If it's so well thought out, and covers all the angles so well as to be impossible to disprove, what makes you think it's a "load of crap"? Just wondered.

If it's so well thought out, and covers all the angles so well as to be impossible to disprove, what makes you think it's a "load of crap"? Just wondered.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2011/apr/16/conversation-science-religious-faith
An interesting conversation between Sam Harris (whom I met the other day) and Robert Winston, on whether science and religion are reconcilable.
For the record, I think that science and religion are absolutely irreconcilable.
EDIT: It isn't actually a full transcript.![]()
If it's so well thought out, and covers all the angles so well as to be impossible to disprove, what makes you think it's a "load of crap"? Just wondered.
I was just thinking the same thing.
I think the point he was trying to make was that no matter what hard evidence may come about to refute (a) religion(s) claim's, that it will find a way to twist/deny that evidence as it is, and always has been, so good at doing it.
Partly due it's design, and partly due to how faith works in incorporating different ideas, no matter how ridiculous, as long as they make sense to the user.
It's fascinating how on one hand it sells absolute certainty, and then on the other hand will dispense of it's most sacred beliefs just for survival. Kinda sounds like humanity - moral, ethical and logical until a point and then we revert to our animal nature.
Also, saying "X religion believes in ..." is somewhat erroneous as due to the almost infinite amount of denominations, and truly, the way faith and belief changes with each person you can't generalise as such, except for perhaps some core beliefs, which to be honest can often change drastically. (e.g. Salvation by works vs Salvation by grace, to take a classical Christian example)
I think labelling it a load of crap is a rather casual and ineffectual way of saying that they disagree with religion in it's place in modern society.
Of course it doesn't disprove religion, has nobody watched Babylon 5?
My parents believe in the Christian god in the sense that he is responsible for the creation of the universe, but thing that genesis is just a story without a shred of fact. Does that compute with anyone?![]()
That quote highlights one of the main problems that i have with understanding religion. (i'm not trying to knock anyones belief or anything)
You can discover scientific facts and principals for yourself, but you have to be told religious ones by people who already believe them. Not really phrased well(i'm tired), but do you understand what i'm trying to say?
A mention of race-memory does raise possibilities though, and is an area which i have always found interesting and rather plausible tbh.
Obviously as your opinion is set and you have no intention of doing anything other than using the platform to pursue your own admitted bias and need to belittle others faith I see no reason to continue this discusdion with you.
I really must take issue with your above comment!
Since when was reasoned debate seen as opportunity to belittle someone?
*Snip
I do have strong views about religion as, like it or not, it affects me and a great many people, in many ways in many countries throughout the world due to, very often it's overbearing influence on our laws and cultures.
I think you will find that most people who think like myself, would be the first to defend a person's personal right to actually believe in a god - I know I certainly would!
However, from my perspective, there is a big difference between believing in a god and that of following a religion. One doesn't need a religion if one truly believes in a god.
snip*
No more dillusional and foolish than those nutty professors and mad scientists who claim the molecules to man theory is an absolute fact.religion, the biggest waste of time ever dreamed up by dillusional fools.
life on other planets.. well religious nuts will say.. "god created them.
The problem is that you are not using reasoned debate, but common derogatory fallacies such as fairies, use of negative language....etc. to demean another's belief and frankly I find it childish, ill-informed and boring.
This is my opinion and I no longer wish to debate at such a level, as we have had this discussion in another thread (http://forums.overclockers.co.uk/showthread.php?p=18864016#post18864016) recently where your true religious bigotry was more evident and this seems a very thinly veiled attempt to put a sheen of moderation on that.
But I was using an analogy which highlighted the fact that I could claim that Fairies and not a god were responsible for world creation and no one could disprove my theory, just as the god theory can't be disproven! That is not in anyway being disrespectful or demeaning - it's simply a means of conveying that one has no more provenance than the other!
I hardly think that is childish but your dismissive post now also backs up my comment that some people will resort to personal attacks, especially those who are believers and who's faith is questioned.
the word ‘atheist’ has in the present context to be construed in an unusual way. Nowadays it is normally taken to mean someone who explicitly denies the existence . . . of God . . . But here it has to be understood not positively but negatively, with the originally Greek prefix ‘a-’ being read in this same way in ‘atheist’ as it customarily is in . . . words as ‘amoral’ . . . . In this interpretation an atheist becomes not someone who positively asserts the non-existence of God, but someone who is simply not a theist. (A Companion to Philosophy of Religion, ed. Philip Quinn and Charles Taliaferro [Oxford: Blackwell, 1997], s.v. “The Presumption of Atheism,” by Antony Flew)
You say that you are agnostic
Ignostic, not agnostic. They're different terms. Ignosticism takes the view that all theological standpoints assume too much about the nature of God, but beyond that I don't really know what it's all about.
Edited, but I don't see how that difference would make a difference to my argument.
Castiel, what do you think about the two different types of definition of atheism
I just came across this
Do you think this semantic argument holds any weight?You say that you are agnostic, but with that definition could you not be described as atheist?