RE: Why are the "laws" of physics so different as conceived by many xtian fundamentalist?
November 7, 2016 at 5:09 am
(This post was last modified: November 7, 2016 at 7:05 am by Homeless Nutter.)
If you believe in an omnipotent, omnipresent god, science is impossible. There isn't a single measurement you can make, or an experiment you can conduct, that you could isolate from god's potential interference. You can test a water sample 999999 times, but you still can't be sure, that if you test it a millionth time it won't be wine, if god wills it, for whatever reason it might have, that you are not allowed to question.
All you can do with your life is bumble around the Earth, like a child in a dream-world, permanently confused and bewildered by even the most mundane events, begging invisible supernatural being for the Sun to rise again tomorrow, all the while being herded and fleeced by cynical charlatans and madmen, who claim to know god's will.
And anyway - why would you want to learn anything, when you can believe, that all you have to do is die and the entire magical reality will be revealed to you?
All you can do with your life is bumble around the Earth, like a child in a dream-world, permanently confused and bewildered by even the most mundane events, begging invisible supernatural being for the Sun to rise again tomorrow, all the while being herded and fleeced by cynical charlatans and madmen, who claim to know god's will.
And anyway - why would you want to learn anything, when you can believe, that all you have to do is die and the entire magical reality will be revealed to you?
"The fact that a believer is happier than a skeptic is no more to the point than the fact that a drunken man is happier than a sober one." - George Bernard Shaw


