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- From: lydick@SOL1.GPS.CALTECH.EDU (Speaker-to-Minerals)
- Newsgroups: alt.callahans
- Subject: Re: Science and god: Are they incompatible? If so, why?
- Date: 17 Nov 1992 02:02:36 GMT
- Organization: HST Wide Field/Planetary Camera
- Lines: 166
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1e9jrsINNolh@gap.caltech.edu>
- References: <AA05158.199211162157@tuda.ncl.ac.uk>
- Reply-To: lydick@SOL1.GPS.CALTECH.EDU
- NNTP-Posting-Host: sol1.gps.caltech.edu
-
- In article <AA05158.199211162157@tuda.ncl.ac.uk>, dph1jg@tuda.ncl.ac.uk (J.P.Gardner) writes:
- ="Let's see: First of all, it is obvious that STM and Nightstalker just
- =plain don't like each other. Next, STM is very rude. When someone
- =posted this before he asked for specific examples, so I'll provide
- =some. Use of profanity is usually not considered to be good manners,
- =and STM called NS's arguments bullshit.
-
- Actually, what I called bullshit was the standard Christian explanation for why
- so many bad deeds have been performed by Christians: "But they weren't REAL
- Christians," where the person who uses that excuse either can't or won't
- provide an operational definition of "real Christian." Or it might've been the
- stanard practice of calling those parts of the Bible that support your position
- literally true and those that would contradict it metaphor, again, without
- providing instructions for telling which are which. Now, Nighstalker has
- used this particular excuse before, and, as expected, failed to give the
- requested operational definition.
-
- =He also called him a bigot --
- =presumeably an anti-scientific bigot.
-
- That's an incorrect presumption. I called him a bigot based on the ample
- evidence he's provided that he believes that being a Christian somehow makes
- one better than if one were not a Christian. Again, I've asked him to provide
- evidence to back up his position. No evidence was forthcoming. Now, if a
- belief, unsupported by evidence, that one's own group (be it ethnic, religious,
- or language) is superior to all others isn't bigotry, what is it?
-
-
- =Now NS is himself a scientist, so
- =this is a little hard to believe. But in any case, this was just
- =name-calling, and there was no support for it in what NS wrote.
-
- Given your flawed presumption, this would follow. Given that your presumption
- was false, it doesn't.
-
- =In a broader sense, from STM's many posts, I have never seen him up on a
- =soapbox, I have never seen him admit he is, was, or even could possibly
- =be wrong.
-
- You must've missed my followup to the post I made during an attack of
- hypoglycemia. I don't usually get up on a soapbox unless I've spent a LOT of
- time thinking about the issue I'm talking about, and discussing it with people
- with a broad range of viewpoints.
-
- =He rarely uses the initials IMHO, and when he does, it is
- =almost always IMNSHO, which really defeats the purpose.
-
- What purpose might that be? To give myself a way of weaseling out of what I've
- said?
-
- =OK -- maybe the
- =first time someone did that it was funny. It isn't funny anymore, it is
- =just arrogant. STM could greatly benefit from a good healthy dose of
- =humility.
-
- In YOUR humble opinion, I presume?
-
- ="Let's see... Well, I found most of STM's objections to NS's first post
- =to be either nit-picking, or knocking down straw men. (And I do wish he
- =would quit that, the straw is playing havoc with my allergies.
-
- 'Twould've been unnecessary had NS not added various non sequiturs to his
- argument. The things I objected to had absolutely no bearing on the question
- of whether god and science are in conflict. That's why I described his post as
- preaching.
-
- ="The bitter dispute about whether NS was talking about Christianity or
- =all religions was nit-picking.
-
- Here you demonstrate the point I was trying to make: Even though you realize
- that what NS said was an insult to other religions, you seem to have missed the
- fact that it's just a much an insult to agnostics.
-
- =Oh, I agree, if I were an editor of the
- =piece, I would probably tell him to change the title (as he said he
- =considered doing) and make it clear that he was talking about
- =Christianity and not anything else. But come on, people, wasn't this
- =obvious? Well it was to me.
-
- He wasn't even talking about "Christianity and not anything else." He was
- talking about his own particular brand of Christianity and not anything else.
- Yet his article showed pretty strong signs that he wasn't even aware (as he was
- writing the piece) that there are other branches of Christianity.
-
- ="The part in NS's original essay about the woman being raped was overly
- =strong imagery for what was otherwise intended as a scholarly toned
- =article.
-
- It was also either a non sequitur or a claim that religion somehow did some
- good for rape victims, either potential or actual. As usual, NS offered
- absolutely no evidence in support of this rather strong claim.
-
- =Nonetheless, STM does not seem to understand that religion does provide
- =comfort to those to whom bad things have happened.
-
- Oh? How do the religions provide more comfort than simply teaching the person
- all her life that unforseeable events are not her fault?
-
- =Different religions
- =in different ways, but it is not only in the ways that STM ridiculed.
-
- Could you provide some examples?
-
- =(But even that way -- by believing it is God's will, and part of a
- =bigger plan does provide comfort to someone who believes that that
- =bigger plan is good.
-
-
- =Obviously this does not provide comfort to someone
- =who doesn't believe in God, such as STM, however.) (And further: a lot
- =of rape victims do feel guilt. Telling them it is not their fault is a
- =good thing.)
-
- Agreed. But if you've taught them that unforseeable events are not their
- fault, and haven't told them that there's some father figure in the sky who's
- judging them, why would you need to tell them that that father figure forgives
- them? What's wrong with just telling them: It was unforseeable. It's not
- your fault?
-
- ="STM seems to have a lot of arguments against the fundamentalists -- or
- =literalists as he calls them. But what is surprising is that he extends
- =these arguments to all Christians by saying "Well, if you can't
- =believe all of the bible, how do you know what parts to believe?" And
- =thus dismisses _all_ of the bible, using the exact same argument
- =that the literalists use!
-
- So tell me, if some parts of the Bible ARE authoritative and literal and some
- aren't, just how DO we tell which are which? The Bible may make a good
- starting point into inquiries, but to pick and choose the parts that are
- convenient for your case and dismiss the others as metaphors is the height of
- intellectual dishonesty. Of course, one useful metaphor is that the devil
- himself can quote scripture to suit his purpose. As long as you let him pick
- and choose what parts are to be believed literally. Christians admit this, but
- a great many of them don't understand that they're using exactly the same
- strategy themselves.
-
- ="Another thing STM likes to do is accuse the "Church" of atrocities in
- =the past. To extend this to the present organized churches is not
- =acceptable to our society's notions of justice, however. The sins of
- =the father are not visited upon the sons. Hold people (and
- =organizations) responsible for their own actions, but it is not just to
- =hold all Christians now responsible for the Inquisition or the
- =Crusades. Any more than it is just to hold scientists responsible for
- =Dr. Mengele's concentration camp experiments.
-
- Many Christians claim that their religion is the one true religion. They also
- claim that the religion has been passed down from the time of Jesus. I'm
- merely pointing out conclusions that follow from their own claims.
- Interestingly, you're the first person in several years to make this argument.
- The standard response is "Those weren't REAL Christians."
-
-
- ="One place where I would quibble with STM's science-religion essay is
- =the idea that God can be active in a non-scientifically provable way.
- =That is, by doing things that can be explained by natural processes.
- =Like providing personal revelations -- that otherwise could be
- =explained as delusion (especially if you are not the one experiencing
- =them.) There are people who have proof that God exists. It is just not
- =proof that they can use to convince a skeptic, it is personal proof.
-
- It would be easier to convince skeptics were it not for the fact that the more
- certain such people are that they have proof, the more their behavior matches
- that of schizophrenics. It would also be easier to convince skeptics were it
- not for the fact that the traditional ways of preparing oneself for such a
- revelation are today known to cause hallucinations.
-
-