Men are better than women: |
|
Men are better than women: |
|
I'm pretty sure the second one is supposed to be joke. |
|
Your Catholic boyfriend doesn't sound very smart. Sorry to say. Catholics are allowed to accept evolution. So he fails as a rational human being and he fails as a catholic. Sorry for being an asshole. I'm not sure if I'm impressed with your "tolerance" or not. I could never respect a creationist that's alive in 2011. I might respect certain things about individual creationists but I could never respect the person. |
|
Last edited by PhilosopherStoned; 03-27-2011 at 11:07 AM.
Previously PhilosopherStoned
(Very tired, excuse any bad grammar. Sorry for the long post, just started type a lot.) He admitedly hasn't looked into the evidence for evolution very much, but from what he has covered it seems most likely to him that evolution isn't true. If he gets most of his information from sites like that, of course it's going to seem like evolution is false. I haven't looked into it much either. I've read The Greatest Show On Earth, taken a second year biology course and heard more about it around the internet, but apart from that I haven't looked into the evidence for evolution in detail. Almost all of the anti-evolution arguments I've read don't seem logically flawed. They usually make me think that okay, this could have a point, but only if some of the background information they're asserting is true, and I have no idea whether it is or not. |
|
That's a straw man argument. The theory of evolution doesn't a priori say anything about "genetic information". It says that organisms that reproduce reproduce and organisms that don't reproduce don't reproduce. Because there is variation in organisms, any variation that helps an organism reproduce will be present in future populations and any variation that prevents an organism from reproducing will not be present in future populations. By future generations, I don't necessarily mean the next generation but "far enough along". That's the core of it. |
|
Last edited by PhilosopherStoned; 03-27-2011 at 01:35 PM.
Previously PhilosopherStoned
You've basically summed it up. How is this so f_cking hard to understand and accept? It's so obvious, but "oh I rather go believe in this other thing that has absolutely no evidence to back it up (Creation)". |
|
I didn't mean 'belief' as a synonym for 'faith'. To believe something is to think it's true for whatever reason. But I know the definition you're using is used too. My reason for thinking it's likely true is because almost all of the experts agree that it is. Isn't some trust of the experts required eventually, or have you really gone over enough of the evidence yourself? |
|
Like I've said before, evolution doesn't really require evidence because it would require a god to actively intervene to prevent it. There's a ton of evidence for it and I've studied some of it and not studied the rest of it. It's surely necessary to trust the experts at time. |
|
Previously PhilosopherStoned
Nylon-eating bacteria - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
|
I can't say I find the third site surprising at all. The second one is also real, and everyone there is batshit fucking insane. I recommend not to spend too much time reading the threads. It's pretty frustrating. |
|
I got into an argument with one of them a couple years ago and wish I hadn't. The whole experience was sickeningly frustrating. |
|
I just joined. It says I have to wait a week before I can post a link. I figure it's to stop spammers. |
|
Flat earthers still aren't as bad a creationists. They're dumber perhaps (although we're going pretty far out on an asymptotic curve to notice a difference) but not as bad. Flat earthers are like having some rare, exotic, normally wild animal take up residence in your house. It's sort of cool. Creationists are like cockroaches. They're all over the place, everybody's seen them, and they could survive a nuclear holocaust. |
|
Last edited by PhilosopherStoned; 03-30-2011 at 07:03 PM.
Previously PhilosopherStoned
Yeah I thought it was stretching the bounds of plausibility with deeply serious and intellectual diagrams such as this |
|
Not sure about the website, but the Flat-Earth society was/is a real thing, it's nearly dead now. |
|
Oh good. That's a relief. If loving flat earthers is wrong, then I don't want to be right. |
|
Previously PhilosopherStoned
Flat Earth Society's evidence page is currently "under construction", but a couple years ago when I first found the website, they had a map of the world (a colored, larger, more detailed version of the small image Xei posted). The way they rationalized it was hilarious because at first glance it almost makes sense. Since people have never gone over Antarctica, from one end to the other through the center (don't know if that's true), they claim the center doesn't exist. What we think is one continent is really a ring around the earth's circumference. |
|
Stuff I found odd from the flat earth society link |
|
Last edited by PurpleDonk; 03-31-2011 at 04:41 AM.
Okay, I guess it is a joke, unless they're mocking the people who think they're irrational/evil. (Like if a creationist were to rant that they're planning to take over the world and make it a crime not to attend church). |
|
The funny thing about the Antarctica theory is that you can disprove it without traversing Antarctica. All you have to do is bound it with a circle that you could traverse. If their theory is right, then the length of the circle would be 2 times the distance from the north pole times pi. Of course the circle would be far less then that. |
|
Previously PhilosopherStoned
^ lol'd @ "Being Christian is not a cultural thing. Being Christian is being converted by God Himself." |
|
Bookmarks