1. You say people who are religious/superstitious/what ever else you want to call it are deluded. Congrats, you think people are deluded. I think you're deluded by your faith and arrogance that you are always right because you 'use' logic. Your logic is full of fallacies thus I think you're deluded.
Did we settle anything by that? Nope, didn't think so. All this is is ad hominem
I stated precisely why I think the aforementioned group to be deluded, wherein lies the difference between what I said, and what you just said.
Please elaborate on my faith, arrogance, and logical fallacies.
2. Is this a fact or an opinion because you're presenting it as a fact. If you love facts so much I want your proof with empirical evidence, otherwise you're delusional.
It was conjecture.
3. Seeing as you rely and believe in facts and evidence so much, I'd like some for this, and let me make it crystal clear; I want numbers/graphs/pie charts/what ever that states specifically, and I quote "more violent and intolerant acts can be traced directly or indirectly to religion than not". I don't want numbers of people killed by the actions of people, I want hard proof that in fact more people have been killed my religion than not.
I never stated this was a fact, it was again, conjecture.
In the end it's the people who did the killing, not religion. You can't place blame for people's actions on inanimate things such as ideas. People get killed by cars, so cars are to blame, right? Or is it the people driving the cars...
Religion has systematically enabled and facilitated people to commit violent acts. Much as did fascism, or colonialism (both of which had religious elements to them).
4. To quote you (in yet another circular use of your arguement), because violence exists in religion, violence that is outside of religion and is "vehemently defended by a large portion of the population" is blameless for it's share?
What?
I think you misunderstood me.
"
Most of these other causes are generally acknowledged being as nefarious,
rather than institutionalized, and vehemently defended by a large portion of the population."
The underlined refers to violence external to religion, the bold refers to religion itself.
5. And you are not delusional for believing in something so strongly as science? That in science/empirical evidence alone lie the answers? What if science can't prove the answers to everything? To believe in science you have to have faith that science is right. Sure, there is "evidence" but that evidence exists solely in the belief that the "evidence" is correct. Science can only be proven by empirical evidence, much like religious arguments can only be proven in faith. You can't argue faith with science or science against faith because they exist separate from each other.
Science
can't provide the answers to everything, and that is exactly the point to pay attention to; this is a crucial pillar of the methodology. The scientific method is limited by the bounds of the natural universe, and openly acknowledges it's own limitations, and also just as importantly, science is falsifiable. The supernatural is not falsifiable.
6. This is an argument from authority, aka fallacie!!!
Congrats! you had a harmful upbringing, do you want a cookie? Just because it was pernicious (I can use big words too
) to you does not mean it is across the board. Logical fallacie.
I would like to see where I stated that my upbringing was applicable to anyone else's, let alone everyone else's.
I try to gauge my vocabulary to my perceived audience.
Sorry for overestimating, I'll try to tone it down next time.
7. So something is wrong if there is a lack of evidence? Just because it can't be proven means it holds no water?
Exactly. Theories, in science, are guilty until proven innocent, as such.
"Absence of evidence is evidence of absence."
What if someone's faith follows along the lines of science/empirical evidence and they use faith to fill in the blanks? The stuff science can't prove. Science answer's how and faith/religion answers why. They both are creations of mankind and you're using one to disprove the other but they are on completely different playing fields. Just because you don't believe in the why doesn't discredit those who do.
I've never stated that science can disprove religion, since it can't. My statement was that science
cannot prove religion, which it also can't. Thus why people looking for evidence to back up their faith-based beliefs confuse me.
Science is naturalistic, and therefore wholly incompatible with the supernatural by very definition.
You're playing refferee in a soccer match while handing out penalties by the rules of basketball.
Am I? It would appear you are ignorant as to what game is even being played at all, if were going to use vague and meaningless metaphors.
Science and faith are seperate and can't be proven or disproven by the other, but they can work together if there is acceptance and acknowledgement of eachother.
Explain to me how they can "work together"?
8. Believe in evidence all you want but it's only true because you believe it to be and others believe it to be. Lack of evidence doesn't prove or disprove, so don't use it to discredit other's opinions.
As stated above, absence of evidence is considered evidence of absence. Ironic that you try to score points against me for using an alleged fallacy, while overlooking other ones.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argument_from_ignorance
9. Aren't you the one who's saying other people are wrong because they don't believe in the way you do? Please explain what your point in saying this is.
I'm not sure what you are confused by here, I don't think you paid attention to the context, and what the person I quoted said.
10. Intellectual surrender? Are you kidding me? Don't be niave. Because one feels beyond the five senses they are wrong? I'm not saying they are right but this is just name calling. You're assuming they give the same importance to "empirical evidence" as you do.
I'm not sure how you deduced that what you quoted had anything to do with empiricism vs. theism, but it didn't. It was related to MBTI.
I hate it when I see people agressively push and use reason as an argument against faith; the same people saying that faith/religion is dangerous because it tells people how to think. Hypocritical. The bullshit excuse is anti-religion can do so because they have facts on their side, but when you get down to the nitty gritty, facts are only facts if one believes them to be so, it doesn't matter if the belief that "science and facts are indeed true" is a widely held popular opinion, because in the end it is just that, nothing more than an opinion.
Science has very little to do with belief.
Facts are not facts because one "believes" them to be, they are facts because they are generally observable by everyone. They are objective truths.
When will people realize that there indeed could be more to this world than our five senses can percieve? I'm not saying that there is or isn't, but it is a possibility. If it's beyond our five senses, no matter what we do we will never be able to prove or disprove it, but does that make it any less real (potenionally)? I mean the Tralfamadorians (anyone get this reference?) could see in four demensions and Billy couldn't, but that doesn't mean it isn't possible.
Ironically, the Tralfamadorians were an allusion to
scientific determinism, the Einsteinian belief that the universe operates like a predictable machine, and that randomness is impossible.
Good book, BTW.