Why MT doesn't believe in this.

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Re: Why MT doesn't believe in this.

Postby theavengers85 » Thu Jul 05, 2012 1:15 am

Yanoda wrote:Quintessential Circular argument:
- God exists.
+ Why?
- The bible says so
+ Why should I believe the Bible?
- God directed the writing of the Bible. (Or The Bible is the Word of God)

Further noting that the bible has been modified and altered throughout the course of history, the language barrier of translations should not be excluded either.

Cheers

Yanoda


Yanoda, you have this argument all wrong:

It goes more like this:
I believe God exists
+Why
I can't define exactly why, but I just know
I support (not prove) my feelings with the Bible, which claims to be written at His direction, and is historically consistent, and claims He exists.
If all the evidence for God was disproved, would you still believe in Him
Yes, and I would find other evidence to support God's existance

You are missing the a priori belief (i.e. before the fact) that He exists. I don't believe in Him just because some evidence points to God. This is not science, but religion/philosophy, which works very differently.

Also, can you point to a single major error in the Bible?

Can you point to a single archeological discovery that has disproved an event in the Bible.

The Old Testament is the most reliable historical record covering that particular timeperiod in existence.

Also, the same can be applied to a belief in evolution:
I believe in evolution
+why?
because of all the evidence
If all the evidence for evolution went away, would you still believe in it
Yes, we would find more evidence to support.
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Re: Why MT doesn't believe in this.

Postby FaiL.? » Thu Jul 05, 2012 2:07 am

Nice, Cypher.
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Re: Why MT doesn't believe in this.

Postby Darth Crater » Fri Jul 06, 2012 5:53 am

Been on vacation, so yet more catching up to do. First off, Yanoda, you seem to be taking those bits with the animals out of context. Even if they really did refer to mythical beasts, it's not implying evidence for their existence. If I say "Wow, I felt like a zombie at work today", that does not imply the existence of zombies. It merely implies the existence of the idea of zombies. The points about translation seem valid, as well.


Col. Homestar wrote:Uhhh yes it does, if someone says your guilty, the typical response is to provide proof your not

I take it you're not familiar with the US judicial system, on top of not being familiar with scientific procedure. In said judicial system, people are presumed to be innocent until proven guilty, meaning that the accused need do nothing until the accuser has provided evidence.

On a more personal level: You are challenging the position I currently hold. If you do not either provide new evidence or discredit existing evidence, I will have no reason (or even ability) to change my belief. If you want to change what I believe, this is exactly the wrong way to go about things. If you want to change what you believe, asking others for evidence is good, but from what I've seen I doubt you have any genuine interest in that.

By the way, your argument lets me lay the burden of proof on you just as easily by twisting a couple of words. I say the Christian god does not exist. Provide proof that this is false. Not evidence, not three-sigma accuracy, but absolute proof. This is what you believe it's alright to constantly ask people to do.
Col. Homestar wrote:So if a friend, wrote you a letter, saying where he was, and that was your only proof would that be circular too?

If I had no other evidence that the friend existed, other than that the letter said he was my friend? Yes. On an unrelated note, I know a wealthy Nigerian prince who needs help smuggling $5 million out of the country. He needs your bank details, but says it's alright to give them to me to handle the transaction. You can believe him, he's royalty.

Col. Homestar wrote: The proof is in the historical accuracy, the harmony after being written by 40 different men over the course 1000+ years, and the accurate prophecies that have come true. Your circular argument is incomplete and simplistic.

The creation story, flood story, and the ages many ancestors are recorded to have lived are not historically accurate, just to name a few. In general, the start of the Bible is about as accurate as you would expect a people's oral histories and myths to be. It gets more consistent as it goes onward, if still biased, but there's no reason for a god to be involved (we have equally accurate histories from other regions). I'm not aware of any accurate, detailed predictions made by the Bible, aside from ones ascribed in hindsight (which are meaningless - humans can find patterns in any set of random data, when they look for them) or ones which are blatantly obvious (kingdoms falling, for example - every government extant at that time has fallen).

Cypher wrote:It goes more like this:
I believe God exists
+Why
I can't define exactly why, but I just know
I support (not prove) my feelings with the Bible, which claims to be written at His direction, and is historically consistent, and claims He exists.
If all the evidence for God was disproved, would you still believe in Him
Yes, and I would find other evidence to support God's existance

So, you believe without any evidence, support it with a circular argument, and admit that you would hold this belief even if the things you do consider evidence were falsified. Thank you for admitting that you cannot be convinced otherwise, at least. My problem with this is that your system is demonstrably worse for you than rationality (forming beliefs based on evidence). Your unfounded belief will cause you to make incorrect predictions. Some will be harmless, others could be fatal. Consider the sects who have absolute faith that God will cure their or their childrens' disease, despite the lack of evidence that this provides any support, and refuse to bring them to the doctor while they can still be saved. Any time you ignore the evidence, you lose the ability to accurately predict the future.

Cypher wrote:Also, can you point to a single major error in the Bible?

Can you point to a single archeological discovery that has disproved an event in the Bible.

Geological and archaeological studies have found no evidence of the existence of the Garden of Eden. They have found that humans were descended from other animals, rather than created. They have found no evidence that there was a worldwide flood which eliminated the vast majority of humans, civilizations, and other animals. Beyond that, which events in particular are you claiming? The writers of the Bible may be a credible source on Jewish history (since they were there) without being a credible source on theology. They had far fewer ways to observe the world than we did, and ascribed much to the supernatural which has already been explained.

Cypher wrote:Also, the same can be applied to a belief in evolution:
I believe in evolution
+why?
because of all the evidence
If all the evidence for evolution went away, would you still believe in it
Yes, we would find more evidence to support.

Evidence can't really "go away", but individual pieces can be disproved or outweighed by new evidence, which is close enough. That last line, though, is where you prove you really don't understand me or my position. If the available evidence favored an explanation other than natural selection, I would stop believing natural selection happened and start believing the new theory. I don't have that irrational attachment to a pet belief that you do (or at least I do my best not to). I don't pin my identity to a particular belief, or vice versa.

EDIT: a bit more, moving backward through the thread.
Col. Homestar wrote:Correct me if I'm wrong but was there a book like the bible that tells us about the existence, personality, and history of leprechauns, unicorns and other mythical creatures.

http://www.amazon.com/Gnomes-Wil-Huygen/dp/0810909650

My grandparents had this book when I was younger. It's detailed and internally consistent enough that for years I was never sure if it was accurate or not. I suspect it was because I had been raised to regard a certain similar book as being true without external evidence...
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Re: Why MT doesn't believe in this.

Postby Col. Hstar » Fri Jul 06, 2012 8:42 am

Darth Crater wrote:
Col. Homestar wrote:Uhhh yes it does, if someone says your guilty, the typical response is to provide proof your not

I take it you're not familiar with the US judicial system, on top of not being familiar with scientific procedure. In said judicial system, people are presumed to be innocent until proven guilty, meaning that the accused need do nothing until the accuser has provided evidence.

I wasn't talking about any judicial proceeding. What is the natural tendency we have, as humans, to do when someone makes a false claim against us? It's to refute those claims and give proof if we have it.
As far as the stupid claim about my knowledge of scientific procedure.... :lol: Classic Crater
Darth Crater wrote:On a more personal level: You are challenging the position I currently hold. If you do not either provide new evidence or discredit existing evidence, I will have no reason (or even ability) to change my belief. If you want to change what I believe, this is exactly the wrong way to go about things. If you want to change what you believe, asking others for evidence is good, but from what I've seen I doubt you have any genuine interest in that.

I'm not trying to change what you believe, your a big boy, and you can make your own decisions. Are you naive enough to think that philosophical debates on a Star Wars game website is where people go for serious answers. I'm defending my beliefs. No one ever just converts to believing in God, you have to have the humility and desire to want to learn about God.
Darth Crater wrote:By the way, your argument lets me lay the burden of proof on you just as easily by twisting a couple of words. I say the Christian god does not exist. Provide proof that this is false. Not evidence, not three-sigma accuracy, but absolute proof. This is what you believe it's alright to constantly ask people to do.

You and Yanoda have been singing the "please provide proof" song throughout this whole thread, now when your the ones being asked to abide by the same rules it's like "oh your crazy for wanting iron clad proof" Oh The Nerve!
Just to "prove" my point:
Past Posts wrote:
Yanoda wrote:There were many Gods before the Judeo-Christian God, how are you sure that that God is the real one? Maybe it is Zeus who is the real God, or maybe its Ra, or Achaman, or Huitzilopochtli, etc... Got any proof which God is the REAL one? If anyone can offer proper data (which can be replicated and verified) that confirms the existence of God(s), then everyone would convert to that religion/God(s). If you're so convinced that a Deity/Deities created our/the Universe, then try to do research of your own and find the way to show with definite proof that God(s) exist. He who claims something (that God(s) exist(s)) has to provide the proof (data, research ect.).

Darth Crater wrote:In general, for those who don't believe Evolution/Natural Selection, Global Warming (not sure how serious Bryant was), or the Big Bang: Where are you hiding your strong evidence against them? If you have that evidence, I'd like to update my beliefs. If not, why are you disagreeing?

Darth Crater wrote:I am aware of what it means. I have seen no evidence that it has any scientific meaning, or any attached evidence, so I was mystified as to why you were bringing it up in this discussion. You can't just say "missing link" as your entire argument without including some facts somewhere.

Darth Crater wrote:Could you quote what, exactly, you're trying to use as an argument? I literally have no idea what you're trying to argue with this, because even the link you cited doesn't include any evidence against evolution.

Yanoda wrote:Again, please give concise examples. You failed give concise examples in showing that the Bible is 100% truth as well in your previous post. So far, your statements are just baseless.

Yanoda wrote:Please explain in more detail. Making a claim without a viable argument and/or proof does not make your statement correct (let alone the Bible).

And that was just in the 1st 27 pages of posts
Darth Crater wrote:
Col. Homestar wrote:So if a friend, wrote you a letter, saying where he was, and that was your only proof would that be circular too?

If I had no other evidence that the friend existed, other than that the letter said he was my friend? Yes. On an unrelated note, I know a wealthy Nigerian prince who needs help smuggling $5 million out of the country. He needs your bank details, but says it's alright to give them to me to handle the transaction. You can believe him, he's royalty.

:roll: So far, I've seen nothing in this post that should be taken seriously, You can't make a serious argument so you make snide remarks and lame jokes.
Darth Crater wrote:The creation story, flood story, and the ages many ancestors are recorded to have lived are not historically accurate, just to name a few. In general, the start of the Bible is about as accurate as you would expect a people's oral histories and myths to be. It gets more consistent as it goes onward, if still biased, but there's no reason for a god to be involved (we have equally accurate histories from other regions). I'm not aware of any accurate, detailed predictions made by the Bible, aside from ones ascribed in hindsight (which are meaningless - humans can find patterns in any set of random data, when they look for them) or ones which are blatantly obvious (kingdoms falling, for example - every government extant at that time has fallen).

Finally, something relevant to the discussion...a little general, and I hate to say it, no foundation or basis for the claims (and by that I mean, please be more specific).
As far as historical accuracy, archeological records verify many or the places, people and events recorded in the bible. Also unlike most ancient myths and legends events are linked to specific times and dates.
As far as prophecy, the Book of Daniel was written 200 years before Alexander the Great began his military campaign, yet it described accurately the rise of the King of Greece, and then just as he became mighty, he died, and his 4 generals rose to take his place but not with his power. See Daniel 8:3-8, and then 20-22
Darth Crater wrote:EDIT: a bit more, moving backward through the thread.
Col. Homestar wrote:Correct me if I'm wrong but was there a book like the bible that tells us about the existence, personality, and history of leprechauns, unicorns and other mythical creatures.

http://www.amazon.com/Gnomes-Wil-Huygen/dp/0810909650
My grandparents had this book when I was younger. It's detailed and internally consistent enough that for years I was never sure if it was accurate or not. I suspect it was because I had been raised to regard a certain similar book as being true without external evidence...

Soooo the answer to my question was.... no.
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Re: Why MT doesn't believe in this.

Postby theavengers85 » Sat Jul 07, 2012 5:14 am

Darth Crater wrote:
Cypher wrote:It goes more like this:
I believe God exists
+Why
I can't define exactly why, but I just know
I support (not prove) my feelings with the Bible, which claims to be written at His direction, and is historically consistent, and claims He exists.
If all the evidence for God was disproved, would you still believe in Him
Yes, and I would find other evidence to support God's existance

So, you believe without any evidence, support it with a circular argument, and admit that you would hold this belief even if the things you do consider evidence were falsified. Thank you for admitting that you cannot be convinced otherwise, at least. My problem with this is that your system is demonstrably worse for you than rationality (forming beliefs based on evidence). Your unfounded belief will cause you to make incorrect predictions. Some will be harmless, others could be fatal. Consider the sects who have absolute faith that God will cure their or their childrens' disease, despite the lack of evidence that this provides any support, and refuse to bring them to the doctor while they can still be saved. Any time you ignore the evidence, you lose the ability to accurately predict the future.

Cypher wrote:Also, can you point to a single major error in the Bible?

Can you point to a single archeological discovery that has disproved an event in the Bible.

Geological and archaeological studies have found no evidence of the existence of the Garden of Eden. They have found that humans were descended from other animals, rather than created. They have found no evidence that there was a worldwide flood which eliminated the vast majority of humans, civilizations, and other animals. Beyond that, which events in particular are you claiming? The writers of the Bible may be a credible source on Jewish history (since they were there) without being a credible source on theology. They had far fewer ways to observe the world than we did, and ascribed much to the supernatural which has already been explained.

Each and everyone of these is an evolutionary viewpoint, and I disagree with every point. Creationism makes the opposite claims and supports them. Once again, you are not realizing that you have to begin with an A PRIORI belief in a God or no God, and derive your views from there.
Let me ask you, can you prove there is no God? You can't, just like I cannot prove there is a God (at least not in a matter acceptable to you). If all of the evolutionary evidence went away, would you still believe there is no God? If so, then you are falling into the same trap I am. You demonstrate this below by saying you would find other evidence. So you are accusing me of the same fault that you display next.

With regard to there being no evidence for the Garden of Eden, that's because the world it existed in was destroyed completely by the flood, evidence that is the same evidence you use to support an old earth (depleted isotopic content). You also cannot prove humans descended from apes merely by proving similarity (show me one ape-man that has a vertical attachment between the head and torso)


Cypher wrote:Also, the same can be applied to a belief in evolution:
I believe in evolution
+why?
because of all the evidence
If all the evidence for evolution went away, would you still believe in it
Yes, we would find more evidence to support.

Evidence can't really "go away", but individual pieces can be disproved or outweighed by new evidence, which is close enough. That last line, though, is where you prove you really don't understand me or my position. If the available evidence favored an explanation other than natural selection, I would stop believing natural selection happened and start believing the new theory. I don't have that irrational attachment to a pet belief that you do (or at least I do my best not to). I don't pin my identity to a particular belief, or vice versa.


Check my previous post (i think two posts ago) answering your rebuttal. I would be interested to hear your comments.

Yes, I am attached to my belief, but you are as well. Thats because it is a BELIEF, you can't prove a belief. You would believe that no God exists no matter what I say or show or prove. It is the same with me and Christianity and Creationism. (Deep down, you would really reject Creationism no matter what evidence I threw at you because you reject the concept of a God. Therefore, you accept evolution because it is the competing theory.)

Also, you are making some very concrete claims that I disagree with, but I respect your beliefs. Please accord me the same respect.
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Re: Why MT doesn't believe in this.

Postby Darth Crater » Sat Jul 07, 2012 7:46 am

Homestar: you're getting less respect from me because you've earned less. You consistently misunderstand basic terminology. "Proof" and "evidence" are different, and you've clearly demonstrated you don't understand scientific procedure at all. In any case, you admit that you have no evidence for me. I think we're done here.

Cypher: (first addressing your most recent post, then going backward - I think there's still a post from way back I need to get to later. This is enough of a wall of text as it is, sorry...)

I am not aware of any actual evidence of a worldwide flood. There is no reason why a flood would alter the decay rate of carbon isotopes. There is no worldwide sediment layer at the correct age, let alone one containing the remains of entire human civilizations. What evidence do you have for this (aside from the Bible, which still seems circular on the subject of God, and is generally considered to be describing a more local flood)? That said, if the Garden of Eden was in the Middle East a local flood might have eliminated it, so I retract that point.

I'm not sure what you mean by "vertical attachment between the head and torso". Is it related to the curvature of the spine? If so, ours is different because we normally walk upright. If you mean something else, one of my friends has studied anatomy; I could ask for clarification if you explain or link to what you mean.

Once again, you are not realizing that you have to begin with an A PRIORI belief in a God or no God, and derive your views from there.
...
You demonstrate this below by saying you would find other evidence. So you are accusing me of the same fault that you display next.
...
You would believe that no God exists no matter what I say or show or prove.
...
(Deep down, you would really reject Creationism no matter what evidence I threw at you because you reject the concept of a God. Therefore, you accept evolution because it is the competing theory.)

I disagree completely with the contents of the above quote. I think part of it is my fault - the red highlights on that line seemed to have the opposite effect of what I intended (could we get a "strikethrough" tag on these forums?). As I said below that, that line does not model my worldview or actions. If the evidence for evolution was outweighed, I would stop believing in it and believing whatever the new evidence pointed to. If that evidence indicated we were created by a deity, I and others would try to find out about that deity (we wouldn't immediately accept that it was the Christian god unless that was also implied by the evidence, obviously). If I continued to believe in evolution after it was disproved, I'd just be hurting myself and making inaccurate predictions.

I do not arbitrarily decide that a deity does or does not exist, then bend the evidence I observe to fit. I do not begin with any preconceived view on that at all (or if I do, it's in favor of a deity, given my Christian upbringing). I look at what humanity knows about the world, and judge that it is consistent with a world where there is no deity. From that, it follows that if a deity does exist they have had no measurable impact, and thus can be treated as nonexistent. If you could show me some proper evidence for your god's existence (I can think of plenty of fair tests - for example, statistically significant precognition under lab conditions, or blind trials showing that prayer improves recovery chance), I would believe he existed.

Also, note that plenty of Christians believe in evolution. Most of the scientists (aside from Darwin himself) involved in forming our understanding of history were Christians. They might have come into things believing much the same as you, but they didn't let their faith get in the way of judging based on evidence.

Cypher wrote:The question of the very beginning is one that both big bang theorists and creationists take on "faith", since no one was there to see it and there is no way to directly test it. You just take your respective theory and assume that what it says about the beginning is true, because the rest of it matches up to what you believe.

Mostly true. Any beliefs about things prior to the Big Bang, or causing it, cannot currently be backed by evidence. However, bacause of this, you don't have to choose a theory - it's perfectly valid to say "I don't know". For anything at or after the Big Bang, we have evidence (in the form of the Cosmic Microwave Background, for example) which gives us some idea of how old the universe is and what it was like.

Cypher wrote:Both the Big Bang theory/evolution and creationist are lenses through which the natural evidence is viewed. Any changes in the evidence will cause corresponding changes in the theory. It is impossible to "kill" either theory on technical points because they will simply alter themselves to fit the new evidence. You also cannot really attack the core views, since they are mostly philosophical (i.e. I believe the universe arose naturally vs. I believe God created it). There is intense competition between the theories as to which better explains the evidence, but both sides will claim this.

I think you're still misunderstanding things - modeling me as having "belief in lack of God" as centrally as you have "belief in God". I apologize if I'm wrong about this, but I suspect our cognitive models are fundamentally different here. I don't have a single, overarching belief that "evolution is true" or "God does not exist" on which I base everything else. If I do have such a belief, it's something like "My beliefs should be based on evidence", which as I said before is demonstrably superior to other systems. It just happens that, given the available body of evidence, those two beliefs are favored. If I encounter good evidence stating the opposite, as I've been trying unsuccessfully to do, I will reconsider.

By the way, we're talking about three separate things here. The Big Bang theory is the commonly accepted model of the time after the universe began. It's relatively new, is still being studied, and I would only be moderately surprised if it was overturned in the next century. Abiogenesis is the origin of life. The processes here are mostly understood, and the biggest upset I could see for this would be if we found life on other planets - that would favor panspermia instead, with life's origin being on a different planet. Natural selection describes the gradual change of species, and is the most well-understood - it's almost closer to a law of statistics. Under a situation such as the one on Earth, with individual organisms breeding and mutating, natural selection will occur, period.

You don't have to believe all of these - none of them is contingent on the others at all. None of them make any claims about deities, beyond not requiring one for the processes in question to occur. "Evolution", which is the common name for the latter two, is not in opposition to most of Christianity, and it is not a unified force like the Church. You don't have to see it as an enemy.

Cypher wrote:So basically, you are stating that "wrong" is a societal consensus on how people feel (am I correct?). You have traced it from society, but permit me to dig a little deeper and ask you how you personally define "wrong." Is it something that makes you feel bad? Or is it something deeper.

Personal views of "wrong" aren't exactly equal to society's consensus. The consensus is based on the majority of members, at least ideally. Anyone who doesn't agree can advocate for change, or leave for a society they find more suitable. As for where "wrong" comes from on a personal level? For me, it's:
-ingrained survival pressure, such as not killing members of your own species, except where overridden by logic.
-learned behavior, from growing up in a society. Most of what we learn has solid logical founding that can be traced to one of the other three sources. Note that "illegal" is not always "wrong", though.
-wanting people to be happy. This basically comes from empathy, which follows from that survival pressure - unwillingness to hurt other members of your species. It's more consciously considered, though - I've decided that all else equal, I prefer a world where a person is alive and happy to one where they are dead or sad.This implies that causing pain or death is wrong.
-the "Golden Rule" - if in doubt, assume the other party thinks like you. Behave to maximize both your happiness, and so will they. This makes sense when considered logically - if you live in a society of people like you, everyone will be attempting to maximize everyone's happiness. (As an interesting side note, this philosophy lets you do better than Game Theory against the Prisoner's Dilemma under some conditions. Specifically, when the other player thinks like you, and thus will make the same decision you do.)


Cypher wrote:What is inherently different about being human in an evolutionary scheme? Isn't man just an ascended ape? Just recently, a male chimpanzee killed a baby chimpanzee in front of zoo-goers, why was everyone horrified (this is normal in the wild)?

Nothing is different, really. "Human" is a subset of "sapient", and killing sapient things is bad. As I said, ideally (if not pragmatically, for now - I like meat, and couldn't make a dent in production if I did go vegetarian) I'd like to extend it beyond humans. We don't solely feel empathy toward other humans, which is why people reacted to that particular scene. Given the power, I would stop that happening, in zoos or in the wild.

And don't worry - I haven't taken any insult from this. The only thing that can come out of discussing my beliefs or ideals is an improvement to them. I've already gained something by putting it into words here. Hopefully you feel the same.
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Re: Why MT doesn't believe in this.

Postby Col. Hstar » Sat Jul 07, 2012 7:55 am

Darth Crater wrote:Homestar: you're getting less respect from me because you've earned less. You consistently misunderstand basic terminology. "Proof" and "evidence" are different, and you've clearly demonstrated you don't understand scientific procedure at all. In any case, you admit that you have no evidence for me. I think we're done here.


Proof:
evidence sufficient to establish a thing as true, or to produce belief in its truth.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/proof

Evidence:
that which tends to prove or disprove something; ground for belief; proof.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/evidence

Different? :lol: Ok your right. When you start trying to split hairs like this our discussion is a an end.

I've given my evidence/proof if you want to stick your head in the sand to ignore it, that's your decision.
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Re: Why MT doesn't believe in this.

Postby theavengers85 » Sun Jul 08, 2012 5:31 am

Darth Crater wrote: The only thing that can come out of discussing my beliefs or ideals is an improvement to them. I've already gained something by putting it into words here. Hopefully you feel the same.


And that is how it should be.

On similar note, I maintain that Evolution and Creationism are both good for each other, since they force each other to improve and interpret evidence better. Competition is good.

I am not trying to convince you to take my theory, and you are not trying to push your theory on me. We are just stating our positions and trying to establish them as legitimate (well, at least I am, your position is already well established).
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Re: Why MT doesn't believe in this.

Postby THEWULFMAN » Sun Jul 08, 2012 2:02 pm

Why don't we put together a list of things we agree on? Or at least certain rules to follow? Actually, we should try and detail what we are trying to accomplish here.

I think we should simply be presenting what we believe, and why we believe it. Not trying to attack others' beliefs. Respect and understanding.
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Re: Why MT doesn't believe in this.

Postby theavengers85 » Sun Jul 08, 2012 11:11 pm

Nah, I think I've accomplished what I needed to do. I presented my position and debated it a little. I don't think there is much more for me to do. How about you guys?
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