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The God Delusion: David Quinn & Richard Dawkins debate (Transcript Here)
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Posted on 10/28/2006 7:47:16 AM PDT by SirLinksalot


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The God Delusion: David Quinn & Richard Dawkins debate

   THE RYAN TUBRIDY SHOW


Now, this morning, we are asking, what’s wrong with religion? That’s just one of the questions raised in a new book called, The God Delusion. We’re going to talk to its author — the man who’s been dubbed the world’s most famous, out of the closet, living atheist — Richard Dawkins.




Ryan Tubridy


Richard Dawkins

David Quinn

Ryan Tubridy: Richard, good morning to you

Richard Dawkins: Good morning.

Tubridy: It’s nice to talk to you again. We spoke before once on the similar subject matter. David Quinn is also with us here. David Quinn is a columnist with the Irish Independent. David, a very good morning to you.

David Quinn: Good morning.

Tubridy: So Richard Dawkins here you go again, up to your old tricks. In your most recent book, The God Delusion. Let’s just talk about the word if you don’t mind, the word delusion, so put it into context. Why did you pick that word?

Dawkins: Well the word delusion means a falsehood which is widely believed, and I think that is true of religion. It is remarkably widely believed, it’s as though almost all of the population or a substantial proportion of the population believed that they had been abducted by aliens in flying saucers. You’d call that a delusion. I think God is a similar delusion.

 

Tubridy: And would it be fair to say you equate God with say, the imaginary friend, the bogeyman, or the fairies at the end of the garden?

Dawkins: Well I think He’s just as probable to exist, yes, and I do discuss all those things especially the imaginary friend which I think is an interesting psychological phenomenon in childhood and that may possibly have something to do with the appeal of religion.


Tubridy: So take us through that little bit about the imaginary friend factor.

Dawkins: Many young children have an imaginary friend. Christopher Robin had Binker. A little girl who wrote to me had a little purple man. And the girl with the little purple man actually saw him. She seemed to hallucinate him. He appeared with a little tinkling bell. And, he was very, very real to her although in a sense she knew he wasn’t real. I suspect that something like that is going on with people who claim to have heard God or seen God or hear the voice of God.

 

Tubridy: And we’re back to delusion again. Do you think that anyone who believes in God, anyone of any religion, is deluded? Is that the bottom line with your argument Richard?

Dawkins: Well there is a sophisticated form of religion which, well one form of it is Einstein’s which wasn’t really a religion at all. Einstein used the word God a great deal, but he didn’t mean a personal God. He didn’t mean a being who could listen to your prayers or forgive your sins. He just meant it as a kind of poetic way of describing the deep unknowns, the deep uncertainties at the root of the universe. Then there are deists who believe in a kind of God, a kind of personal God who set the universe going, a sort of physicist God, but then did no more and certainly doesn’t listen to your thoughts. He has no personal interest in humans at all. I don’t think that I would use a word like delusions for, certainly not for Einstein, no I don’t think I would for a deist either. I think I would reserve the word delusion for real theists who actually think they talk to God and think God talks to them.


Tubridy: You have a very interesting description in The God Delusion of the Old Testament God. Do you want to give us that description or will I give it to you back?

Dawkins: Have you got it in front of you?

Tubridy: Yes I have.

Dawkins: Well why don’t you read it out then.

Tubridy: Why not. You describe God as a misogynistic, homophobic, racist, infanticidal, genocidal, filicidal, pestilential, megalomaniacal, sadomasochistic, capriciously malevolent bully.

Dawkins: That seems fair enough to me, yes.


Tubridy: Okay. There are those who would think that’s a little over the top.

Dawkins: Read your Old Testament, if you think that. Just read it. Read Leviticus, read Deuteronomy, read Judges, read Numbers, read Exodus.

Tubridy: And do you, is it your contention, that these elements of the God as described by yourself are what has not helped matters in terms of, say, global religion and the wars that go with it?

Dawkins: Well, not really because no serious theologian takes the Old Testament literally anymore, so it isn’t quite like that. An awful lot of people think they take the Bible literally but that can only be because they’ve never read it. If they ever read it they couldn’t possibly take it literally, but I do think that people are a bit confused about where they get their morality from. A lot of people think they get their morality from the Bible because they can find a few good verses. Parts of the Ten Commandments are okay, parts of the Sermon on the Mount are okay. So they think they get their morality from the Bible. But actually of course nobody gets their morality from the Bible, we get it from somewhere else and to the extent that we can find good bits in the Bible we cherry pick them. We pick and choose them. We choose the good verses in the Bible and we reject the bad. Whatever criterion we use to choose the good verses and throw out the bad, that criterion is available to us anyway whether we are religious or not. Why bother to pick verses? Why not just go straight for the morality?


Tubridy: Do you think the people who believe in God and in religion generally who you think that have, you use the analogy of the imaginary friend, do you think that the people who believe in God and religion are a little bit dim?

Dawkins: No, because many of them clearly are highly educated and score highly on IQ tests and things so…

Tubridy: Why do you think they believe in something you think doesn’t exist?

Dawkins: Well I think that people are sometimes remarkably adept at compartmentalizing their mind, at separating their mind into two separate parts. There are some people who even manage to combine being apparently perfectly good working scientists with believing that the book of Genesis is literally true and that the world is only 6000 years old. If you can perform that level of doublethink then you could do anything.


Tubridy: But they might say that they pity you because you don’t believe in what they think is fundamentally true.

Dawkins: Well they might and we’ll have to argue it out by looking at the evidence. The great thing is to argue it by looking at evidence, not just to say “Oh well, this is my faith. There’s no argument to be had. You can’t argue with faith.”


Tubridy: David Quinn, columnist with the Irish Independent, show us some evidence please.

Quinn: Well I mean the first thing I would say is that Richard Dawkins is doing what he commonly does which is he’s setting up straw men so he puts God in the same, he puts believing in God, in the same category as believing in fairies. Well you know children stop believing in fairies when they stop being children, but they usually don’t’ stop believing in God because belief in God to my mind is a much more rational proposition than believing in fairies and Santa Claus.


Tubridy: Do we have more proof that God exists than we do for fairies?

Quinn: I will come to that in a second. I mean the second thing is about compartmentalizing yourself when he uses examples of… well you’ve got intelligent people who somehow or other also believe the world is only 6000 years old and we have a young Earth and they don’t believe in evolution… but again… I mean that’s too stark an either or… I mean there are many people who believe in God but also believe in evolution and believe the universe is 20 billion years old and believe fully in Darwinian evolution or whatever the case may be… Now I mean in all arguments about the existence or nonexistence of God often these things don’t even get off the launch pad because the two people debating can’t even agree on where the burden of proof rests. Does it rest with those who are trying to prove the existence of God or with does it rest with those who are trying to disprove the existence of God? But I suppose you know if I bring this on to Richard Dawkins’ turf and we talk about the theory of evolution…The theory of evolution explains how matter — which we are all made from — organized itself into for example highly complex beings like Richard Dawkins and Ryan Tubridy and other human beings but what it doesn’t explain just to give one example is how matter came into being in the first place. That, in scientific terms, is a question that cannot be answered and can only be answered, if it can be answered fully at all, by philosophers and theologians. But it certainly cannot be answered by science and the question of whether God exists or not cannot be answered fully by science either and a common mistake that people can believe is the scientist who speaks about evolution with all the authority of science can also speak about the existence of God with all the authority of science and of course he can’t. The scientist speaking about the existence of God is actually engaging in philosophy or theology but he certainly isn’t bringing to it the authority of science per se.


Tubridy: Back to the original question, have you any evidence for me?

Quinn: Well I will say the existence of matter itself. I will say the existence of morality. Myself and Richard Dawkins have a clearly different understanding of the origins of morality. I would say free will. If you’re an atheist, if you’re an atheist logically speaking you cannot believe in objective morality. You cannot believe in free will. These are two things that the vast majority of humankind implicitly believe in. We believe for example that if a person carries out a bad action, we can call that person bad because we believe that they are freely choosing those actions. … And just quickly an atheist believes we are controlled completely by our genes and make no free actions at all.


Tubridy: What evidence do you have, Richard Dawkins, that you’re right?

Dawkins: I certainly don’t believe a word of that. I do not believe we are controlled wholly by our genes. Let me go back to the really important thing that Mr. Quinn said.

Quinn: How are we independent of our genes by your reckoning? What allows us to be independent of our genes? Where is this coming from?

Dawkins: Environment for a start.

Quinn: Well hang on but that also is a product of if you like of matter. Okay?

Dawkins: Yes but it’s not genes.

Quinn: What part of us allows us to have free will?

Dawkins: Free will is a very difficult philosophical question and it’s not one that has anything to do with religion, contrary to what Mr. Quinn says…but…

Quinn: It has an awful lot to do with religion because if there is no God there’s no free will because we are completely phenomena of matter.

Dawkins: Who says there’s not free will if there is no God? That’s a ridiculous thing to say.

Quinn: William Provine for one who you quote in your book. I mean I have a quote here from him. “Other scientists, as well, believe the same thing… that everything that goes on in our heads is a product of genes and as you say environment and chemical reactions. That there is no room for free will.” And Richard if you haven’t got to grips with that you seriously need to because many of your colleagues have and they deny outright the existence of free will and they are hardened materialists like yourself.


Tubridy: Okay. Richard Dawkins, rebut to that as you wish.

Dawkins: I’m not interested in free will what I am interested in is the ridiculous suggestion that if science can’t say where the origin of matter comes from theology can. The origin of matter… the origin of the whole universe, is a very, very difficult question. It’s one that scientists are working on. It’s one that they hope eventually to solve. Just as before Darwin, biology was a mystery. Darwin solved that. Now cosmology is a mystery. The origin of the universe is a mystery; it’s a mystery to everyone. Physicists are working on it. They have theories. But if science can’t answer that question then as sure as hell theology can’t either.

Quinn: If I can come in there, it is a perfectly reasonable proposition to ask yourself where does matter come from? And it is perfectly reasonable as well to posit the answer, God created matter. Many reasonable people believe this and by the way… I mean look it is quite a different category to say look we will study matter and we will ask how

Dawkins: But if science can’t answer that question, then it’s sure as hell theology can’t either.

Tubridy: Richard, if ...

Quinn: Sorry — if I can come in there — It’s a perfectly reasonable proposition to ask oneself where does matter come from. And it’s perfectly reasonable as well to posit the answer God created matter. Many reasonable people believe this.

Dawkins: It’s not reasonable.

Quinn: It’s quite a different category to say “Look, we will study matter and we will ask how matter organizes itself into particular forms,” and come up with the answer “evolution.” It is quite another question to ask “Where does matter come from to begin with?” And if you like you must go outside of matter to answer that question. And then you’re into philosophical categories.

Dawkins: How could it possibly be another category and be allowed to say God did it since you can’t explain where God came from?

Quinn: Because you must have an uncaused cause for anything at all to exist. Now, I see in your book you come up with an argument against this that I frankly find to be bogus. You come up with the idea of a mathematical infinite regress but this does not apply to the argument of uncaused causes and unmoved movers because we are not talking about maths we’re talking about existence and existentially nothing exists unless you have an uncaused cause. And that uncaused cause and that unmoved mover is, by definition, God.


Tubridy: OK. I’m going to move...

Dawkins: You just defined God as that! You just defined a problematic existence. That’s no solution to the problem. You just evaded it.

Quinn: You can’t answer the question where matter comes from! You, as an atheist —

Dawkins: I can’t, but science is working on it. You can’t answer it either.

Quinn: It won’t come up with an answer, and you invoked a mystery argument that you accuse religious believers of doing all the time. You invoke a very first and most fundamental question about reality. You do not know where matter came from.

Dawkins: I don’t know. Science is working on it. Science is a progressive thing that’s working on it. You don’t know but you claim that you do.

Quinn: I claim to know the probable answer.


Tubridy: Can I suggest that the next question is quite appropriate. The role of religion in wars. When you think of the difficulty that it brings up on a local level. Richard Dawkins, do you believe the world would be a safer place without religion?

Dawkins: Yes, I do. I don’t think that religion is the only cause of wars. Very far from it. Neither the second World War nor the first World War were caused by religion, but I do think that religion is a major exacerbater, and especially in the world today, as a matter of fact.


Tubridy: OK. Explain yourself.

Dawkins: Well, it’s pretty obvious. I mean that if you look at the Middle East, if you look at India and Pakistan, if you look at Northern Ireland, there are many, many places where the only basis for hostility that exists between rival factions who kill each other is religion.


Tubridy: Why do you take it upon yourself to preach, if you like, atheism and there’s an interesting choice of words in some ways — that you’ve been accused of being something like a fundamental atheist. If you like, the “High Priest” of atheism. Why go about your business in such a way that that’s kind of ...trying to disprove these things. Why don’t you just believe in it privately, for example?

Dawkins: Well, fundamentalist is not quite the right word. A fundamentalist is one who believes in a holy book and thinks that everything in that holy book is true. I am passionate about what I believe because I think there’s evidence for it. And I think it’s very different being passionate about evidence from being passionate about a holy book. So I do it because I care passionately about the truth. I really, really believe it’s a big question. It’s an important question, whether there is a God at the root of the universe. I think it’s a question that matters, and I think that we need to discuss it, and that’s what I do.

Quinn: Ryan if I could just say...

Tubridy: Go ahead.

Quinn: Richard has come up with a definition of fundamentalism that obviously suits him. He thinks a fundamentalist has to be somebody who believes in a holy book. A fundamentalist is somebody who firmly believes that they have got the truth and holds that to an extreme extent and become intolerant of those who hold to a different truth. And Richard Dawkins has just outlined what he thinks the truth to be and that makes him intolerant of those who have religious beliefs.

Now, in terms of the effect of religion upon the world, I mean, at least Richard has rightly acknowledged that there are many causes of war and strife and ill will in the world, and he mentions World War I and World War II. In his book he tries to get Nietzsche off the hook of having atheism blamed for example, the atrocities carried out by Josef Stalin, and saying that these have nothing particularly to do with atheism.

But Stalin and many Communists who were explicitly atheistic took the view that religion was precisely the sort of malign and evil force that Richard Dawkins thinks it is. And they set out from that premise to, if you like, inflict upon religion sort of their own version of a “final solution.” They set to eradicate from the earth true violence and also true education that was explicitly anti-religious. And under the Soviet Union, and in China, and under Pol Pot in Cambodia explicit and violent efforts were made to suppress religion on the grounds that religion was a wicked force; and we have the truth, and our truth would not admit religion into the picture at all because we believe religion to be an untruth. So atheism also can lead to fundamentalist violence and did so in the last century. And atheists…

 

Tubridy: We’ll allow Richard in there.

Dawkins: Stalin was a very, very bad man and his persecution of religion was a very, very bad thing. End of story. It’s nothing to do with the fact that he was an atheist. We can’t just compile lists of bad people who were atheists and lists of bad people who were religious. I am afraid there were plenty on both sides.

Quinn: Yes, but Richard you are always compiling lists of bad religious people. I mean you do it continually in all your books, and then you devote a paragraph to basically trying to absolve atheism of all blame for any atrocity throughout history. You cannot have it both ways! You cannot…

Dawkins: I deny that.

Quinn: But of course you do it. Every time you are on a program talking about religion, you bring up the atrocities committed in the name of religion. And then you try to minimize the atrocities committed by atheists because they were so anti-religious and because they regarded it as a malign force in much the same way you do. You are trying to have it both ways.

Dawkins: Well, I simply deny that. I do think that there is some evil in faith because faith is belief in something without evidence.

Quinn: But, you see, that is not what faith is. You see, that is a caricature and a straw man and is so typical. That is not what faith is! You have faith that God doesn’t…

Dawkins: What is faith? What is faith!?

Quinn: Wait a second! You have faith that doesn’t exist. You are a man of faith as well.

Dawkins: I do not! I have looked at the evidence!

Quinn: Well, I have looked — I have looked at the evidence too!

Dawkins: If somebody comes up with evidence that goes the other way, I will be the first to change my mind.

Quinn: Well, I think the very existence of matter is evidence that God exists. And by the way, remember, you are the man who has problems believing in free will, which you try to, very conveniently, shunt to one side.

Dawkins: I’m just not interested in free will. It’s not a big question for me.

Quinn: It’s a vast question because we cannot be considered morally responsible beings unless we have free will. We do everything because we are controlled by our genes or our environment. It’s a vital question.


Tubridy: We are returning to the point at which we kind of pretty much began, which is probably an appropriate time to end the debate. Richard Dawkins, good to talk to you again. Thank you for your time. And to you, David Quinn, columnist at The Irish Independent, thank you very much indeed for that. The God Delusion, by the way, throws up many, many interesting questions. It’s written by Richard Dawkins and is published by Bantam Press. We’ll put details, as always on our website, www.rte.ie If you want to exercise your free will to contact us, please do so.


ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Ryan Tubridy. "The God Delusion: David Quinn debates Richard Dawkins." The Ryan Tubridy Show (October 9, 2006).

Published with permission of The Ryan Tubridy Show of RTE radio in Dublin, Ireland.

Listen to the audio of this discussion here.

The debate lasts for about 18 minutes.

THE AUTHORS

Ryan Tubridy (born 28 May 1974) is a television and radio presenter on Radio Telefís Éireann in Ireland. Tubridy started his radio career at the age of 12 reviewing books for the popular Radio 1 show "Poporama" presented by Ruth Buchanan. From 2002 until 2005 he presented RTÉ 2 fm's hugely popular morning show, The Full Irish. In 2006 he presents The Tubridy Show, weekday mornings on Radio 1.

David Quinn is one of Ireland's best known religious and social affairs commentators. For over six years he was editor of The Irish Catholic, Ireland's main Catholic weekly newspaper. He has written weekly opinion columns for The Sunday Times and The Sunday Business Post. He has contributed to publications such as First Things, the Human Life Review and the Wall Street Journal ( Europe edition). Currently he is working freelance and contributes weekly columns to The Irish Independent, Ireland's biggest selling daily paper, and the Irish Catholic. He appears regularly on Irish radio and television current affairs programmes.

Richard Dawkins was educated at Oxford University and has taught zoology at the universities of California and Oxford. He is the Charles Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University. His books about evolution and science include The Selfish Gene, The Extended Phenotype, The Blind Watchmaker, River Out of Eden, Climbing Mount Improbable, Unweaving the Rainbow, and, most recently, The God Delusion.

Copyright © 2006 RTE radio
 




TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: atheism; christophobia; crevolist; davidquinn; debate; goddelusion; misotheism; postedinwrongforum; richarddawkins; theophobia
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To: SirLinksalot

Wonderful interview. Thanks for posting.


141 posted on 11/12/2006 9:30:12 AM PST by Silly (still being silly)
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To: MHGinTN
Well said, MHGinTN! Very well said indeed. Thank you!
142 posted on 11/12/2006 12:02:24 PM PST by Alamo-Girl
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To: MHGinTN

Your post zeroed in on the essence of it all ... Dawkins assumes his own status as godhood and thus moral responsibility which begins and ends with himself. From such an arrogant position it is near impossible to even comprehend his own error in reasoning, yet the error is blatant. Dawkins may have free will as his own god, but no one else may have free will if their choices obstruct his will. Truth is, only with a God of the creation in which we are creatures may we each have free will since we answer ultimately to the highest authority ... which is not Richard Dawkins, not any government, not any whim of nature or even the natural destruction of that which is matter in nature, for the soul is more than the matter in the mechanism and the spirit is more than the soul of the mechanism. Someone might want to ask Dawkins by what standard Stalin was evil or bad ... alas, Richard will obfuscate the obvious even from his own mind because he is unable to be free to be loved by his creator since he holds himself to be god to himself.

= = =

Excellent points.

Thanks.


143 posted on 11/12/2006 12:43:23 PM PST by Quix (LET GOD ARISE AND HIS ENEMIES BE SCATTERED. LET ISRAEL CALL ON GOD AS THEIRS! & ISLAM FLUSH ITSELF)
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To: SirLinksalot

In my opinionb, Quinn cleans hos clock, but why not: Dawkins never rises above village atheism. What's his name is much more formidable.


144 posted on 11/12/2006 12:45:49 PM PST by RobbyS ( CHIRHO)
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To: SirLinksalot
Seventy-four years of official atheism robbed the Russian people of this source of hope. This, more than a ruined economy and environmental degradation, is what has put Russia on the road to extinction. It’s a tragic reminder that ideas, and the worldviews and attitudes they engender, have very real consequences.
145 posted on 11/12/2006 12:54:56 PM PST by RobbyS ( CHIRHO)
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To: Alamo-Girl

Well said. Materialism is not the same thing as philosophical realism, although most modernists carelessly confuse the two, materialism and realism, and think of themselves as realists.

Furthermore, materialists cannot even know what is "real" in the material world. You can pound on a desk and say that it is real. You see it and feel it. But we know that the wood of the desk is in fact mostly empty space, made up of electrons orbiting around atomic nuclei. (If, in fact, there is any such thing as electrons, protons, or neutrons, or maybe these elementary particles are made up of muons or something else we don't know about yet?)

The world that materialists think of as real changes with every scientific advance.

Indeed, materialism often slows the advancement of science, because members of the scientific establishment stubbornly refuse to change their view of the way things work until their noses are absolutely rubbed into the new discoveries, as Thomas Kuhn points out in "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions." It happens again and again.

Materialists like to parrot that the Catholic Church resisted Galileo's hypothesis that the earth goes around the sun whenever resistance to science comes up. In fact, Galileo's friend the Pope only clamped down and ceased protecting him from his scientific rivals when Galileo (falsely) insisted that the movement of the earth was a proven fact, not a hypothesis. It was not really proven until more than a century later. Yet, four hundred years later, the Galileo affair is still the most famous example of opposition to scientific advancement, endlessly repeated.

In the real history of science, I suspect that most often literal-minded materialists are the ones who have most tenaciously resisted new and upsetting discoveries.


146 posted on 11/12/2006 1:32:48 PM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Alamo-Girl
I'm truly enjoying your exchanges with TrisB ... perticularly this response: Likewise you cannot declare something is random in the system when you don’t know what the system “is.” Secular humanists assume their current knowledge is the extent of that which is reality, when it is clear that their horizon is short of the turn. The material atheist declares the limits of the system and every year new data shows the arrogance to be amusing. Interesting that even Dawkins brushes against this fact when he says Science is working on the problem yet he, Dawkins, has yet to comprehend the essence of your cogent sentence regarding system incomplteness and randomness.
147 posted on 11/12/2006 5:41:45 PM PST by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote life support for others.)
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To: SirLinksalot
Only a fool says in his heart, there is no God.

If this fellow got a good showing of God's wrath, he'd start believing in a hurry.

148 posted on 11/12/2006 5:45:09 PM PST by pray4liberty (School District horrors: http://totallyunjust.tripod.com)
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To: Cicero
Thank you so much for your outstanding essay-post and for the additional insights into Galileo. And thank you for the encouragements!

The world that materialists think of as real changes with every scientific advance.

So very true. As you have explained so well, they are often brought kicking and screaming to the next level of scientific discovery.

It will be interesting to see their reaction if CERN gives up on the Higgs field/boson (ordinary matter) or if what CERN observes does not agree with the Standard Model - further advancing supersymmetry, extra dimensionality, etc.

149 posted on 11/12/2006 8:53:33 PM PST by Alamo-Girl
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To: MHGinTN
Thank you oh so very much for your encouragements and for your excellent insights into Dawkins "I" problem. LOL!

Seriously though, it saddens me that the Dawkins of the world are so sure they have all the answers when they willfully refuse to see but a fraction of what we see.

150 posted on 11/12/2006 9:00:02 PM PST by Alamo-Girl
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To: Cicero; Alamo-Girl; cornelis; hosepipe
...materialism often slows the advancement of science, because members of the scientific establishment stubbornly refuse to change their view of the way things work until their noses are absolutely rubbed into the new discoveries, as Thomas Kuhn points out in "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions." It happens again and again.

Excellent point, Cicero!

Thank you so much for the additional details on Galileo, the book recommendation -- and for your outstanding essay/post!

151 posted on 11/12/2006 9:03:18 PM PST by betty boop (Beautiful are the things we see...Much the most beautiful those we do not comprehend. -- N. Steensen)
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To: TrisB; Alamo-Girl
...If all perception is just electrical sensory information

Jeepers, why do you use the word "if," when it seems this is your actual view?

Like Alamo-Girl, I strongly disagree with this presumption on your part. There is a species of "perception" which is "inner" to a man, not something originating from "outside." You only need physical ears for the latter.

I think you and Alamo-Girl are simply "talking past each other." And yet to me, she is speaking so clearly and directly. FWIW.

Good night, TrisB!

152 posted on 11/12/2006 9:18:56 PM PST by betty boop (Beautiful are the things we see...Much the most beautiful those we do not comprehend. -- N. Steensen)
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To: betty boop
There is a species of "perception" which is "inner" to a man, not something originating from "outside." You only need physical ears for the latter.

So very true. Thank you so much for your encouragements, my dear sister in Christ!

153 posted on 11/12/2006 9:41:59 PM PST by Alamo-Girl
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To: Alamo-Girl
I really cannot believe some of the things I'm reading from many of the contributers. Here, theists are accusing others of:

Limiting themselves by working within a presumed framework (i.e. blind postulation)

Slowing scientific advancement and not accepting change

Being arrogant

Lacking imagination

Failing to listen

Some of the things here are so hypocritical it makes me uncomfortable and somewhat reluctant to bother engaging with. I do feel somewhat outnumbered here by the nature of the site, and so much is being said unopposed purely because end-conclusions are the same - Any argument will suffice, so long as it comes to the same conclusion, whereon many congratulations are exchanged.

Alamo, we have failed to clash blades in the manor I hoped; I feel my arguments have been instantly cast aside because of their implications conflicting with your beliefs, not their content. I don't appreciate being talked down to, the household-physics you churn out hasn't actually brought anything to the table, and every time I check back I see my statement copied in inverted commas with replies all cryptically resembling "No you are wrong" or at best "No you are wrong because I am right". Read back over your dissections of my posts if you don't believe me. A parrot can tell me I'm wrong, but only a theist can say it in a different way each time.

I was told by my associates that arguing with theists is a waste of time, since argument is a rational activity which theists gate-crash by smudging and evading attacks on their irrationality so that it remains hidden, and whenever they run off the playing field, claim that their playing field is bigger, when actually overall it's smaller. I had more respect than my associates, and wanted to prove them wrong. I have enjoyed our exchange, but hope next time I clash with more modern minds.
154 posted on 11/13/2006 6:50:22 AM PST by TrisB (Reply to Alamo-Girl)
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To: pray4liberty
"If this fellow got a good showing of God's wrath, he'd start believing in a hurry." Ahh, but these same individuals will ignore for a whole lifetime the showing of God's love toward those around them and focus only upon the tragic things that happen to folks, choosing to blame God--or in the Dawkins case of self-godhood, blame the lack of God they choose to uphold--rather than seek the reasons for human failings. It is irrational to believe that because God may see all of time like a panorama that God is then responsible for what happens across time, because the reality of free will is the axiom they must reject first in order to prove to themselves that there is no free will and/or no loving God of Creation. If I see an auto crash, am I responsible for that event? Hardly, yet there are people who would argue in essence that I am responsible if I'm God. How irrational, don'tchaknow. On the other hand, accepting the axiom of free will makes room for events to occur without a puppet-master god causing each of them. But there are those who find escape in believing the either or false premise that God's universe is either a puppet stage or is without a master. Dawkins has chosen in his arrogance to believe the latter, sadly ... or perhaps rather than arrogance it is fear of that which he cannot completely know or cannot accepted will never be completely explained/revealed by his demi-god, Science, at this level of reality.
155 posted on 11/13/2006 6:51:06 AM PST by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote life support for others.)
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To: TrisB

You are an insulting little mind. Did you imagine that your insulting phrases would somehow whoosh over our primitive heads because you couched your petty insults in cloying verbiage? So juvenile.


156 posted on 11/13/2006 7:00:50 AM PST by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote life support for others.)
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To: MHGinTN
No I DO actually WANT you to take my words in and contest them. I apologise if my pompous Cambridge English sounds condescending in verbosity, I did not intend this. Honest!
157 posted on 11/13/2006 7:23:02 AM PST by TrisB (Reply to Alamo-Girl)
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To: SirLinksalot; EveningStar

This thread should reallyl have a pic from the South Park with this Dawkins character in it. Can you post the one with Mr/Ms. Garrison by chance?

Dawkins is the smartest man in the world according to Otters.


158 posted on 11/13/2006 7:34:00 AM PST by subterfuge (Tolerance has become the greatest virtue, and hypocrisy the worst character defect.)
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To: TrisB
I had to search diligently to find a single personal offering that opens a doorway in discussion rather than pumping your ego: "Ok, getting a little deep here, but I'm struggling in retrospect of my young days when I did believe in free will, and now trying desperately to understand what it could possible be, and what would permit it to exist outside of order and chaos." Refer momentarily to the story of Flatland, the 2-D realm visited by a 3-D being. Confronted with a dot on the 2-D plane, a flatlander has only the choice of left or right, back away to avoid the dot; the 3-Der has the additional up or down (over or under) to allow freer movement.

If you can, apply this analogy to the nature of dimensional complexities in space, time, soul of life force, and spirit, such that a being of merely space, time, soulish level of complexity is a reactive-to-only-stimuli sensed by the three dimensional existence, while the space,time, soulish, spirit being has another level of variability to which decisions may be submitted for review before reaction. A cat killing a mouse is not committing a good or bad act, but a human killing another innocent human (not in self-defense or in war, for example) is committing a bad deed by the reckoning of a dimensional variability (spirit) not available to the cat or the mouse.

Imagine that the Creator God is seven dimensional (space, time, soul, spirit, 5, 6, and 7, though in my limits I cannot fathom what to name the 5th, 6th, or 7th dimensions of The Creator God's variability). While the cat is free to kill or not to kill the mouse, based upon abilities, the human is more free and more responsible to utilize the greater variability factors of his or her existent reality.

If you can imagine each dimension has three variable expressions (as in space has length, width, and height; time has past, present, future; soul has will, emotion, mind; spirit has ... well, you get the idea), the human is not just one level more free, but three levels/exponentials more free than the cat or mouse, having a spirit component the cat and mouse do not have.

The above is merely offered as a means to open thought to more realistic discussion not limited by antiquated notions of 'all animal kingdom species are the same in moral value'. Consider the entire field of variables is essential in reaching an ultimate truth regarding the reality of the variables, but we haven't the means to define all the variables yet, so we cannot 'know' in a scientific sense that there is no God of Creation ... to assume there is no God of Creation is arrogant in the main, since taking such a perspective assumes personal abilities regarding the variables not yet well defined. It is not however arrogant to postulate variabilities we do not have (yet; we are an evolving species) and assign these greater variabilities to God of Creation, an uncaused cause of our reality. Is it irrational to postulate God of seven dimensions and believe our universe (the realm of our perceptions, and don't eliminate spirit as a means of some perception) exists within those seven yet the One Of All Seven is outside and inside our realm? Philip got that same Physics lesson from Jesus as related in John's Gospel, 14th Chapter. You might find it an interesting read.

159 posted on 11/13/2006 7:51:21 AM PST by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote life support for others.)
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To: MHGinTN; betty boop
But how do you really feel, MHGinTN? LOLOL!

Our correspondent is a newbie with less than a month’s experience on this forum whereas you, betty boop and I have been around here for a very long time, a cumulative total of some 25 years of active posting history between the three of us.

On this forum, we have entertained, engaged and exhausted every atheistic challenge known to me. But there’s always the possibility one will post a challenge we haven’t seen before. Maybe next time...

160 posted on 11/13/2006 8:34:44 AM PST by Alamo-Girl
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