reliable conclusions from his measurements alone. And the original paper says so. And I admitted that right off the bat. So why did you even bring it up if you knew from the start that this study was unreliable? The problem is that you demand absolute scientific proof to five nines confidence. Sorry, old bean, I can only give you three nines. FYI: "absolute scientific proof" does not exist. Any scientific conclusion is open for modification, if and when reliable evidence for that appears. Your monumental skepticism leads you to the point of dishonesty, particular= ly when you ignore sudden versus longer term changes. Why don't you apply this skepticism to AGW? :-)) Back in the days of Svante Arrhenius, who in the 1800's was the first person to point out the future risk of AGW, being skeptical about AGW would have been a reasonable point of view. Today the situation is very different. Being skeptical of AGW today is much like being skeptical about the Earth being round and not flat. |
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