TimHauck 2,745 Posted June 19 @jerryskids how was your class? Figured this deserved it’s own thread. I think yes. on this subject, this tweet from 2 days ago went viral and of course all the conservative x posters jumped all over it. I also think it’s odd the guy is bragging about being the “IQ record holder” https://x.com/yhbryankimiq/status/1935171190827667641 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Strike 5,447 Posted June 19 The answer is no. For one thing, nothing prevented God from creating the world to adhere to scientific rules/principles. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TimHauck 2,745 Posted June 19 3 minutes ago, Strike said: The answer is no. For one thing, nothing prevented God from creating the world to adhere to scientific rules/principles. Prior to the invention of artificial insemination, was there anything in science that could explain someone being born with no biological father? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Hardcore troubadour 15,288 Posted June 19 6 minutes ago, TimHauck said: Prior to the invention of artificial insemination, was there anything in science that could explain someone being born with no biological father? Why wouldn’t someone created via artificial insemination have a biological father? It’s the insemination that’s artificial, not the semen. 🪖 4 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
seafoam1 2,942 Posted June 19 This very question asked, shows that the OP doesn't know what the hell he is even talking about. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jerryskids 6,737 Posted June 19 31 minutes ago, TimHauck said: @jerryskids how was your class? Figured this deserved it’s own thread. I think yes. on this subject, this tweet from 2 days ago went viral and of course all the conservative x posters jumped all over it. I also think it’s odd the guy is bragging about being the “IQ record holder” https://x.com/yhbryankimiq/status/1935171190827667641 Thanks, I saw that video this morning. Concepts like quantum entanglement and the multiverse are mind blowing and introduce so many opportunities. Short answer is the class was pretty good. I'm on my phone waiting for an appointment, so I'll type more later. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
MDC 7,301 Posted June 19 I’d say no unless you’re a Bible literalist. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
RaiderHaters Revenge 4,316 Posted June 19 yes but so do libtards Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TimHauck 2,745 Posted June 19 7 minutes ago, RaiderHaters Revenge said: yes but so do libtards Agree Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kopy 565 Posted June 19 I say whoever created beer. That scientific god is awesome. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
The Real timschochet 6,671 Posted June 19 The answer is yes and no. Yes at first always. But eventually the smart religions, the ones that last, accept the science and find a way to work it in. Of course sometimes there’s a lot of drama in between, people get murdered, etc. Heretics are put to the stake. Eventually though it gets absorbed. Christianity brilliantly solved this dilemma with something called the Enlightenment which basically means “hey if the scientists say it’s true, God must have wanted it all along! When we thought differently it wasn’t God who was wrong; we just misunderstood Him.” This excuse cleverly allows everyone but the absolute literalists to adopt every discovery no matter how much it might contradict Scripture. Islam didn’t have any Enlightenment and so they’ve struggled a little more with this. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Alias Detective 1,394 Posted June 19 Here we go. I know for fact a guy born with a twig and berries can’t be a woman. So who is denying science? 2 hours ago, TimHauck said: @jerryskids how was your class? Figured this deserved it’s own thread. I think yes. on this subject, this tweet from 2 days ago went viral and of course all the conservative x posters jumped all over it. I also think it’s odd the guy is bragging about being the “IQ record holder” https://x.com/yhbryankimiq/status/1935171190827667641 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TimHauck 2,745 Posted June 19 12 minutes ago, Alias Detective said: Here we go. I know for fact a guy born with a twig and berries can’t be a woman. So who is denying science? Hey @EternalShinyAndChrome you better call this guy out for changing the subject!! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jerryskids 6,737 Posted June 19 @TimHauck, I'm at my desk so here is a summary: The instructor was a biology professor and nominally Lutheran, although he said he associates more with Buddhism on this topic (perhaps explained at the end). He started by presuming there is often a dichotomy of hard core people on both sides who refuse to see the other side. The religious side, he mostly conflated with Christianity. [Side note: he referred this side as "MAGA" which I found at best lazy and at worst bigoted. At one point he said "believe it or not I have a harder time discussing this with the hard-core science folks vs. MAGA," I presume because MAGA folks are stoopid. More side note: this was at a retirement home. Between the head nodding at the MAGA comment and the attendance at the no-kings protests, I'm wondering what's happening to our elderly? Are they entering some phase like the movie "Cocoon" where they mentally go back to their early 20s and lose all their wisdom?] Back on topic: He spent most of the class showing why each side of the dichotomy is wrong. Starting with the religious side, he said that the word "day" in Genesis comes from "yowm" in the original language (Greek? Hebrew? I missed it.) Anyway, the word more accurately refers to an indeterminate period of time. He also showed why evolution has been proven. Frankly, I personally found this track uninteresting because I know the basics of these arguments. The science side was more interesting. He explained inductive reasoning and, during the Enlightenment, the introduction of the scientific method (deductive reasoning). We broke into small groups and analyzed a picture with two chairs to identify differences -- the size difference was an optical illusion; we assumed they were different without measuring them. He then went through in more detail an experiment/paper he led studying tiger beetles in SE Arizona (fascinating creatures, I'll skip details). Despite all efforts to measure and account for what couldn't be measured, the team inevitably made assumptions. Which led to his takeaway: assumptions are basically faith. Citations of earlier experiments are also faith; faith that the experiment was accurate and the scientists were honest. (We did talk about dishonest scientists, but it wasn't that relevant IMO). Ergo, scientists have no problem with faith in their assumptions, or the work of peers, so it is not unreasonable to have faith in God. The best thing IMO that came out of the class was a comment by a woman in the audience during Q&A. She described a letter that Galileo wrote to the Grand Duchess Christina (can size unknown), in which he describes his belief that science can not only co-exist with faith, but is part of God's gift to us, to discover his creation. The awesome quote from this: "That the intention of the Holy Ghost is to teach us how one goes to heaven. not how heaven goes." Full letter: https://web.stanford.edu/~jsabol/certainty/readings/Galileo-LetterDuchessChristina.pdf Wiki summary: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letter_to_the_Grand_Duchess_Christina I walked away feeling it was a bit of a yin/yang thing, which I guess is Taoist or perhaps somewhat Buddhist in thinking. Final note: I'm slow-watching Dexter while I do some short exercises and/or stretches. I'm on season 6 which is a religious theme. Yesterday morning before class, they introduced the concept of the Second Law of Thermodynamics (entropy: energy moves towards a state of increasing randomness/disorder) and how it is inconsistent with life and its increasing organization. I've since researched and found that the answer was proposed by Schroedinger: Quote The problem of organization in living systems increasing despite the second law is known as the Schrödinger paradox.[7] In his note to Chapter 6 of What is Life?, however, Schrödinger remarks on his usage of the term negative entropy: Let me say first, that if I had been catering for them [physicists] alone I should have let the discussion turn on free energy instead. It is the more familiar notion in this context. But this highly technical term seemed linguistically too near to energy for making the average reader alive to the contrast between the two things. This, Schrödinger argues, is what differentiates life from other forms of the organization of matter. In this direction, although life's dynamics may be argued to go against the tendency of the second law, life does not in any way conflict with or invalidate this law, because the principle that entropy can only increase or remain constant applies only to a closed system which is adiabatically isolated, meaning no heat can enter or leave, and the physical and chemical processes which make life possible do not occur in adiabatic isolation, i.e. living systems are open systems. Whenever a system can exchange either heat or matter with its environment, an entropy decrease of that system is entirely compatible with the second law. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entropy_and_life 1 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BudBro 180 Posted June 19 JK, you may find Genesis Unbound by John Sailhamer interesting. The premise is that Gen 1:1 is a complete statement, standing alone. Gen 1:2 forward is the creation of the promised land within the creation. Quote "That the intention of the Holy Ghost is to teach us how one goes to heaven. not how heaven goes." I'd rather lend that the Holy Spirit infills us to become more human, like Jesus. The vocation is to bring heaven to earth. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BiPolarBear 485 Posted June 20 I never worry about what our 6,000 plus religions are spewing. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Voltaire 5,284 Posted June 21 The best religions can incorporate science in seamlessly while the best scientists, including atheists, have an ethical underpinning. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TimHauck 2,745 Posted June 21 On 6/19/2025 at 2:18 PM, jerryskids said: @TimHauck, I'm at my desk so here is a summary: The instructor was a biology professor and nominally Lutheran, although he said he associates more with Buddhism on this topic (perhaps explained at the end). He started by presuming there is often a dichotomy of hard core people on both sides who refuse to see the other side. The religious side, he mostly conflated with Christianity. [Side note: he referred this side as "MAGA" which I found at best lazy and at worst bigoted. At one point he said "believe it or not I have a harder time discussing this with the hard-core science folks vs. MAGA," I presume because MAGA folks are stoopid. More side note: this was at a retirement home. Between the head nodding at the MAGA comment and the attendance at the no-kings protests, I'm wondering what's happening to our elderly? Are they entering some phase like the movie "Cocoon" where they mentally go back to their early 20s and lose all their wisdom?] Back on topic: He spent most of the class showing why each side of the dichotomy is wrong. Starting with the religious side, he said that the word "day" in Genesis comes from "yowm" in the original language (Greek? Hebrew? I missed it.) Anyway, the word more accurately refers to an indeterminate period of time. He also showed why evolution has been proven. Frankly, I personally found this track uninteresting because I know the basics of these arguments. The science side was more interesting. He explained inductive reasoning and, during the Enlightenment, the introduction of the scientific method (deductive reasoning). We broke into small groups and analyzed a picture with two chairs to identify differences -- the size difference was an optical illusion; we assumed they were different without measuring them. He then went through in more detail an experiment/paper he led studying tiger beetles in SE Arizona (fascinating creatures, I'll skip details). Despite all efforts to measure and account for what couldn't be measured, the team inevitably made assumptions. Which led to his takeaway: assumptions are basically faith. Citations of earlier experiments are also faith; faith that the experiment was accurate and the scientists were honest. (We did talk about dishonest scientists, but it wasn't that relevant IMO). Ergo, scientists have no problem with faith in their assumptions, or the work of peers, so it is not unreasonable to have faith in God. The best thing IMO that came out of the class was a comment by a woman in the audience during Q&A. She described a letter that Galileo wrote to the Grand Duchess Christina (can size unknown), in which he describes his belief that science can not only co-exist with faith, but is part of God's gift to us, to discover his creation. The awesome quote from this: "That the intention of the Holy Ghost is to teach us how one goes to heaven. not how heaven goes." Full letter: https://web.stanford.edu/~jsabol/certainty/readings/Galileo-LetterDuchessChristina.pdf Wiki summary: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letter_to_the_Grand_Duchess_Christina I walked away feeling it was a bit of a yin/yang thing, which I guess is Taoist or perhaps somewhat Buddhist in thinking. Final note: I'm slow-watching Dexter while I do some short exercises and/or stretches. I'm on season 6 which is a religious theme. Yesterday morning before class, they introduced the concept of the Second Law of Thermodynamics (entropy: energy moves towards a state of increasing randomness/disorder) and how it is inconsistent with life and its increasing organization. I've since researched and found that the answer was proposed by Schroedinger: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entropy_and_life I guess there’s an argument for a God to exist, but I would still say the biggest things about religion (particularly Christianity) that deny science is Jesus being born via divine intervention and that he rose from the dead. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Frozenbeernuts 2,239 Posted June 21 Because they have become so separated they both deny each other at times. The modern day father of materialism, Isaac Newton, wrote quite a bit on God and not separating that study from science. It's all one thing. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites