(December 19, 2013 at 7:55 pm)Ksa Wrote: ^ Listen, you're a Bible man. If you can prove from the Bible that you're a true christian by passing the Mark 16:17-18 confirmation test, we take your word for it without argument.
Mark 16:9-20 is not original and therefore is not inspired. Nice try though.
(December 19, 2013 at 11:14 pm)Lemonvariable72 Wrote: If you bothered to read the damn link I posted, you'd realize that, that is not the only find all.
I did look at your links.
Quote: Ffs even look at archaeopteryx
Archaeopteryx is considered by most to be a type of bird based on phylogenic comparisons and not a feathered dinosaur.
Quote: Or how how about Sciurumimus albersdoerferi
And here is Anchiornis huxleyi
Or Sinornithosaurus millenii
or Sinocalliopteryx gigas
It just happens to be that Sinosauropteryx is in the spotlight right now do to that debate.
Feduccia cautions against using such fossils as evidence for feathered dinosaurs in his article, “Do feathered dinosaurs exist? Testing the hypothesis on neontological and paleontological evidence” published in the Journal of Morphology. He points out that all of these fossils come from a similar region of China known for fossil hoaxes. The fossils are never authenticated by any Western scientists so accepting them upon face value is not wise.
(December 20, 2013 at 9:38 am)Bad Wolf Wrote: Wow, stat really got called out on the feather thing
Hardly. It’s just shocking how little evidence you will accept when it supposedly supports something you want to be true. I am not sure why it’s surprising, I should know better by now.
(December 20, 2013 at 1:52 pm)BadWriterSparty Wrote: That's not the only thing he gets called out on. You should hear him carry on about Noah's Ark.
Yes, I refuted every one of your silly objections to that account. You’re welcome.
(December 20, 2013 at 6:36 pm)BadWriterSparty Wrote: You're not very good at this game.
Doesn’t seem to stop me from winning at it.
Quote: The Bible would be evidence of people writing a religious text, not of there being a god.
Why?
Quote: What, is the Quran evidence of Allah?
Nope because it is self-contradictory.
Quote: Is the Book of Mormon evidence of there being those elusive Golden Plates?
Nope, it is self-contradictory as well. Do you have anything actually analogous?
Quote: Yes, you'll get laughed at because it's a silly tactic.
That’s still a fallacious appeal to consequence. As long as I am right I do not care what the consequences are.
Quote: You are trying to convince us atheists that there is a god, are you not?
No.
Quote:The fallacy was correctly identified by Esquilax, and it still stands.
No it was not and no it does not.
Quote: You just like that he presumed creation instead of considering other possibilities or taking the honest route by saying, "I don't know enough to say anything for certain."
No, you just disliked the fact he preferred creation causing you to desperately toss out the names of fallacies you clearly do not understand hoping that they will stick. That was not even close to a fallacious appeal to incredulity.
Quote:It proves that it's possible in natural conditions.
How does doing something in the laboratory prove it can happen outside of the laboratory?
Quote: Even if we don't know the original conditions of the earth when RNA first came about, we know that if there's another condition where it can, then the sky is the limit on a number of other possibilities.
Atheists really do live by faith.
Quote:I can see why you would think that, but the claim that Whateverist was questioning was still a positive one.
“RNA cannot spontaneously generate” is a negative claim.
Quote: Orangebox positively claimed that he thinks it cannot spontaneously exist.
How?
Quote: If he's so certain of this, then the burden of proof is on the one making the claim.
Yes, and that’s you. He is not claiming that RNA can spontaneously generate, that is all yours.
Quote: If I were to say, "I know there is no god," even though the assertion is about a negative, the claim is still positive, and I would be obliged to provide evidence of god's nonexistence or shut up.
Atheists claim that all of the time.
Quote:A lot has been mentioned. Do you have anything specific that you need addressed?
I think my question was clear, so can you or can you not?
Quote: Also, who told you that denying the existence of god has anything to do with questioning all things?
Whateverist in Post #69
Quote: That's fine. Even in the face of insurmountable evidence, it is your prerogative to deny the facts and go about thinking the same way you always have.
Insurmountable evidence? You have evidence that God does not exist? I am not even sure how that is possible. Please present said evidence.
Quote: You're absolutely right that we can't appeal to your "theistic conceptual scheme" because we atheists love evidence. It's our figurative cross to bear.
Such hubris. Your conceptual scheme undermines the use of evidence because it cannot account for regularities in Nature.
Quote:The only problem here is that you believe his reasoning was circular, but it's not surprising that you would try to find such a flaw, even if there was none to begin with.
Appealing to your senses to justify the reliability of your senses is not circular? Appealing to your memory in order to justify the reliability of your memory is not circular? I think you need to learn your terms.
Quote: After all, we're sitting here on this thread trying to call Christians out on their own circular reasoning with the Bible. Are you sure the reason you're projecting your own insecurities isn't because you feel threatened by all this?
Threatened by what? Blatant hypocrisy? Not in the least.
Quote: I am honestly telling you that I don't believe the Bible to be the words of anything but men.Is that a positive claim?
Quote: Nothing in my words or actions should indicate otherwise (but I would be remiss if I didn't ask you to show me where I might have indicated it so that I can apologize for any such mistake).
By assuming there are regularities in nature that will continue into the future; more precisely by claiming that we can reason from specific instances to general claims. This would not be possible without the God of scripture existing and yet you seem to believe this is possible.
Quote: As you have interpreted it to mean that we already accept your god, neither I nor anyone else can take said belief away from you.
It’s pretty clear.
Quote: The only problem that I see is when you tell us this doctrine of yours as a knowledge claim instead of as an article of faith.
If someone who knows everything and who cannot lie tells you something then it’s not faith, it’s knowledge.
Quote: You declare, "You already know the word to be true." Telling us that is going to make us a little mad because we don't feel that way, nor can we possibly, physically think that if we are indeed atheists.
I did not declare that, scripture did. There’s no reason to get upset, if you know I am wrong that is. I am just not going to disbelief scripture based upon what a couple atheists tell me. It’d be like if your dad told you never to play cards with gypsies because they’ll deceive you and you go and play cards with them because they told you that your dad was wrong. Seems rather foolish.
Quote: If you were to instead tell us, "I believe that you already know it to be true," our mutual understanding could be greatly enhanced. The former remark is meant to be incendiary, even if you don't think so (or do you?).
It was not meant to be incendiary at all. I am not on here to push people’s buttons.
Quote:And that's a non-analogy.
Why?
Quote: We have demonstrable proof that those were created.
Are you really going to argue that if we did not have such proof we’d have to conclude that Windows 8 is the result of natural processes or the expansion from a singularity 13.7 Billion years ago? Seriously?
I’ve never met the creator(s) of Windows 8 and yet I can infer that they exist from the product they created.
Quote:I hate to say it, but this one has got to be one of the most absurd, intellectually vapid replies that I have ever seen from you.
Then I am doing pretty well because I raised an excellent point.
Quote: However, I did notice that Lemon got back to you with photographic evidence of the fossils from whence these artists get their information.
Which I easily refuted. Not only this, but not a single one of those fossils allegedly proving dinosaurs had feathers were of an Oviraptor so my point still stands. An artist drawing feathers on a dinosaur proves nothing. If you think that it does then you are even worse off than I thought.
Quote: You can now shove your own picture up your arse.
Classy.
(December 20, 2013 at 11:53 pm)Lemonvariable72 Wrote: Hell he mays as well tried to support the claim sauropods dragged their tails.
On the contrary, you’d have to claim that since some artists draw them with their tails that way.
Quote: In truth the discovery that many small and medium sized therapods had feathers is basically his lizard with bird features. It is a painfully obvious link between birds and dinosaurs.
What! How? This is one of the worst non-sequiturs I have ever seen on here. If organisms possessing homologous structures from two other groups of organisms proves the first organism is a transitional form then you’ve got some serious problems!
“It is a painfully obvious link between Mammals and Birds.”
(December 23, 2013 at 6:00 am)là bạn điên Wrote: The Bible is evidence of God in the same way that the Lord of the Rings is evidence of Sauron
How unoriginal. God is the author of the Bible so this is a fallacious analogy.
(December 24, 2013 at 10:47 am)Minimalist Wrote: When cross-examined by archaeology/history it turns out to be horseshit. This is a bad sign.
So you are trying to argue against something known through deduction by pointing to something we know through induction alone. That makes a lot of sense.