(August 11, 2017 at 3:49 pm)pabsta Wrote: Isn't It Funny...
- that gravity on earth just happens to be the perfect value to allow humans to move freely, and never varies such that people become stuck in place or float into the atmosphere, wiping out humanity?
The precise strength of Earth's gravity varies depending on location.
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- that the air quality on earth just happens to provide the perfect environment to sustain human life, never varying... such that human beings become poisoned or suffocated, wiping out all humanity?
There is a huge variety in air quality, both in purity and in oxygen content. Compare smoggy Beijing to the summit of Everest to an isolated area on the seashore and you will get three completely different readings.
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- … that the distance of the earth from the sun never varies such that all humanity either burns or freezes to death?
That distance varies as Earth orbits the Sun.
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- … that atheists admit there are laws of nature, but deny there is anyone who created those laws?
Equivocation fallacy, confounding two different definitions of "law." A "law of nature" is merely a description of some consistency in a natural phenomenon; it is not enforced by a celestial court of law.
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- … that studies have been performed confirming that there is no place on earth where religion hasn't been practiced? Why do people have this built-in instinct?
You might want to tell that to the Pirahã tribe in the Amazon rainforest. According to [linguist Daniel] Everett, the Pirahã have no concept of a supreme spirit or god,and they lost interest in Jesus when they discovered that Everett had never seen him.
Oh, and I've never experienced that so-called "instinct." Religion is a learned response, not a natural inborn one.
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- that every person is born with a built-in knowledge that actions such as murder, suicide, theft, and deceit are wrong, without ever having to learn about this in school?
- that every person that goes against this built-in knowledge (the natural law) also has a voice of conscience that rebukes him repeatedly that what he did was wrong? Where does this voice come from and why do we all have it?
Apparently you've never heard of psychopaths. As for learning about morality in school, that is superfluous to the teaching already received in early childhood from one's parents: "Don't hit your brother. How would you like it if he hit you?" "Share your toys."
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- that every person has a built-in desire to pursue the truth in matters, and to balance the scales of justice when they become imbalanced?
I know people who do the exact opposite, using wishful thinking to avoid confronting their addictions, behaviours, bad relationships, financial problems, and other things. (And on what grounds do you purport to know the desires of "every person"? I'm reasonably sure that if we gave you a mind-reading test you would fail it.)
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- that every person instinctively begs God for help when death appears imminent, whether they previously learned to do this or not.
Nope. I know from my own experience that the above statement is false. When I was 11 I was mountain-climbing and got into a dangerous spot where I was one misstep away from plummeting 1400 feet to certain death. It never even occurred to me to ask a god for help; not only did I not believe in any gods, but I was much too busy trying to establish a strong handhold and chart a safe course to a nearby ledge.
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- that men and women just happen to be created with a built in desire for one another?
I take it that you've never heard of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans*, Two Spirit, Queer, Questioning, Intersex, and Asexual (LGBTTQ*) community, then?
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- that men and women just happen to have the built-in desire for self-preservation and procreation?
Oh, that's an evolved trait. Animals that have no desire for self-preservation or procreation die without reproducing, leaving only the animals that do have those survival instinct.
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- that there is an automated food chain across the globe that continuously maintains life?
Again, an evolved ecosystem. We eat what's available, and other animals eat what's available. Photosynthesis plays a pretty big role in the system, too.
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- that the human brain, a 3 pound piece of tissue, is the most complex computer found on the planet?
I expect this to change as computing technology continues to improve. This so-called "computer" also lacks a great deal of precision and is subject to biochemical derangement and retention of false information and unhealthy behavioural patterns. It's also tied to substandard input devices: Compared to other species we don't hear all that well, and we don't see all that well either.
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- that the human heart can maintain life for over 100 years with its own mysterious source of energy?
"Mysterious" as in "brain, lungs, gastrointestinal tract, food, water and air"? Take away any of the above, and you can wave bye-bye to Mr. Heart.
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- that of the countless functions of the human body, if any of them were omitted or occurred in a different order, it would wipe out humanity?
Well, I think that most of us can do quite nicely without an appendix -- and we'd be in considerably less danger of choking to death if we had separate ingress to the lungs and stomach. Hair growth is nice, but hardly essential. (Oh, and the lumbar spine and the knees are engineering nightmares.) One would think that a divine "designer" with more than half a working brain cell should have figured out by now that humans could benefit from better joints, self-healing spinal cords and peripheral nerves, limbs capable of regeneration, and an endocrine system capable of dealing with high stress and high carbohydrates without having conniptions and screwing up hormone production.
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- that many atheists try to assert there is no God due to deaths in past wars, while they neglect to acknowledge the fact that 4.5 million people die of natural causes across the globe every MONTH (55 million per year)?
I do not belong that particular group of atheists. I fully acknowledge the reality of death and see the existence or non-existence of gods as a completely separate issue, being a nonbeliever simply because I've yet to see any evidence for gods that I find convincing.
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- that atheists will become angry when these facts are pointed out in this forum post? This anger obviously stems from the atheist continuously fighting his own conscience as it repeatedly points out all of these facts.
Angry? No, I'm smirking at your gullibility and at your use of the word "facts" in connection with your paean to religiously-fueled wilful ignorance.