Note: Made a few small edits
marked in bold.
Col. Homestar wrote:"Argumentum ad Ignorantiam"
I'll start with this one. You like to claim (since science being based solely on what can be proved) that there must be no God because there is no evidence to support this. Yet When I look all around myself and see, this planet that we live on, the absolute perfect conditions for sustaining human life, and down to the very fact that I am alive, I attribute that as proof and evidence of a higher power and creator. Please don't tell me I can not see this as evidence, because of evolution.
Never stated God absolutely does not exist. Only stated that
current evidence indicates that a God does not exist. If evidence indicate otherwise, then it is safe to say it exists, which is lacking at the moment.
We do not live in perfect conditions, life (organisms etc.) have adapted to the environment to cope with it. We have natural disasters, the Universe is a harsh place (more than 99% of the known universe is not habitable, statistically).
70% of the Planet's surface is covered by sea water, 97% of water is saline which we cannot drink from.
Fresh water is about 2.5% of the total water we have, almost 70% of that is ice.
The planet has roughly only 13% arable land of the land surface, 5% that can support permanent crops.
The conditions of the planet is not perfect by far. Only small areas are decent for us to live on. Don't forget the mass extinctions that occurred in the past. Life adapts to the environment.
Col. Homestar wrote:This is your computer graphic project that you have been working on. It's looking great, you are obviously putting time and effort into making it, accounting for many small details even. Now would it be rational for me to look at that picture and say "oh wow, someone just set the computer to spit out some random code and miraculously this picture came together" No one would believe that in a million years. Yet you want us to believe that exactly that happened for this planet. (Which is far more complex then your drawing)
I appreciate you sharing my work.
The watchmaker analogy, how very common...
I won't bother with this and let this link explain it (which does it far better than I can explain):
http://www.atheist-community.org/faq/#watchmakerCol. Homestar wrote:My argument isn't based on ignorance. I base it on common sense. You like to make these statements that mock the way people who believe in God explain things, but I can do that too.
argumentum ad ignorantiam - Argument from ignorance:
is a fallacy in informal logic.
It asserts that a proposition is true because it has not yet been proven false, it is "generally accepted" (or vice versa). This represents a type of false dichotomy in that it excludes a third option, which is that there is insufficient investigation and therefore insufficient information to prove the proposition satisfactorily to be either true or false. Nor does it allow the admission that the choices may in fact not be two (true or false), but may be as many as four, (1) true, (2) false, (3) unknown between true or false, and (4) being unknowable (among the first three). In debates, appeals to ignorance are sometimes used to shift the burden of proof.
Based on the definition, your previous post does apply to that fallacy.
Col. Homestar wrote:Here is an evolutionists view:
How did Earth form? Just happen by chance
How did life develop? Just happen by chance
Why do we have hundreds of religions with different views? They're all crazy
Why does the devil exist? Because..... oh wait you believe in the Devil but not God?
See, No thought from you either.
I have indicated the extreme side of the religious argument, I should have made that more clear in my previous post.
I also haven't claimed any specific individual or group that make this claim, unlike you who clearly states it is evolutionist arguments.
The actual views in the scientific base:
How did Earth form? - Through the gravitational collapse of a massive molecular cloud. Most of the mass collected towards the center that jump started the fusion process
in the sun. The rest collected into a protoplanetary disk from which the planets, moons and asteroids formed.
How did life develop? - The formation of amino acids in the early Earth from non-organic elements/compounds enabled the formation of more complex organic structures. Over long periods of time, the structures became more complex and eventually formed
the first simple organisms (bacteria ect.). Over time, through mutation and environmental feedback (adaption) the simple organisms became more specialized and more complex. The rest I leave since i don't want to write a 3 page essay.
This can be read on any science book and/or websiteCol. Homestar wrote:Why do we have hundreds of religions with different views? They're all crazy
Very ignorant of you to make that claim. Though if you call them crazy for their religious view, does that mean you also call yourself crazy?
Why do we have hundreds of religions with different views? People developed different cultures and views. Respectively, they developed their own form of religions to suit their culture.
Why does the devil exist? Never said I believe in the devil. Though if you believe in God(s) created everything, then it/they also created all the evils in the world.
Col. Homestar wrote:When it all comes down to it. The theory of evolution and natural selection is based on faith just as much as belief in a creator. Sure you can make experiments and read those results as adding weight to your argument but the bottom line is, you don't know for sure. So just like my beliefs, you too must take a leap of faith.
Belief: noun
1. something believed; an opinion or conviction.
2.
confidence in the truth or existence of something not immediately susceptible to rigorous proof.3. confidence; faith; trust.
4. a religious tenet or tenets; religious creed or faith.
Faith: noun
1. confidence or trust in a person or thing.
2.
belief that is not based on proof.3. belief in God or in the doctrines or teachings of religion.
4. belief in anything, as a code of ethics, standards of merit, etc.
5. a system of religious belief.
I have provided several points and data that indicate the validity of the Evolutionary process, and support of my argument. Claiming that I put faith/belief in that is false in both definitions. Unlike, your position which fits the definitions of both Belief and Faith.
Col. Homestar wrote:An argument of ignorance. No, an argument of faith
Read further up of this post for the definition of 'An argument of Ignorance', to which your position clearly fits.
Cheers
Yanoda