I don't believe that just because something sounds good makes it less likely. Also, I made some arguments in my prior post.Jrecee wrote: I'm leaving open the possibility for anything. But I'm not going to pick a religion and go with it when I see no convincing arguments for them. I don't believe that if there is a god, that he has any particular plan for humans. We set ourselves so high on the totem pole, yet within the incomprehensibly vast universe, I think we're relatively meaningless in the grand scheme of things. We like the idea that some incredible being created us to serve some purpose and that if we fulfill that purpose we get super happy everlasting life. It's a nice thought, but there's no evidence to support it. It's just denying the obvious to ourselves.
And a single man led a campaign to rebuild China the way he saw fit, with casualties reaching into the tens of millions. Yet, I do not consider politics inherently evil. If this issue is so subjective, then it can't be deal with through generalization.Jrecee wrote:There's always a bigger problem. But here, I'll name one; A bunch of guys hijacked a plane and killed thousands because they thought it would get them into super happy everlasting life world.
? My point was that the exact same thing is done from atheists to christians.Jrecee wrote:The christmas at the airport thing is bullshit. I celebrate christmas. It has become more of a cultural and marketing thing than a religious thing these days. You can see it as either one.
I'm pretty sure that at no point does the Bible say "go kill people". Also, how mindless are these religious people you're imagining? Frankly, anyone who looks into a book and that book says "kill people" and does it wouldn't be remarkably hard to convince in the first place. I would also imagine that since you're using Muslims as your primary example, for what reason do you say "Religion" instead of "Islam"? As Limewater pointed out, religion can have a profoundly beneficial effect. If what we have is a case of some people driving an airplane, who's the problem? All religions in the world, or a group of people on an airplane?Jrecee wrote:"If an atheist kills someone because they want to, and a religous person kills someone for God, there is no logical distinction between who's better since both actions and methods had identical outcomes."
But why would someone kill someone for god if they didn't believe in god? It's an enabler. Say the atheist dude kills a guy who slept with his wife, if that guy hadn't slept with his wife he never would have killed him. If the bible hadn't told the other guy to kill someone, he wouldn't have done it.
You.Jrecee wrote: Are you talking to me or limewater?
That's a clearer description. However, time can also be described as a nonspatial continuum that measures irreversible events in succession. If this model of time is considered, than time must certainly always exist so long as there are events to measure. Going off of this, I believe that there must be another event before all space and matter being at a single value, which is that same space and matter appearing. Even outside of time, I don't understand how that mass can exist if it is impossible for it to be created.Hatta wrote:According to Big Bang Theory, "what happened before" is a nonsensical question. Mathematically, time is a dimension just like space. Not only were the 3 spatial dimensions compressed into a singularity at the big bang, but time was as well. There's no more a "before the big bang" than there is a "to the left of the big bang".MrPopo wrote: As of yet we have no idea what things were like before that event (or indeed, even at that event, just a brief moment in time afterwards). For all we know right now it could be that the time line extends infinitely into the past.
To get your mind around this, consider that time is a representation of entropy (disorder). If the entire universe is compressed into a single point, there can be no disorder. That one point, a single value, tells you everything there is to know about the universe. To go backwards any further would require you to decrease entropy below zero, which would be meaningless.
Not that that matters in the context of this discussion. And the Big Bang is just a model, which is almost certainly flawed. I just thought I'd point that out. Cosmology is pretty cool, until you start getting into untestable string theories.
However, I see that you agree that the model is flawed, so I'm not sure if I'm actually deliberating with you at this point.
