(August 31, 2013 at 8:19 am)Esquilax Wrote: If consciousness is a product of a physical brain, then that brain existing in a stable state is what causes the consciousness. Your question is nonsensical; you might as well ask why a shoe remains a shoe. That's its physical state, absent some outside influence.
What you just asked only makes sense if we assume your conclusion that there's something more from the outset.
This is the point what I am making. Car and Driver are two separate bodies. Both have unique properties and both looks different. However, when driver drives the car the intention of driver and function of car merged to form one whole body for a single purpose i.e. to reach the destination.
I am comparing car with the physical body and driver with self-Consciousness. I am saying self-consciousness and human body are two distinct persons. Physical body has physical senses and self-consciousness has phenomenal experiences. Physical senses can’t perceive phenomenal experiences even though we feel phenomenal experiences within our physical bodies. Self-consciousness is using the senses of physical body in order to achieve phenomenal experiences.
(August 31, 2013 at 8:19 am)Esquilax Wrote: Theist uses the word God and simplifies his task to explain this “No Nothingness”.
You might have a simple answer, but that doesn't mean it's correct.
That doesn’t mean it’s incorrect as well.
(August 31, 2013 at 8:19 am)Esquilax Wrote: Quote: However, atheist finds it hard to give explanation to this “No Nothingness” and come up with different theories and models. Like multiverse model, inflationary model, string theory, etc. but all these hypotheses are highly speculative scientifically.
Nor does our not having a definite answer make yours the correct one.
Until you don’t have a definite answer, you can’t say there is no God either. All concepts of nature are only pointing to a super intelligent designer. Our birth, our death, and our short stay on this earth can’t be without a purpose. We feel sceptic about our second rise (resurrection) but we mistreat the questions how and why we first time came into being. In my opinion our intellect and self-consciousness are the most complex things in the universe and to me it is impossible that this intellect and self-consciousness a matter of chance. It seems to be an utter nonsense that with the death of our physical bodies our self-consciousness dies as well.
(August 31, 2013 at 8:19 am)Esquilax Wrote: Lie. The earth has an elliptical orbit, meaning that its distance from the sun varies by several hundred thousand kilometers. So much for the magnificent balance of the universe, huh?
Can the Earth diverge from its fixed path of motion? Note path can be circular or elliptical.
(August 31, 2013 at 8:19 am)Esquilax Wrote: All of which are explained scientifically and possess no indication of having a supernatural origin. Unless you'd like to provide such evidence, and not just another argument from ignorance?
True! Science has given us valuable details on the functions of different parts of our bodies. However, does that mean science engendering those functions? Is it science, which fashions our faces in wombs of our mothers?
(August 31, 2013 at 8:19 am)Esquilax Wrote: Fine tuning? Including the black holes that are swallowing whole stars out of the sky? The stars themselves, which are essentially giant radioactive fires blazing in space? Space, which is intensely hostile to life? Just beyond the atmospheric boundaries of our planet, which is itself beset by natural disasters, radiation from space, and the occasional meteor? Very "fine tuned," that.
We are living peacefully on earth without any threat of any black hole, comet, etc. What else you need? If we are living peacefully without any fear of cosmic intimidations, isn’t it a sufficient proof that Universe is fine-tuned. How many asteroids had smashed over human civilizations in the known history of human beings? Do you think that our earth had escaped the power of some event horizon at some occasion in the past? How many times sun flares had burned the earth. Thanks to God for He had fine-tuned this universe for our peaceful lives on earth. Because of it, we don’t have a burden of cosmic threats over our shoulders. If there is anything, which is a threat for us in this cosmos, it is our own beings against our own selves.
(August 31, 2013 at 8:19 am)Esquilax Wrote: Oh man, we're doing Watchmaker now? Okay: so, the reason that you know the watch is designed is through contrast and comparison. That's the same way we define everything; we compare it to things that are different from it. But if we take your analogy to its conclusion, there are no natural objects with which to compare and thus infer design. What you're really saying is that we find a wristwatch in a desert made of watches, on a planet of watches orbitting a sun made of watches, in a universe of watches, and also you yourself are a watch. And in the midst of all this clockwork, you reach down and pick up a single watch and say "this watch is so different from all the other watches, it must have been designed."
It's nonsensical.
The presence of design, such as we find in a watch, requires an intelligent designer
Buffier, Claude (1661-1737)
In the nineteenth century Sir William Hamilton, Herbert Spencer, Thomas Huxley, Leslie Stephen and John Stuart Mill had inherited the legacy of agnosticism commenced by Hume and Kant. However, in his persuasive essay ‘Theism’ (1874), Mill contended that only the argument from design remained as a potential source for rational support for some form of divine reality responsible for the order, if not the existence, of the natural universe.
(August 31, 2013 at 8:19 am)Esquilax Wrote: Rather begging the question, there. And the whole thing is an argument from ignorance: "I don't understand how this works, and therefore my idea of a god must be the thing doing that."
It is not begging the question rather unveiling the truth, which you are ignoring while looking at it with your open eyes.
(August 31, 2013 at 8:19 am)Esquilax Wrote: First of all, I reject the absolutist nature of the first premise, because I don't think you can demonstrate that everything that exists does have a cause, least of all in a universe before the big bang, where the laws of causality might not work the way they do here.
First premise rooted into metaphysical intuition that something cannot come into being out of nothing. To suggest that thing simply popped up into being uncaused out of nothing is literally worse than a magic. Even in the performance of magic, a magician pulls rabbit out of the hat so even there cause has its contribution.
Secondly, if things could come into being uncaused from nothing then it becomes inexplicable that why then anything and everything (including human beings) doesn’t come into being uncaused from nothing. First premise is consistently confirmed in our experiences. We have the strongest of motivation therefore to accept the first premise.
(August 31, 2013 at 8:19 am)Esquilax Wrote: I also reject the second premise, because you don't know what happened before the big bang any more than I do, and therefore cannot make a statement about any purported origin.
You are repudiating an established scientific fact that universe has an origin. Expansion of the universe is the foremost justification on its beginning.
(August 31, 2013 at 8:19 am)Esquilax Wrote: And I reject the conclusion because nothing in the premises lead one to conclude that the cause was a god, even if they were correct, which they aren't. You're handwaving, and that's not acceptable.
Universe has an origin. Therefore, it is caused by SOMETHING. THAT SOMETHING I call God. If you deny the existence of God then THAT “SOMETHING” transcends your imaginations. You can’t deny the majesty of THAT “SOMETHING” on the logical grounds. If you don’t want to use the word GOD then you have to present substitutive proposition to THAT “SOMETHING”
(August 31, 2013 at 8:19 am)Esquilax Wrote: Since I can't be shitted treading over old ground, when I and others have debunked this argument in another threat quite recently, I'll just post an old video with some more objections:
Saying I like it or not will not change anything. No one had come up with any evidence, demonstrating the presence of “Nothingness”, and shown that things could pop out of Nothingness without any cause and reason. This argument is a hard fact. You like it or not, it will remain a fact until you challenge it with the help of a solid testimony. Jumping in air or hitting your head in a concrete wall won’t help you here.
(August 31, 2013 at 8:19 am)Esquilax Wrote: Arguments are based on demonstrated premises, not assertions. All this is is an assertion, made baselessly and given no reason beyond some vaguely philosophical handwaving. Since you haven't bothered to actually provide any reason why a person should accept the reasoning here, I can reject it out of hand.
That which is asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence
“We recognize that we ourselves are not made by ourselves but by something else;”
What is wrong with this phrase?
(August 31, 2013 at 8:41 am)StuW Wrote: Quote:First Argument
(1) Whatever begins to exist is caused to exist by something else.
(2) The universe began to exist.
(3) Therefore the universe was caused to exist; and the cause of its existence is God.
Al-Ghazali, Abu Hamid (1058-1111)
Kalām has been proven again and again to be a false argument, watch..
1) All men have mothers
2) All men are part of the human race
3) Therefore the human race has a mother
You can't lump things that happen within the universe with the universe itself.
Disagreeing with the second part of third premise is a pure matter of choice, but you cannot disprove its logical inference either.
You are in a state where you are denying the existence of “God”, cannot support “Nothingness”, and do not have third option for trading for “God” and “Nothingness”.
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: Do you really think that a large font can hide the idiocy of your arguments? It doesn't
Sorry! From now on, I’ll keep the font size normal.
If you think my arguments are stupid then you should prove them stupid instead of using mere vocalization. Without appropriate reasoning, your statement is in fact no more than a Hullabaloo.
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: Quote:Most biologists also disagree that genes of apes can be developed through evolutionary route into human genes, whereas others striving to show similarities among genes of apes and human and through this trying to prove Darwin’s point of view on human evolution to be true.
Web is full of such controversies
Not this one. Biologists have all pretty much agreed on that.
Can you name couple of eminent biologists who agreed that genetic coding of an ape DNA could evolve into human DNA by means of evolution?
If you think answer is yes then show us, how many ape genes out of 10 to the power 100 evolve into human DNA at average and what time factor involved in this process?
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: Quote:Cartoons of Prophet Mohammad were intended to humiliate Islam based on hatred and Jealousy. There was no literary contention behind that act.
Ofcourse there was - its called freedom of speech.
If freedom of speech means humiliating others then why you feel angry when someone compares your beloved ones with disgusting things?
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: They took the cowardly route by trying to appease the crybaby Muslims. Not the correct step.
Nope! You are wrong. They are Conspiratorial, not Coward.
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: And even if it did, it'd still be wrong of me to threaten or commit violence in retaliation - something you muslims are so fond of.
Is that the reason why poor Afghans receiving western bombs over their heads since last 40 years in their own homes?
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: If you beat me in a 100m sprint and it turns out that I never held a record in the first place, it wouldn't be a news at all.
Here we are talking about a record holder only.
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: Quran claims that it is a divine word. But it has had discrepancies and scientific errors within it since its conception. So it never actually established its claim. Not for last 1400 years, not even for 1 year. And since it was never established, someone challenging it and proving it wrong doesn't amount to news and therefore won't be broadcasted at all.
It is near to impossible for someone to memorize a book in foreign language without knowing that language especially when the text that has discrepancies in it. However, this glory goes to Quran exclusively. There are approximately 30,000,000 Hafiz Quran in the world today. Hafiz Quran are those people who memorize complete Quran from beginning to end and word by word. These hafiz Quran belongs to all cultures, nations, race, colour and language. Around 70% of these hafiz Quran are those people who don’t know Arabic as language.
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: I agree- what information is given in it is sufficient to establish the truth. And the truth is that the Quran, like every other 'holy text' out there, is a pile of bullshit that's not even worth a reading.
First point, am I asking you to read Quran?
Second, if you don’t know Quran then how comes you are criticizing it? Perhaps, you are one of those who follow blind faith. Possibly, it’s your dire desire to condemn Quran by hook or by crook and for this reason you agree with everything which goes against Quran whether true or false.
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: Too easy, simply too easy. Atleast gimme a challenge.
http://wikiislam.net/wiki/Dr._Keith_Moor..._Additions
Wikiislam is managed by Crooks, whose job is to distort everything related to Islam. Better, you search Wikipedia, which is, if not saying the truth then at least, not distorting it as well. For its honest job, Wikipedia is famous worldwide and people don’t hesitate giving their financial donations in acknowledgement to its fabulous services to humanity.
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: The result of Moore's and Zindani's collaboration is not an academic book and subsequent editions omit and contradict the "Islamic additions". Reverting back to his previous description, they basically admit that the embryology in the Qur'an is a repetition of Greek and Indian medicine
Can you validate your statement true through proper references and by presenting the writings of Greeks and Indians who were living before the invention of microscope?
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: For example, in 1986 he wrote that "The drop or nutfa [in Surah 23:13] has been interpreted as the sperm or spermatozoon, but a more meaningful interpretation would be the zygote which divides to form a blastocyst which is implanted in the uterus ("a place of rest")," but in the 8th edition of The Developing Human (published 2007), he writes that "Growth of science was slow during the medieval period... human beings [according to the Qur'an] are produced from a mixture of secretions from the male and female. Several references are made to the creation of a human being from a nutfa (small drop). It also states that the resulting organism settles in the womb like a seed, 6 days after its beginning."
Word Nutfa came in Quran no less than 11 times. Nutfa means minute quantity of liquid.
Verily We created Man from minute quantity of (Nutfah) a drop of mingled fluid, in order to try him: So We gave him (the gifts), of Hearing and Sight
Al Insaan (76)
-Verse 2-
Nutfa can refer to male and female Gemmates after they form the Zygote. It yet remains a Nutfa “a minute quantity of liquid”.
It can also refer to the spermatic fluid, which contains several secretions from various glands like the testis, which contain spermatozoon it also includes the secretion from seminal vesicle, the seminal fluid that is a reservoir of spermatozoon but does not contain the fertilizing agent.
In addition, it refers to secretion of prostatic gland, which gives the creamy texture, and the characteristic odour to the sperm as well as gland attached to urinary track, which gives specific texture of mucus to the sperm.
Quran refer “minute quantity of mingled fluid”, which is male and female gemmates surrounded by these fluids, which are responsible for the birth of a human being.
Quran tells about different stages of embryology.
Man We did create from a quintessence (of clay);
Then We placed him as (a drop of) sperm in a place of rest, firmly fixed;
Then We made the sperm into a clot of congealed (leech like) blood;
Then of that clot We made a (chewed like) lump;
Then we made out of that lump bones and clothed the bones with flesh;
Then we developed out of it another creature. So blessed be Allah, the best to create!
Al Mu'minuun (23)
-Verses 12 to 14-
“Then We placed him as (a drop of) sperm in a place of rest, firmly fixed;”
Today Embryology tells us that the embryo is protected posteriorly by the backbone and the posterior muscles of mother and of course by the anti-abdominal wall, the womb’s wall, and amniocordionic membrane.
“Then We made the sperm into a clot of congealed (leech like) blood;”
Alaqa in Arabic has three meanings
a. Something which clings
b. A leech like substance
c. Blood clot
Under the hood of embryology all three meanings fits perfectly well in the description. Embryo in the initial stage clings to the uterine wall of the mother. It looks like a leech and behaves like a leech, which is a bloodsucker. It derives the blood supply and the nutrition from the mother. At this stage if an abortion takes place the Conceptus looks like a blood clot. This is the beauty of Quran that in one word “Alaqa” it implies all three meanings and all three meanings are in perfect harmony with embryological interpretation of initial stages of embryo.
“Then of that clot (Alaqa) We made a (chewed like) lump;”
In Arabic “Mudgha” means Chewed like lump.
Dr. Keith Moore took a plaster seal and bit it with his teeth. He was astonished that the teeth marks resembled to somite from which develop the spinal column.
“Then we made out of that lump bones and clothed the bones with flesh;”
“Then we developed out of it another creature.”
What does Quran means by “another (new) creature”?
In the initial embryological stages of development, human embryo is similar to other animals’ embryo. It is only at this stage that the particular appearance of human being appears. At this stage appear the head, the hands and the feet.
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: This shows that Moore's previous statements on embryology in the Qur'an were not based on science, but merely the result of patronage by the Saudi royal family.
When Dr. Keith Moore went through the translations of different verses of Quran he said that most of the things which Quran speaks are matching with the latest discoveries in the field of embryology. However, there are few things which I can’t say are right or wrong as I don’t have sufficient knowledge about that. One such verse was:
Proclaim! (or read!) in the name of thy Lord and Cherisher, Who created-
Created man, out of a (mere) clot of congealed blood (a leech like substance):
Al 'Alaq (96)
-Verses 1 & 2-
Dr. Keith Moore said he don’t know whether the embryo looks like a leech or not. So in his laboratory he examined whether the embryo in its early stages looks like leech or not by comparing it with the photograph of a leech.
To his astonishment, he found exact resemblance between the appearances of embryo and of leech.
Regarding the 80 question that were formulated based on Quranic verses and tradition of Prophet of Mohammad, Dr. Keith Moore said that if these questions were asked 30 years back, no one could have answered them as Embryology is somewhat a new field in medical science.
In his book “The Developing Human”, third edition he has incorporated new discoveries that he discovered through the clues given in Quran for which he got an award for writing a best medical book in that year. This book afterwards translated into several different languages of the world.
Those were the facts based on which professor Keith Moore proclaimed that he has no objection that Prophet Mohammad was the messenger of God and Quran is the Word of God.
A connection with Royal Saudi Family is nothing more than an attempt came out of desperation.
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: J. Needham, a well known authority on the history of embryology and a reference cited in Keith Moore's books, has also dismissed embryology in the Qur'an as merely "a seventh-century echo of Aristotle and the Ayer-veda."
Please give us the reference material from the work of anyone who before the invention of microscope had explained the stages of human evolution similar to what Quran had given and modern embryology had confirmed.
When professor Marshal Johnson (head of anatomy department, in the Denial Institute, in Thomas Jefferson hospital, Philadelphia USA) was asked to comment on these verses he said it is possible that Prophet Mohammad had a microscope and he had observed all these stages. At that, when he was reminded that microscope was not there 1400 years ago. He laughed loudly and said, “Yes, I know that”, he continued “I have seen the first microscope myself and it hardly enlarge 10 times”. He proclaimed that the source of description of these stages in Quran should only be a divine one.
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: You could've fooled me - it sounds exactly like the ramblings of a drunk bum.
Its the muslims who've thrown a curtain over their own eyes (that's a clever reference to burqa, in case you missed it). They are the ones who've closed their eyes to all the errors and contradictions in it.
BURQA is not a prerequisite to behave like those about whom Bible says:
… they seeing see not; and hearing they hear not, neither do they understand.
(Matt 13:13 [KJV])
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: Yes, Sir Francis Gold did discover that - but I don't see this being mentioned in your quran.
Many times, I had referred to Quran as a book of signs. Quran gives these signs in such a manner that a layman and scholar both can apprehend the meanings according to the level of their intellects. In both cases of comprehension, these meanings remarkably suffice the same purpose.
Before the discovery that Francis Gold had made, no one had any idea why Quran gave the example of fingertips. Now we can understand the purpose behind that example. It is because although all fingertips are more or less similar in their physical appearances but they are unique for every individual person in terms of signatures they carry. Allah is saying not only He is proficient enough in reassembling the bones but also He is in full command to recreate the fingerprint in their exact fashion as He had created them first time.
This is the beauty of Quran that alongside positing its message in an easy and explicable manner, it gives clues on facts, which are not yet known to us, but in reality, they are there.
Previously, I had elucidated that what looks ambiguous in Quran is in fact not ambiguous. It is our acquired knowledge that has not reached the level at which we can understand most of the clues that Quran is giving beside the formal meanings these clues depict. If Quran is giving some specific example, it is to draw our attention toward to some reality and asking us to ponder and try to reach a higher level of understanding. As Quran is the book of commandments, it doesn’t go into intricate details related to science, philosophy, history, etc.
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: If you want to establish your "claim" that there are no contradictions or scientific discrepancies in Quran, then yes, you'll have to "waste" your time refuting all those childish arguments. And then you'll have to refute the other thousand "childish" contradictions I come up with. Then we move on to the adult contradictions. And only when you have refuted each and every one of them then you can say that there are no contradictions or discrepancies in Quran - but not before.
Secondly, none of Christian or Atheist Apologists uses any of these allegations in their debates with Muslims. There are millions of Muslim-Christian and Muslim-Atheist debates available on YouTube and you can check yourself. Do you think Christian and Atheist scholars don’t know about these web sites and about these allegations against Quran?
There not using it doesn't make these arguments untrue. So either put up or shut up.
They are not giving these arguments in debates and in their written works, because they know these allegations have intentional purpose to distract general people from Quran and those allegations are not necessarily reputable facts. They don’t want that people who have proper knowledge of Quran would laugh at their cheap shots.
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: Quote:Once Jay Smith tried to quote such allegation in a debate with Shabir Ally and after that, Jay had no place to hide his face when Shabir Ally rebutted.
Never heard of either of them. But if you are so confident in your rebuttal - go ahead, present it.
You can find their debates on YouTube. Those debates might be boring for you as in them two theists are defending their specific ways they perceive and believe in God and you do not believe in the presence of that God.
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: I haven't studied Illiad either. I don't need to in order to know its wrong.
Arguments against Quran are not established facts on which everyone can unequivocally agree. You cannot experience the experience of others as your own experience. Merely on the words of others, you are trying to build your conclusions, which in itself is an unjust act. Perhaps people, whom you are following, have unwise intentions against Quran. If you are really striving to know the truth, then there is no way other than putting your personal effort in the research and learning. Else, your verdicts against Quran based on other people’s opinions (which are not established facts) are no more than notorious act of a hypocrite.
Quote
We shall willingly grant that bad faith is a lie to oneself, on condition that we distinguish the lie to oneself from lying in general. Lying is a negative attitude, we will agree to that. But this negation does not bear on consciousness itself; it aims only in transcendent. The essence of the lie implies in fact that the liar actually is in complete possession of the truth, which he is hiding. A man does not lie about what he is ignorant of; he does not lie when he spreads an error of which he himself is the dupe; he does not lie when he is mistaken. The ideal description of the liar would be a cynical consciousness, affirming truth within himself, denying it in his words, and denying that negation as such.
Unquote
Page 48
Being and Nothingness
Jean-Paul Sartre
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: Are you saying that the quotes given in the website, supposedly from the Quran, are actually not in Quran at all? That should be easy to prove. Otherwise, the only thing I'm hearing against Quran is Quran itself.
You are listening what you desire to listen.
All those allegations are based on misquotes, quotations out of context and on the implications of false synonyms to the words. The authors had also taken advantage on general people’s lack of knowledge on Quran and Arabic Language while framing those allegations.
Let me give you one example:
Until, when he reached the setting of the sun, he found it set in a spring of murky water: Near it he found a People: We said: "O Zul-qarnain! (thou hast authority,) either to punish them, or to treat them with kindness."
Al Kahfi (18)
-Verse 86-
The objection here is that sun setting in a spring of murky water is unscientific.
The Arabic word used here is “VAJADA” means, “it appeared to”. Allah is describing what appeared to Zul-Qarnain.
The Arabic word Maghrib (West) can be used for time as well as for place. When we say sunset at 7pm it means time but if I say sunset in the west then it means place.
Therefore, “when he reached the setting of the sun” means he reached at the time of sunset and sunset appeared to be in spring of murky water.
If someone ague no it means sun was factually setting in murky water then lets analyses it further.
We in our everyday life use the words sunrise and sunset. Is scientifically sun is rising or is it setting? Sure not. Yet you are reading every day in the newspapers “sunrise at 7 AM” and “sunset at 6 PM” so does that means all the newspaper around the world are wrong because they are unscientific? Sure not.
Hence, Al Kahfi (18)-Verse 86- is not in contradiction to the established science it is the way how people speak in generalised form based on general natural appearances of natural phenomenon.
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: All this proves is that there is a multitude of arguments against Quran and that people can pick and choose different ones.
It is a sign of an obstinate character to argue on things without giving proper reasons. It is something as if you are saying, “I agree with all those allegations and I don’t care whether they are true or false”
(August 31, 2013 at 10:23 am)genkaus Wrote: Agreed. Naive people can be easily fooled and deceived by Muslim conmen trying to spread their bullshit dogma. Websites like these do a public service by preventing its reader from being taken in by quranic lies.
You have crushed me! Bravo!