Our Fundie Friend wrote:I find it interesting and very telling that I did not cite authority but quoted a statement by St. Augustine and then illustrated factually that it was true. He predicted that science would lead to materialism and that is what happened.
The exact quote you gave is:
St. Augustine wrote:"For there are some individuals who, having abandoned virtue and not knowing what God is nor the majesty of His eternal and immutable nature, suppose themselves to be engaged in a great enterprise when they busy themselves with intense and eager curiosity exploring that universal mass of matter we call the world... For it is by such desire that the soul is deceived into thinking that nothing but matter exists, ..."
First of all, you don't have to abandon virtue to be a materialist. This is just fundie bullcrap. It's only necessary to abandon virtue in this way if "virtue" includes "submitting to the Great Sky Pixie." However, this definition is not shared by all English-speaking people, or indeed by most christians. Rather, they use an alternate (and more properly defined) definition:
Wordsmyth wrote:
virtue:
- moral excellence; righteousness.
- a specific example of moral excellence.
- chastity, esp. in a female person.
- an admirable trait, as in a person's character.
- power; efficacy.
Notice that NONE of them mention God. Therefore, one can be virtuous without appealing to God. No, "moral" does not have any specific connection to God either. (You fundies think you have the monopoly on morality. Hah, I
spit on your notions!)
Secondly, if God has
no demonstratable effect on the material world, then
of course we must exclude him from consideration. It's easy to figure out a way that God could be scrutible by material means (for instance, him coming down from on high to declare "I am here" would be a great start). So, in other words, St. Augustine said that science would lead to materialism because he
knew that God was not materialistically demonstratable.
Thirdly, the people who were engaged in this "great enterprise" that St. Augustine referred to were indeed engaged in a great enterprise. It is science that has brought you all the wonders of washing machines, detergents, plastic, TV and all the trappings of modern society. Including a wonderful little gadget called a COMPUTER!
With faith, we can only sit back and let shit happen to us in our ignorance, shrugging it off as "God's will." With science, we achieve understanding, and perhaps a little bit of control, and a shitload of nifty toys! Gee, science sounds more like a deal, don't it?
The reason that denying God is not logical (Occam would never have denied God's existence) is because materialist explanations are completely inadequate to explain the ordered universe.
Then how do you explain that thing your pecking on right now? It's a child of materialistic thinking.
Random changes create chaos not order.
There's a non-random element to evolution. It's called "natural selection."
Anyone who argues that they can adequately explain the existence of the material universe without God is merely deluding themselves. The greatest problem comes at the beginning. Nothing cannot create something. Thus, the Big Bang either says that nothing created something which is impossible or that something already existed and then the question becomes what (or who) created that.
What about God, then? If nothing cannot create something, then where did God himself come from? If God is something, then by this logic something had to create God: a God of Gods. But then, being something, something would have to create the God of Gods: a God of God of Gods. Then you must postulate a God of God of God of Gods, and then a God of God of God of God of Gods, a God of God of God of God of God of Gods, a God of God of God of God of God of God of Gods...
ad infinitum. But if God is nothing, then if he created the universe, then nothing definitely
does create something, and you've destroyed your entire argument. Occam's razor then dictates you must jettison God and say that the universe was created
ex nihilo because it's the simplest explanation.
As the Bible, Koran, Bhagavad-Gita, and every other holy book explain, materialists merely delude themselves and in the end are forced to rely on faith. A faith rooted in mere prejudice against religion and a desire to deny the reality of sin.
I don't deny the reality of evil. But I regard it as different from the victimless "sins" that your God hands us from on high, mostly consisting of God-gratifying kowtowing. In fact, many things you consider "sins" are not evil in my eyes, and a great deal of what your traditions consider "reverent behavior" fall under my "evil" catagory.
As to relying on faith? Where did that come from? If anything, materialism is the
lack of faith in the unseeable. You don't have to have faith in what you can see with your own two eyes, or what you can measure with your instruments. You don't need much faith to believe in a punch in the nose.
Materialists want to make sin merely an opinion with no objective basis and yet history tells a far different story. Sin hurts other people that is why it is sin.
Most of what the Christan fundamentalists catagorize as "sins" are quite victimless and hurt no one. I'm a materialist and I find hurting other people abhorrent. On the other hand, your tradition has DO NOT SUFFER A WITCH TO LIVE! {Exodus 22:18} Your tradition has the crusades, missionaries, persecution of Jews, the justification of slavery, and a whole slew of inhuman atrocities. How is
that not hurting people?
I must be honest that scientifically you do not seem very aware of the problems with evolution that evolution scientists like Stephen Jay Gould are very aware of. Why is there Darwinism, Neo-Darwinism, and "hopeful monsters" if the evidence for the theory is so over-whelming?
You are misinformed. The bickering you see is quite normal in
healthy sciences. Scientists are
paid to try to shoot down each other's ideas. They're paid to bicker about the nitty-gritty details. Physicists are bickering about the nitty-gritty details of quantum mechanics and general relativity, but this does not indicate that the whole ediface is about to come tumbling down any minute.
Why is the theory collapsing of its own weight and lack of evidence that is not circular?
Who told you this horse hockey? Your creationist friends at the ICR? Your minister? Let me tell you this, friend: they wouldn't know a circular argument if it walked up to them and bit them on the leg.
How do I know this?
Their entire creationist ediface is based on a circular argument!
- God exists, because the Bible said so.
- The Bible is right, because it is the word of God.
THAT... is a circular argument.
Why are more scientists living up to their profession and actually questioning these unproven assumptions?
Again, who fed you these lies? Scientists have always been bickering about the details of their theories, but such bickering is not the same as questioning the basic assumptions. Last time I checked, the scientific community was still firmly entrenched in the assumption of materialism, and only the fringe we like to call the "kooks" question that assumption.
Overall, you haven't shown much of an open mind and ability to learn.
Funny you should say that, as you have shown no proficiency to learn the theories you are supposedly arguing against, rather you are trying to set up prefabricated strawmen to knock down and claim victory.
You can cite the sins of Christianity all day long but what about the rest of the world? Of course, they had no slavery, warfare, imperialism, human sacrifice, torture, patriarchy, racism, exploitation, and any other evil you can mention. Obviously, they were perfect and Christian influence only could have made things worse. If you really believe that then you don't know much about other cultures.
Other cultures have had their fair share of atrocities and evil, but, and this is the main point,
the Christian world was/is no better.
And you show a great deal of arrogance about peasants.
And rightly so!
My point was not that they knew everything but they knew a lot more about their life than a modern expert does.
They barely knew how to eke out an existence! They knew nothing about
how their world worked, just what rituals they had to do to make things happen in their world, which is an entirely different thing! They knew if you put seeds (A) into fallow ground (B) and till it with hoes (C), while waiting for sunlight (D) and rain (E) to fall on it, then eventually they would get crops (F) and be able to make food (G) to eat and survive.
And even then it didn't work all the time! Peasants were frequent victims of starvation and disease, famine and plauges, and the whims of their lords, all the while being spoonfed the kind of age-old nonsense you've been fed all your life and expecting some kind of great (but by no means certain) reward for all their years of toil and suffering... the perfect pyramid scam!
My advice would be that you should study a lot more about philosophy and religion and if you are going to be a materialist at least do it from knowledge and not ignorance.
I am a materialist from knowledge. I know
exactly what I'm getting into. You, however, have known naught but the ignorant dogma of your forefathers and your clergy. You demonstrate your ignorance of the concepts you attempt to argue against by putting forth these strawmen that we've seen a billion times before. Your camp has turned out
nothing new in
millennia; even this recent "Intelligent Design" junk is just Paley's Watch in new clothes.
You are as ignorant as those peasants of old, and I laugh at you!