@Jeku
"That attitude is genuine Raven. When I asked about your relation to him, I was referring to the fact that no matter what I would post that you disagree on, you'll jump on it."
You've never argued with Raven have you? Raven doesn't argue any point just for the sake of it. He only argues if you disagree with him explicitly on something. Even then using the term "argue" is a bit streching it. Its more like he rants in your general direction oblivous to what you say. At least
I address your counter points.
"There's really no point with people like you."
And yet you continue.
"If you didn't notice, that article is about the Sun Pictures' Noah's Ark hoax., not about disproving that the Ark exists"
Uhh...yeah, actually, it IS about disproving that the ark ever existed. I even did a CRTL-F Find with "Sun Pictures'" with and without the apostrophe and It didn't turn up anything.
"There are *MANY* other groups and people that have seen the ark and taken pictures of it nonetheless."
Yes, MANY con men.
"http://anchorstone.com/number8.html - Dig around on this page for pictures"
Dude, that's a scam. Notice the advert at the bottom for "Noah's Ark Surprising Discoveries # 1". They're baiting gullible people into thinking they found the ark when in reality all they have is a bunch of pictures of a dirt mound.
And for further proof that this guy is a scam artist click here:
http://www.tentmaker.org/WAR/
This site is a Christian one so I'm sure that you'll at least consider a little bit before dismissing it out of hand.
"http://www.users.ms11.net/~dejnarde/ark.htm - Another man's account of the ark"
This one is another guy peddling
the exact same hoax. Here is another resouce, a creationist one no less that thinks this guy is a fraud as well.
http://www.answersingenesis.org/home/area/hot/plimer_verdict.asp
Quote: "CSF actually distanced themselves from Roberts in 1992 when Creation magazine published Dr Andrew Snelling’s 13 page article, Noah’s Ark Exposé (see Creation Ex Nihilo 14(4):26–38, 1992). Allen Roberts sincerely (though incorrectly, in our view) believed that a particular site in Eastern Turkey was likely to be the remains of what would have been a significant Biblical relic."
"http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v25/i1/apemen.asp - the problem with apemen"
Yet more creationist scientific illiteracy. Some of the excuses they come up with are hilarious. Vitamin D deficiencies explain huge bone
differencies? Give me a break.
I'll go through each one at time though just to make sure you get just how wrong this really is.
For "Australopithecines."
Quote: "However, Dr Fred Spoor has done CAT scans of the inner ear region of some of these skulls. These show that their semi-circular canals, which determine balance and ability to walk upright, ‘resemble those of the extant great apes’.6"
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/a_canals.html
Quote: "The results proved interesting. The canals in Australopithecus africanus and robustus skulls were most similar to the great apes. Spoor et al. found this consistent with the commonly-held view that australopithecines were partly arboreal and partly bipedal. They did not conclude that australopithecines were quadrupedal, as most creationists imply or claim."
Read the rest of the link above for a more thorough debunking.
As for their claims about Lucy:
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/a_piths.html
For a rebutall to their Homo Habilis argument:
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/a_habilis.html
For Homo erectus:
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/a_erectus.html
For their hilarious take on Neanderthal Man:
Quote: "However, the early reconstructions suffered from a heavy dose of evolutionary bias, along with the fact that some specimens suffered from bony diseases such as rickets, which is caused by vitamin D deficiency from childhood and can result in bowing of the skeleton. One cause of this is a lack of exposure to sunlight, consistent with their having lived in the post-Flood Ice Age."
If you didn't laugh at this the first time you saw it you have no sense of humor my friend. I mean, Vitamin D deficiency? Someone is really pulling your leg on this one.
But even riduculous arguments need rebuttals so here is a thorough one for your viewing pleasure:
[href] http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/a_neands.html[/href]
Quote: "But Neandertals have many distinctive features, and there is no reason why these diseases (or any others) would cause many, let alone all, of these features on even one, let alone many, individuals. Modern knowledge and experience also contradicts the idea that disease is a cause of Neandertal features, because these diseases do not cause modern humans to look like Neandertals."
" And who said anything about not reading your links? "
This is only funnier given the fact that you complian about one of my links not being about the topic at hand when in actually it blatantly is.
@Mouse
"You're very confused... I'm not arguing for the existance of a christian god. I'm arguing the liklihood of creation. Any kind of creation. Not just christian creation."
Alright. That wasn't exactly clear in your original post.
"Not a single one of them have offered a bit of evidence as to a theory of where it all came from. "
If you read my original link thoroughly you would have known that this wasn't necessary. Here it is again for you:
http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/theodore_schick/bigbang.html
Go to the section called "The Traditional First-Cause Argument" and start reading from there.
"We as humans have no way of explaining how something would come from nothing."
Read the above link. Or better yet, buy a book on quantum physics. You'll be pleasantly surprised.
I'd also like to point out that if we humans have no way of explaining how something would come from nothing then wouldn't that beg the question of who created the Creator? Ignoring for a moment the obvious fallacy that just because we don't understand something it can't exist, if something can't come from nothing then where did the creator come from? Something must have created him because obviously since we can't conceive of something coming from nothing he had to come from somewhere, right?
And don't say that he wasn't created because you said yourself that we can't concieve of something coming from nothing. Therefore if he wasn't created we couldn't have concieved him, and if we couldn't concieve of him how could we be having this discussion? Isn't it necessary to first be able to concieve of something to argue about? If we can't wrap our minds around the possiblity or something coming from nothing than how can we discusse it? We must have some kind of conceptual stand point
somewhere on it in order to have this debate.
"Vacuum fluctuation? You know, those things can't happen if there is no vacuum. "
::sigh::
A vacuum IS nothing Mouse. Vacuum fluctations DO NOT have a cause. This is in rebuttal to the first tenet of the First Cause Argument that everything has a cause.
" Where did that vacuum come from? What caused the fluctuation? "
If you had read the link instead of skimming it, you would have saw your answer to those questons.
Quote: "A particle produced by a vacuum fluctuation has no cause."
"It has to start somewhere, "
No it doesn't. He demonstrated this rather thoroughly, your repeated denials not withstanding. Particles produced with vacuum fluctations HAVE NO CAUSE. Read the Above quote.
"and 'rationally' we have no methods of explaining it"
::sigh::
Yes we do. Read up on modern physics mouse. We do have explainations.
Rational ones based on empirical evidence.
"By the way, I believe Hawking has allowed the rationally of some types of creationism, correct me if I'm wrong."
Sure.
http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/richard_carrier/ten.html
Quote: "But it is most ridiculous to cite Einstein and Hawking as supporting belief in a "creator" not only because, as I've noted, it is vain to appeal to the opinions of admired men (why should Einstein know more about God than Carl Sagan?), but even more importantly because neither has declared the idea of a creator to be a necessary conclusion from anything, and both have stated point blank that it as likely as not that there is no intelligent creator."
" Rest assured you're missing a lot when the stars are bright at night or there's a particularly beautiful sunset."
All of these things can be rationally explained mouse. I have no idea why you are using them.
"Visions, words spoken by a god, miracles; all of these you may not have seen or expirienced, but have converted millions of others to religion."
Argumentum Ad Populum mouse? Just because a lot of people believe something doens't make it true. A lot of people believe in evolution mouse. Does that make it true?
"You simply like to say it's not evidence because you haven't expirienced it,"
I never said this. Quit building straw men. If you have a quote from me saying this then by all means post it. I said that you need evidence to believe in something rationally.
NOT that things need to be directly experienced 1st hand.
" but the fact is, you have no way of determining whether they were being truly rational or not unless you can actually know what they expirienced."
Irrelevant. Whether they are being rational or not is not the point. In order to rationally accept something you have to have evidence for it. Hearsay, even by rational people, just doesn't cut it. I think Philip would agree with me when I say that people's testimony can be wildly inaccurate.
"False premise #1. I have already logically concluded above that rationally, we must believe some supernatural power created the universe. Evidence."
Saying it is so don't make it so. You haven't rationally concluded that there is a creator. You've merely stated that we must believe that there is some supernatural power that created the universe since the universe can't come from nothing. I've demonstrated otherwise that we have ample of evidence of things coming from nothing. You haven't demonstrated at all why a creator IS THE ONLY OPTION even if everything we know about quantum phyics is false. Using your conclusion to justify you argument is circular reasoning mouse.
"Final proof you just don't get it."
I'd say the same for you.
"I'm skipping the first part because it is a conclusion based on a false premise and thus must be logically invalid and ignored..."
Translation: I can't argue with it so I'll pretend it is invalid!
"Have you seen space aliens with purple shoes? Have you had visions of them? Have they talked to you in your dreams? Granted you things when you prayed to them? All of this is concrete evidence for members of religion, "
No it isn't. None of these things have been proven to happen by the will of a God.
"and simply because you haven't expirienced it dosen't mean they haven't."
Correct. But it also doesn't mean that they have actually experienced them either.
" You can try to rationalize around it all you want, but the fact is you can't argue something they feel and you don't. "
Que? I don't get what you mean here. I'm not arguing what they felt is valid or not, I'm arguing that in order to believe in something rationally one has to have evidence that it occured. You've dodged this point constantly throughout the discussion instead relying on strawmen you built to make yourself appear to be the victor. Address my points mouse not the ones you make up for me.
@Jeku
"If I have a bucket of sea-monkeys, they have no knowledge of me. They can't comprehend that I can just dump them out and kill them. They can't comprehend that I go to university or program software on computers, because they don't have computers--- see the comparison? But to them, I don't exist. I pretty much see it as if we're like the sea-monkeys (not literally of course haha)."
I won't argue with you on this, because I know you'll get pissed with me for addressing one of your points when it wasn't addressed to me, but I'd like to point out that in the above example it is perfectly rational for the sea monkeys to conclude that you don't exist. Rationality is not a one way ticket to instant knowledge. There is no such thing and I would like point out that I'm not claiming such before people go accusing me of these things.
It is, however, the best process he have for determining whether something exists or not. The seamonkeys may not believe in you even though you do exist, but they also don't believe in your evil twin Ukej which doesn't exist.
@SuperMonkey
"............do any of you guys remember the poem? "
Yes, I do. It was a good poem. But debating is more fun than poems.