Design ain't "magic."
The "work" of a god would be the opposite of "random and undirected."
Evolution is not random, the direction is supplied by the environment.
Design ain't "magic."
The "work" of a god would be the opposite of "random and undirected."
We are not fish. We like fish are vertebrates.
How would you explain it?
By definition, an unexplainable experience has no possible explanation.
I've had some. In the end, I wasn't able to explain them.
May be a small point, but I'll point out that unexplainable is context dependent.
Someone in an aboriginal society could validly state "a rainbow is unexplainable" meaning they cannot explain it, even though others can.
Someone looks out the airplane window and says "there is a UFO above the clouds" and it is unexplainable to them, when someone else might know it to be the reflection of the moon
Other things might be unexplainable to everyone and anyone in the world
Sum up: it could be "something i can' explain" something "we (in a limited group) can't explain," or something "no human can explain."
Fair point.
What I was getting at is that I frequently find believers in mystical forces essentially saying that "because this cannot be explained I can explain exactly what it is" which turns out to be unproven mystical forces.
Or it cannot be explained "yet".
Not according to Bible and fanatical creationists though...But I can accept this idea as another theory.
Biologically, the only sensible way to make a group called "fish" is to include all land vertebrates inside of it.
Quick everyone
Throw your Darwin books in the trash can and instead listen to the insane ramblings of a religious lunatic on an internet basketball forum
Also a fair point, thanks.
In that mystical forces are forces that are difficult to understand, they may have a point. In other words, something that is mystical can be in fact fully explainable by science and reasoning. Mystical can also connote something that is directly explainable by God or some currently-inexplicable spiritual phenomenon. So the word itself is a bit slippery.
I'm always a sceptic, but since there is always an edge to our understanding of nature, beyond which there is stuff we cannot explain by science, I tend to remain open to the possibility of things not currently explainable by what we know today. It's humility about what we know versus what possible to know. Always a gap.
No great stretch of the imagination? That's stretching it clear beyond the breaking point!
Just because something cant be disproven doesn't mean theres any sane reason to believe in it
a lot of perfectly sane kids believe in the sphagetti monster. . . . sorta. . . .
kids are learning to play with fantasy and fact, and can do both at the same time. Mostly, I think a lot of "religious" folks are like that too. And scientists as well.
Most of us can see your lack of imagination, but your post underlines the point nicely. Carolinajazz, embrace your orthodoxy-bound, imagination-limited brethren!
..and when it comes to "geocentrism" it actually disagrees with what the Bible says!
I have been touched by his noodly appendage.
I think you missed the point, which is not what you think or what the bible says, but rather what the science-denying orthodox religious leaders believed at the time. That is the reason they are your brethren. In 200 years, your ancestors will look back at you in the same light.