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How to Land a Red Fish

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Short answer, stick a logic hook in his mouth and yank.  Long answer below:

In a prior post RDFish asserted:

The point is important because nobody believes that “matter in motion” can lead to complex form and function, the way ID folks pretend.

The obvious implication of RDFish’s assertion is that a monist such as himself can take comfort in the fact that there is something out there other than particles moving through space-time to account for the dizzying diversity and complexity of nature, including, space stations, Iphones and, not least, living things.  I believe that RDFish is bluffing.  Take any brand of monism you like, materialism, naturalism, physicalism; it does not matter.  RDFish knows that monist reductionism has failed to account for the observations.  Yet he does not want to abandon monism.  So what is a monist to do?  Why conjure up out of whole cloth a tertium quid – i.e., assert that there is a third physical (by which I mean “non-spiritual”) thing out there that is not space-time or matter/energy that explains it all.  Perhaps we do not yet understand how RDFish’s tertium quid explains it all, but we can appeal to its mere existence as a possible, indeed probable, explanation.

The problem, of course, is that asserting a tertium quid is meaningless speculation until you actually plausibly identify it.  Until you do plausibility identify it, it is no better, scientifically speaking, than an appeal to “gremlins.”  Such an appeal is nothing but obscurantism employed to disguise the failure of monist reductionism.

So I responded to RDFish with the following simple challenge:

Tell us what else there is besides space, time, matter and energy.

RDFish responded to my challenge here.

In this post, I shall fisk RDFish’s reply.

First, you should realize that time and space are not distinct; they are entwined as dimensions of a 4D spacetime manifold.

I do realize this.

Second, you should realize that matter and energy are not distinct; they are both manifestations of the same underlying “stuff”, and that we cannot conceive of what this “stuff” actually is because none of our classical conceptions fit:

I do realize this. So far you’ve gotten exactly nowhere except to condense “space, time, matter and energy” to “space-time and matter-energy.”

The fundamental “particles” of reality are not “things” that exist at one place at one time, or that obey locality and causality as we understand them.

It is well known that fundamental particles do not fit the classical “billiard ball” conception.  But whatever they may be, they are still “particles.”  So, you still have not identified anything other than space- time and matter-energy.

Third, there are lots of things described by modern physics that are not spacetime or mass-energy,

OK, now we’re getting somewhere:

such as the fundamental forces;

Wrong.  The fundamental forces are not “things” apart from space-time and mass-energy.  Mass-energy behaves in space-time in particular ways which we describe with mathematical models.   I challenge you to tell us what there is other than space-time and matter-energy and your answer is to reify abstract mathematical models.  Sigh.

 properties like electric charge, color charge, or quantum spin;

Good grief.  The “property” of a something does not exist independently and in addition to that something.

phenomena that have no underlying conceptual explanation at all such as entanglement; and so on.

If it has no conceptual explanation then, by definition, you are not free to conceptualize it as something in addition to space-time and mass-energy.  It may well be, but you have no right to say that it is.  That would be pure speculation.  Your speculations do not count as evidence.

BA77 is right that these aspects of reality are fundamental and need to be comprehended in order to derive an accurate picture of the most important questions of existence, starting with ontology.

BA77 is right about a great many things, and yes this is one of them.  But until we do understand them, appealing to them as something other than properties of space-time or mass-energy is pure speculation.  Again, your evidence-free speculations do not meet the challenge.  They are the epistemic equivalent of appeals to quantum woo.

BA77 is completely wrong about what the implications of these things are, of course. To move forward we need to move the discussion past this ridiculous cartoon of people believing that “matter in motion” jostles around and results in planets, stars, snowflakes, and people.

To move forward based on your assertion that there is something other than space-time and mass-energy capable of resulting in planets, stars, snowflakes, and people, you need to actually identity something other than space-time and mass-energy capable of resulting in planets, stars, snowflakes, and people.  And you have not.

 

 

Comments
RDFish
What you’re asking for is an explanation of the origins of biological CSI
This is deeply confused. I asked for no such thing. My question was very succinct: "Tell us what else there is besides space, time, matter and energy." Go back and read the OP if you are still confused about the question. I called you out on your facile “no one believes there is just matter in motion” mantra. And you failed to meet the challenge. Now you are trying to change the subject. Predictable. Sad, but predictable.
I’ve said over and over that nobody can explain [CSI].
That is simply, plainly and demonstrably false. ID proponents explain it every day. You do not seem to understand the difference between “no explanation” and “explanation that I don’t like.”
My point about physics is that ID is wrong to claim that no physical theory could ever account for it, and the reason is because physics is so demonstrably more mysterious than any of us can imagine.
Yes, your point is to make an obscurantist appeal to monist mysticism. I cannot deny that. Barry: “Here’s the bottom line. You have enough sense to know that mindless matter in motion through space-time cannot possibly account for the observations.”
That is the point you’re missing. Nobody knows what the relation between mind and matter is! Many people (including ba77 here) believe that consciousness is centrally involved in physical phenomena, and many people believe conversely that mysterious quantum physical phenomena are involved in consciousness. People here mostly assume an ancient view of the mind/body problem: dualist interactionism. But in all this time nobody has any idea how mind might interact with matter, and nobody has any idea how to experimentally demonstrate that dualist interactionism is actually true.
You are changing the subject yet again. We are not discussing dualism. We are not discussing the mind/body interaction problem. We are discussing your claim that there is something other than matter/energy in space-time. You made the claim. You’ve been called out on the claim. You have not supported the claim. Barry: “Yet you absolutely refuse to countenance the most obvious answer – guiding intelligence – because that answer has theological implications you do not like.”
You assume that is the case, but you’re quite wrong about that. I’m not afraid of finding a god! I would LOVE to have some reason to believe that a transcendent, conscious mind was able to create a universe, pay attention to individual human beings on this little planet, and so on. It would obviously be the most amazing discovery of all time and then some. I just think it is highly unlikely that the truth has any relation to this; rather, it appears to be an anthropomorphic projection that people have invoked since ancient times to explain whatever they don’t understand.
Yes, I do assume that is the case. You are obviously an intelligent man, and I assume that intelligent men evaluate the evidence dispassionately and come to the most compelling conclusion. In this case the evidence overwhelmingly preponderates toward the existence of God. And I assume that anyone who resists that evidence does so for personal, sub-rational reasons.
There are a number of reasons why ID does not represent a meaningful, empirically supported answer to the question of origins. For starters, ID has a very long history of failure: As I’ve explained, ID has always been the catch-all explanation for everything we don’t understand, and the answer turns out to be something that nobody has ever expected (such as electromagnetic fields guiding lightning bolts to church steeples instead of intelligent agents in thunderclouds).
RDFish logic: The ancients believed that certain things were directed by intelligence and that turned out to be fasle; therefore ID is bunk. Ancient scientists believed false things too RDFish (Aristotle; Ptolemy; everyone who believed in the luminous aether). Is science bunk too? Your premise does not support your conclusion.
Now that we are certain that the physical world operates in ways that defy our intuitive conceptions of time, space, matter, energy, locality, causality, and realism, it is clear that this ancient notion of a human-like being with superpowers isn’t really a good candidate for the ultimate answer to the question of origins.
Back to monist mysticism. Natch. BTW, no mature theist conceives of God as being “human-like.” When you reject an entire field of knowledge with a millennia-long history and tradition, you really ought to be able to articulate a higher than second grade level version of that field. That you cannot (or at least did not) indicates that you did not take the time and effort necessary to understand it before you rejected it.
In the end, my position is “we do not know” for this reason
My position is that we know a great many things and we don’t know a great many other things. And in the meantime we evaluate the evidence and come to the best provisional conclusions we can. For example, I conclude that natural forces are incapable of creating CSI. And that leads me to conclude that design is the most plausible answer. I hold that conclusion provisionally, and if it were demonstrated that blind natural forces can produce CSI, it would have to re-evaluate it.Barry Arrington
September 9, 2015
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Hi Virgil Cain,
We observe humans designing things. We know how engineers design things. We observe humans producing CSI and IC.
We have no idea how engineers add 2+2 in their head, must less how they design a machine. Read a bit of cognitive psychology or neuroscience and you will see that I am correct.
We have never observed nature producing it.
Human beings are natural.
For example we don’t know specifically who designed and built Stonehenge. Saying “humans” isn’t specific. The humans in China didn’t do it.
That's funny. I'm not talking about specfying the agent's name, address, or nationality :-) What I'm pointing out is that forensics and archeology deal exclusively with human beings, not "intelligent agents" in the abstract.
We don’t know it was humans who designed and built it, though.
There is no serious controversy that I'm aware of suggesting that Stonehenge was not built by human beings. Perhaps you are thinking of von Daniken, the gentlemen who suggests the pyramids were built by humanoid aliens from outer space? His theory was never taken seriously by any scientist that I'm aware of.
RDF: ID hypothesizes something entirely unknown to science: Something that has the mental abilities of a human being but lacks the complex organs (like the brain) that humans use to design with. VC: ID doesn’t say anything about the designing intelligence. I have been over and over this and you still persist with your obfuscation.
It is you who is obfuscating of course. Either ID posits complex organisms as the cause of life on Earth, or it does not. In the former case, ID becomes merely another theory of panspermia. In the latter case ID is hypothesizing something entirely unknown to science. Take your pick. Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
September 9, 2015
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RDFish:
And, as I said, no one knows how to model how a human being designs things either – it is a mystery that we do not understand.
We observe humans designing things. We know how engineers design things. We observe humans producing CSI and IC. We have never observed nature producing it. Archaeology, forensic science and SETI also have unspecified intelligent agents.
That’s simply untrue.
It's quite true. For example we don't know specifically who designed and built Stonehenge. Saying "humans" isn't specific. The humans in China didn't do it.
The object of study in archaeology and forensics is quite well specified – they are human beings.
Wrong. They may ASSUME that but they don't know exactly who until they have followed the evidence.
Because we know that human beings existed on Earth when Stonehenge was built, and because we know human beings at that time built structures out of stone.
We don't know it was humans who designed and built it, though. We don't know how nor why.
ID hypothesizes something entirely unknown to science:
No, it doesn't.
Something that has the mental abilities of a human being but lacks the complex organs (like the brain) that humans use to design with.
ID doesn't say anything about the designing intelligence. I have been over and over this and you still persist with your obfuscation. Again, we know designers existed because they left traces of their activity behind. That is the same as ID. We have a criteria that has to be met- a scientific criteria. We can test to see if that criteria exists (it does). We can also see if some unguided process could do it (it cannot). Once those two have been met we infer ID.Virgil Cain
September 9, 2015
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And by the way, Barry, you must know that there is a faction of most religions - including Christianity - that holds that God is in a profound sense unknowable. The "obscurantism" you accuse me of is related to that tradition. You assume that the cause of the universe and of life has human-like qualities like conscious awareness and sentience, beliefs and desires and intentions, emotions, and so on, and you bring these faith-based assumptions into your view of science. I think those assumptions are all unfounded, just like the apophatic Christians and many others do.RDFish
September 9, 2015
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Hi Barry,
You are the one who says over and over that no monist believes that the universe consists of only matter in motion in space-time. I ask you to tell us what monists believe exists in addition to matter in motion in space-time, and you’ve got nothing. Instead you give us some X Files song and dance about how the truth is out there.
What you're asking for is an explanation of the origins of biological CSI, and I've said over and over that nobody can explain it. My point about physics is that ID is wrong to claim that no physical theory could ever account for it, and the reason is because physics is so demonstrably more mysterious than any of us can imagine.
Here’s the bottom line. You have enough sense to know that mindless matter in motion through space-time cannot possibly account for the observations.
That is the point you're missing. Nobody knows what the relation between mind and matter is! Many people (including ba77 here) believe that consciousness is centrally involved in physical phenomena, and many people believe conversely that mysterious quantum physical phenomena are involved in consciousness. People here mostly assume an ancient view of the mind/body problem: dualist interactionism. But in all this time nobody has any idea how mind might interact with matter, and nobody has any idea how to experimentally demonstrate that dualist interactionism is actually true.
Yet you absolutely refuse to countenance the most obvious answer – guiding intelligence – because that answer has theological implications you do not like.
You assume that is the case, but you're quite wrong about that. I'm not afraid of finding a god! I would LOVE to have some reason to believe that a transcendent, conscious mind was able to create a universe, pay attention to individual human beings on this little planet, and so on. It would obviously be the most amazing discovery of all time and then some. I just think it is highly unlikely that the truth has any relation to this; rather, it appears to be an anthropomorphic projection that people have invoked since ancient times to explain whatever they don't understand.
You don’t like the answer that is staring you in the face, but you don’t have another answer. So you resort to obscurantism. I can understand why you want to wallow in obscurantism Fish, but for the life of me I don’t know why you expect the rest of us to wallow with you.
There are a number of reasons why ID does not represent a meaningful, empirically supported answer to the question of origins. For starters, ID has a very long history of failure: As I've explained, ID has always been the catch-all explanation for everything we don't understand, and the answer turns out to be something that nobody has ever expected (such as electromagnetic fields guiding lightning bolts to church steeples instead of intelligent agents in thunderclouds). Now that we are certain that the physical world operates in ways that defy our intuitive conceptions of time, space, matter, energy, locality, causality, and realism, it is clear that this ancient notion of a human-like being with superpowers isn't really a good candidate for the ultimate answer to the question of origins. In the end, my position is "we do not know" for this reason: I for one am not afraid to admit our ignorance. Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
September 9, 2015
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Hi Virgil Cain,
RDF: If the natural world is stranger than we can imagine, how can ID say that no natural process can in principle ever produce CSI? VC: No one even knows how to model such a thing.
And, as I said, no one knows how to model how a human being designs things either - it is a mystery that we do not understand. You and most folks here simply adopt a dualist/interactionist metaphysics and act as though that is somehow settled science, but that's not the case at all - it is as much as an act of faith to assume that as it is to assume what you call a "materialist" view of cognition, such as functionalism.
Archaeology, forensic science and SETI also have unspecified intelligent agents.
That's simply untrue. The object of study in archaeology and forensics is quite well specified - they are human beings. There is no object of study in SETI, because SETI is a search for narrow-band radio waves, and nothing interesting has yet been found. If anything is ever found, theorists will look at what has been found and theorize about what we might infer about the source.
The intelligent design does that. We know that designers and builders of Stonehenge existed because of- wait for it- Stonehenge!
Because we know that human beings existed on Earth when Stonehenge was built, and because we know human beings at that time built structures out of stone. Now you will say something like: What if we found Stonehenge on Mars? In that case, since we know complex organisms live on Earth, we would assume complex organisms were on Mars at some point. Just as SETI assumes that what they are looking for is "life as we know it" (which is why they hire astrobiologists), the known cause for CSI is life as we know it. ID hypothesizes something entirely unknown to science: Something that has the mental abilities of a human being but lacks the complex organs (like the brain) that humans use to design with. It is possible that such a thing exists, but in order to be considered a scientific result it obviously requires evidence, of which there is none. And if ID instead hypothesizes that the Designer was a complex organism, then ID becomes just another example of a panspermia theory. Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
September 9, 2015
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RDFish @ 31: You are the one who says over and over that no monist believes that the universe consists of only matter in motion in space-time. I ask you to tell us what monists believe exists in addition to matter in motion in space-time, and you’ve got nothing. Instead you give us some X Files song and dance about how the truth is out there. Here’s the bottom line. You have enough sense to know that mindless matter in motion through space-time cannot possibly account for the observations. Yet you absolutely refuse to countenance the most obvious answer – guiding intelligence – because that answer has theological implications you do not like. You don’t like the answer that is staring you in the face, but you don’t have another answer. So you resort to obscurantism. I can understand why you want to wallow in obscurantism Fish, but for the life of me I don’t know why you expect the rest of us to wallow with you.Barry Arrington
September 9, 2015
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RDFish:
If the natural world is stranger than we can imagine, how can ID say that no natural process can in principle ever produce CSI?
No one even knows how to model such a thing. Might as well say that nature can produce cars, computers and codes. Screw engineering schools- just study nature as it is the most amazing engineer evah!
ID offers some unspecified “intelligent agent” as the cause of living systems, but this remains an unsupported hypothesis just as much as saying that some unspecified “natural process” was responsible.
Archaeology, forensic science and SETI also have unspecified intelligent agents. We know how to test for intelligent agent activity. And if someone could show that nature is capable then ID falls. Science 101
If ID wants to hypothesize some demon or god or spirit or agent – or a whole army of them – that’s fine, but you’ll need to provide evidence that such a thing exists (or existed).
The intelligent design does that. We know that designers and builders of Stonehenge existed because of- wait for it- Stonehenge!Virgil Cain
September 9, 2015
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Barry and many others here poke fun at people who believe that "matter in motion" could account for cells, people, and iPhones. Barry and I were arguing about the fact that people don't actually believe that the world is nothing but "matter in motion" since the revolution in physics over a hundred years ago. Here is the point that Barry and everyone else here is resistant to: The consequence of modern physics theories is that we know that the world does NOT consist of "matter in motion", and in fact the world is not only stranger than we imagine but stranger than we can imagine (as JS Haldane famously said). If the natural world is stranger than we can imagine, how can ID say that no natural process can in principle ever produce CSI? All we can say is that nothing we observe except for human beings and other complex organisms can produce CSI. And we don't know how human beings produce CSI, except that it is clear that our brains are critically involved. This means that just because we decide that matter in motion - or even all of the physics and chemistry we currently understand - cannot account for OOL or biological complexity, we still are not justified in assuming that there are no aspects of reality that are capable of producing the complex form and function we observe in biology of which we are currently ignorant - because we are so surely ignorant of a great deal of how the universe works! ID offers some unspecified "intelligent agent" as the cause of living systems, but this remains an unsupported hypothesis just as much as saying that some unspecified "natural process" was responsible. There is no evidence that the cause of living systems was conscious, could solve novel problems, could learn from mistakes, could explain the reasons for its actions, or any other particular characteristic of human mentality. * * * I gave an example in another thread I'll repeat here that illustrates my point: Imagine you lived in the year 1900 and were attempting to explain the photoelectric effect. Since classical electromagnetism failed to account for experimental results, you came up with theory that said little demons live inside of atoms and eject electrons in just the way we observe whenever they see light beams. Now, you had no way to provide any evidence that these little demons existed, but you said all anyone had to do was to explain the results with any other theory and your demon theory would be falsified! Here’s the point: Your theory would have been wrong, even though nobody at that time had imagined anything like what the solution might turn out to be. The true solution was simply unknown (and impossible to even conceptualize using classical concepts of matter and energy). This is the case with origins now: We can’t imagine what the answer to the question is, but that doesn’t mean that little demons (or big demons, or gods, or…) constitute a scientifically justified answer! Another example is the one about lightning: Before people understood electricity, the best explanation for why lightning preferentially struck church steeples was because an intelligent agent was for some reason angry with those churches. Nobody could imagine how anything but an intelligent agent could possibly look around and aim a lightning bolt from way up in the clouds and have it hit church steeples on the ground. But of course there is no intelligent being who lives in the clouds - or anywhere else - who aims lightning bolts. Electro-magnetic phenomena were simply beyond the ken of anyone at the time, so the catch-all "intelligent agent" hypothesis was put forward as usual. If ID wants to hypothesize some demon or god or spirit or agent – or a whole army of them – that’s fine, but you’ll need to provide evidence that such a thing exists (or existed). Until then, it's just a catch-all hypothesis that works for any phenomena we can't explain. Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
September 8, 2015
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"tertium quid". Thank you Barry. Not too many people speak Latin these days. Shame really. Never heard:read that expression, thanks again. ID = Logic/Science:)ppolish
September 6, 2015
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When did bees decide that living communally would be an advantage? And how many shapes did they try before they decide that the hexagon was best, and how did the use of other shapes lead to the demise of their competitors?Davem
September 6, 2015
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"No, intelligent design gives us space stations and iPhones." Agree Roy. Do you see intelligent design in a beaver's dam or a bee's hive? Or do you view intelligent design as an only human thing?ppolish
September 6, 2015
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Roy:
Intelligent Design gives us nothing but distraction.
Yes, reality is a distraction for materialists.Virgil Cain
September 6, 2015
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Seversky, Intelligent Design gives us space stations and iPhones.
No, intelligent design gives us space stations and iPhones. Intelligent Design gives us nothing but distraction.Roy
September 6, 2015
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daveS:
Also, the shroud was not formed by a ‘classical’ process.
Technically correct. It was a neo-classical process.Mung
September 6, 2015
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Seversky, you trying to redefine materialism to fit quantum mechanics, is not me not having an answer, it is you being blatantly dishonest towards the evidence and refusing to accept the correct answer. i.e. the answer from quantum mechanics that materialism is false. The following reaction is the typical reaction that materialists/naturalists most often have upon learning about some of the ‘weirdness’ inherent in Quantum Mechanics, such as super-position:
Hitler Reacts to the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle – video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MlJYUIXAAQ8
:) Of technical note to Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle. Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle is found to support Wheeler’s, Zeilinger’s, and Dembski’s contention that 'material' reality is actually ‘information theoretic’ in its most foundational basis:
Quantum physics just got less complicated – Dec. 19, 2014 Excerpt: Patrick Coles, Jedrzej Kaniewski, and Stephanie Wehner,,, found that ‘wave-particle duality’ is simply the quantum ‘uncertainty principle’ in disguise, reducing two mysteries to one.,,, “The connection between uncertainty and wave-particle duality comes out very naturally when you consider them as questions about what information you can gain about a system. Our result highlights the power of thinking about physics from the perspective of information,”,,, http://phys.org/news/2014-12-quantum-physics-complicated.html "it from bit” Every “it”— every particle, every field of force, even the space-time continuum itself derives its function, its meaning, its very existence entirely—even if in some contexts indirectly—from the apparatus-elicited answers to yes-or-no questions, binary choices, bits. “It from bit” symbolizes the idea that every item of the physical world has a bottom—a very deep bottom, in most instances, an immaterial source and explanation, that which we call reality arises in the last analysis from the posing of yes-no questions and the registering of equipment—evoked responses, in short all matter and all things physical are information-theoretic in origin and this is a participatory universe." – Princeton University physicist John Wheeler (1911–2008) (Wheeler, John A. (1990), “Information, physics, quantum: The search for links”, in W. Zurek, Complexity, Entropy, and the Physics of Information (Redwood City, California: Addison-Wesley)) Why the Quantum? It from Bit? A Participatory Universe? Excerpt: In conclusion, it may very well be said that information is the irreducible kernel from which everything else flows. Thence the question why nature appears quantized is simply a consequence of the fact that information itself is quantized by necessity. It might even be fair to observe that the concept that information is fundamental is very old knowledge of humanity, witness for example the beginning of gospel according to John: "In the beginning was the Word." Anton Zeilinger - a leading expert in quantum teleportation http://www.metanexus.net/archive/ultimate_reality/zeilinger.pdf John 1:1-4 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made. In him was life; and the life was the light of men.
bornagain77
September 6, 2015
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bornagain77 @ 22
Seversky: do you even read what you write? “The material world exists as it it always has.”
That’s right, meaning that our recent understanding of quantum phenomena has not changed the way the way the material world we experience on a day-to-day basis behaves in the slightest.
Seversky, I’ve said my piece and I am not going to join you in chasing your dogmatic atheist tail in a circle! Your doing quite well in that regards all by yourself!
It’s okay to admit you don’t have answers to the questions I put to you. There’s lot’s of questions to which I have no good answers. That’s to be expected. We are limited, fallible beings.Seversky
September 6, 2015
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Seversky: do you even read what you write? "The material world exists as it it always has." Actually that belief went out with Big Bang cosmology. Strike Three! Perhaps you should crack a post 1800's science book? i.e. perhaps something other than 'Origin of Species'? Seversky, I've said my piece and I am not going to join you in chasing your dogmatic atheist tail in a circle! Your doing quite well in that regards all by yourself! :)bornagain77
September 5, 2015
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bornagain77 @ 15
As is usual for seversky’s claims, that claim is false. Quantum Mechanics is incompatible with materialism:
If I duplicate Dr Samuel Johnson’s refutation of Berkleyan idealism by kicking a heavy stone, it will hurt my toes just as much as it did his. It will hurt yours, too. The material world exists as it it always has. What has changed is our understanding of its underlying structure and properties. Yes, we can create an entangled sub-atomic particle pair such that if a property, such as spin direction, of one of the pair is changed, there will be an instantaneous change in the same property of its distant twin. But if we send two billiards balls spinning in opposite directions across a billiards table, changing the spin of one doesn’t cause an instantaneous change in the spin of the other. I’ll ask the same questions concerning your - and Bruce Gordon’s - understanding of the implications of quantum theory. If, as you claim, nothing exists except when it is being observed, does this mean that, if we maroon you on a desert island, you cease to exist because no one is observing you? If, as you claim, nothing exists except when it is being observed, then what is being observed in the first place? You can only observe that which exists prior to the observation. You can’t observe nothing. If, as you claim, nothing exists except when it is being observed, then who or what was the first observer?
Moreover, Quantum Mechanics, also contrary to seversky’s claim, applies at the macro-level, not just the micro-level.
I never said that quantum effects could not extend to the macro level of reality
one post two major wiffs, let’s see if he goes for a third wiff to strike out. :)
It’s not my interpretation of the implications of quantum theory that wiffs.Seversky
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ppolish @ 18
Seversky, you’re saying ID is part of your Materialst Worldview. Deep down, you’re truly an IDiot:)
There are those that would certainly agree with you. :)Seversky
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World Over - 2015-04-02 – Investigation the Shroud with Raymond Arroyo https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65GDj4EzuY0 Shroud of Turin - Jalsa Salana UK 2015 - Barrie Schwortz - video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oz4p4eIHvmIbornagain77
September 5, 2015
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“And space stations, iPhones, etc, were all designed based on materialistic accounts of the world – unless you’re one of those who thinks Steve Jobs was God. Seversky, you're saying ID is part of your Materialst Worldview. Deep down, you're truly an IDiot:)ppolish
September 5, 2015
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Seversky:
And space stations, iPhones, etc, were all designed based on materialistic accounts of the world
Wrong. They all require information and information is neither matter nor energy. There isn't a materialistic account for information.Virgil Cain
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Shroud Of Turin Is Authentic, Italian Study Suggests - December 2011 Excerpt: Last year scientists were able to replicate marks on the cloth using highly advanced ultraviolet techniques that weren’t available 2,000 years ago — nor during the medieval times, for that matter.,,, Since the shroud and “all its facets” still cannot be replicated using today’s top-notch technology, researchers suggest it is impossible that the original image could have been created in either period. http://www.thegopnet.com/shroud-of-turin-is-authentic-italian-study-suggests-87037 Scientists say Turin Shroud is supernatural - December 2011 Excerpt: After years of work trying to replicate the colouring on the shroud, a similar image has been created by the scientists. However, they only managed the effect by scorching equivalent linen material with high-intensity ultra violet lasers, undermining the arguments of other research, they say, which claims the Turin Shroud is a medieval hoax. Such technology, say researchers from the National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable Economic Development (Enea), was far beyond the capability of medieval forgers, whom most experts have credited with making the famous relic. "The results show that a short and intense burst of UV directional radiation can colour a linen cloth so as to reproduce many of the peculiar characteristics of the body image on the Shroud of Turin," they said. And in case there was any doubt about the preternatural degree of energy needed to make such distinct marks, the Enea report spells it out: "This degree of power cannot be reproduced by any normal UV source built to date." http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/scientists-say-turin-shroud-is-supernatural-6279512.html Shroud Of Turin - Photographic Negative - 3D Hologram reveals solid oval object under the beard with the words “ The Lamb” - video http://www.tunesbaby.com/watch/?x=5664213
bornagain77
September 5, 2015
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Seversky claims:
Quantum theory describes the structure and behavior of the material world at the smallest scale. It’s what material is at the sub-atomic level so it’s a materialistic theory.
As is usual for seversky's claims, that claim is false. Quantum Mechanics is incompatible with materialism:
"[while a number of philosophical ideas] may be logically consistent with present quantum mechanics, ...materialism is not." Eugene Wigner Quantum Physics Debunks Materialism - video playlist https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=PL1mr9ZTZb3TViAqtowpvZy5PZpn-MoSK_&v=4C5pq7W5yRM Why Quantum Theory Does Not Support Materialism - By Bruce L Gordon: Excerpt: Because quantum theory is thought to provide the bedrock for our scientific understanding of physical reality, it is to this theory that the materialist inevitably appeals in support of his worldview. But having fled to science in search of a safe haven for his doctrines, the materialist instead finds that quantum theory in fact dissolves and defeats his materialist understanding of the world.,, The underlying problem is this: there are correlations in nature that require a causal explanation but for which no physical explanation is in principle possible. Furthermore, the nonlocalizability of field quanta entails that these entities, whatever they are, fail the criterion of material individuality. So, paradoxically and ironically, the most fundamental constituents and relations of the material world cannot, in principle, be understood in terms of material substances. Since there must be some explanation for these things, the correct explanation will have to be one which is non-physical - and this is plainly incompatible with any and all varieties of materialism. http://www.4truth.net/fourtruthpbscience.aspx?pageid=8589952939
Moreover, Quantum Mechanics, also contrary to seversky's claim, applies at the macro-level, not just the micro-level.
Macrorealism Emerging from Quantum Physics - Brukner, Caslav; Kofler, Johannes American Physical Society, APS March Meeting, - March 5-9, 2007 Excerpt: for unrestricted measurement accuracy a violation of macrorealism (i.e. a violation of the Leggett-Garg inequalities) is possible for arbitrary large systems.,, http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2007APS..MARB33005B
one post two major wiffs, let's see if he goes for a third wiff to strike out. :)bornagain77
September 5, 2015
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Also, the shroud was not formed by a 'classical' process.daveS
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Seversky claims:
"space stations, iPhones, etc, were all designed based on materialistic accounts of the world"
This is a prime example of the willful blindness inherent to atheism. Seversky was just shown in post 10 that iPhones, computers, and such modern inventions as that, are the result of advances in quantum mechanics. And quantum mechanics is about as far away from a strictly materialistic understanding of reality as can be had:
“If you go back and look at the premises which underlie materialism, They are all presumptions that were made back in the 17th and 18th century. Those (presumptions) are: reality, locality, causality, continuity, and determinism. All of those concepts were assumed to be self evident. And all of them have been disproved by quantum theory. The last one to fall was locality. (John Bell’s theory of non-locality disproved locality, which has now been proven I think 11 times in 11 different experiments throughout the world.),,, Anyone who says, “Well, I want to believe materialism and I don’t want to believe quantum physics.” Okay then, get rid of your cell phone, along with anything you have with a transistor in it. Get rid of your MRIs, get rid of all those things. Because quantum electro-dynamics is the theory which allows those things. It is the most proven theory in all of science.” Dr. Alan Hugenot – Hugenot holds a doctorate of science in mechanical engineering, and has had a successful career in marine engineering, serving on committees that write the ship-building standards for the United States. He studied physics and mechanical engineering at the Oregon Institute of Technology. quote taken from 16:35 minute mark of interview http://www.skeptiko.com/276-al.....-research/ 10 Real-world Applications of Quantum Mechanics – 2013 Excerpt: The study of quantum mechanics led to some truly astounding conclusions. For instance, scientists found that electrons behave both as waves and as particles, and the mere act of observing them changes the way they behave. Revelations like this one simply defied logic, prompting Einstein to declare “the more success the quantum theory has, the sillier it looks.” Einstein’s sentiments still resonate today, more than a century after humanity’s first insights into the quantum world; quantum mechanics makes perfect sense mathematically but defies our intuition at every turn. So it might surprise you that, despite its strangeness, quantum mechanics has led to some revolutionary inventions over the past century and promises to lead to many more in the years to come. Read on to learn about 10 practical applications of quantum mechanics. 10. The Transistor (i.e. Integrated Circuits) 9. Energy Harvesters 8. Ultraprecise Clocks 7. Quantum Cryptography 6. Randomness Generator 5. Lasers 4. Ultraprecise Thermometers 3. Quantum Computers 2. Instantaneous Communication (highly debatable) 1. Teleportation (with huge caveats) Go here to read details of each http://dsc.discovery.com/tv-shows/curiosity/topics/10-real-world-applications-of-quantum-mechanics.htm
bornagain77
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bornagain77 @ 10
Moreover, as far as iPhones, computers, and such modern inventions as that, those inventions are the result of advances in quantum mechanics. And quantum mechanics is about as far away from a strictly materialistic understanding of reality as can be had:
Quantum theory describes the structure and behavior of the material world at the smallest scale. It’s what material is at the sub-atomic level so it’s a materialistic theory.Seversky
September 5, 2015
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ppolish @ 2
Seversky, Intelligent Design gives us space stations and iPhones. Proven Fact. Atoms, Void, and ID.
bornagain77 @ 10
FYI seversky, “Space stations, iPhones and a whole lot of other stuff” are the direct result of intelligent design.
I’ve never denied there is intelligent design in the Universe. We do it. That’s not in doubt. What we don’t know is whether there is anyone else doing it. And space stations, iPhones, etc, were all designed based on materialistic accounts of the world - unless you’re one of those who thinks Steve Jobs was God.Seversky
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Seversky claims:
"Space stations, iPhones and a whole lot of other stuff we take for granted are evidence that materialism has actually done rather well for itself."
FYI seversky, "Space stations, iPhones and a whole lot of other stuff" are the direct result of intelligent design. Moreover, as far as iPhones, computers, and such modern inventions as that, those inventions are the result of advances in quantum mechanics. And quantum mechanics is about as far away from a strictly materialistic understanding of reality as can be had:
"If you go back and look at the premises which underlie materialism, They are all presumptions that were made back in the 17th and 18th century. Those (presumptions) are: reality, locality, causality, continuity, and determinism. All of those concepts were assumed to be self evident. And all of them have been disproved by quantum theory. The last one to fall was locality. (John Bell's theory of non-locality disproved locality, which has now been proven I think 11 times in 11 different experiments throughout the world.),,, Anyone who says, "Well, I want to believe materialism and I don't want to believe quantum physics." Okay then, get rid of your cell phone, along with anything you have with a transistor in it. Get rid of your MRIs, get rid of all those things. Because quantum electro-dynamics is the theory which allows those things. It is the most proven theory in all of science." Dr. Alan Hugenot - Hugenot holds a doctorate of science in mechanical engineering, and has had a successful career in marine engineering, serving on committees that write the ship-building standards for the United States. He studied physics and mechanical engineering at the Oregon Institute of Technology. quote taken from 16:35 minute mark of interview http://www.skeptiko.com/276-alan-hugenot-nde-research/ 10 Real-world Applications of Quantum Mechanics - 2013 Excerpt: The study of quantum mechanics led to some truly astounding conclusions. For instance, scientists found that electrons behave both as waves and as particles, and the mere act of observing them changes the way they behave. Revelations like this one simply defied logic, prompting Einstein to declare “the more success the quantum theory has, the sillier it looks.” Einstein’s sentiments still resonate today, more than a century after humanity’s first insights into the quantum world; quantum mechanics makes perfect sense mathematically but defies our intuition at every turn. So it might surprise you that, despite its strangeness, quantum mechanics has led to some revolutionary inventions over the past century and promises to lead to many more in the years to come. Read on to learn about 10 practical applications of quantum mechanics. 10. The Transistor (i.e. Integrated Circuits) 9. Energy Harvesters 8. Ultraprecise Clocks 7. Quantum Cryptography 6. Randomness Generator 5. Lasers 4. Ultraprecise Thermometers 3. Quantum Computers 2. Instantaneous Communication (highly debatable) 1. Teleportation (with huge caveats) Go here to read details of each http://dsc.discovery.com/tv-shows/curiosity/topics/10-real-world-applications-of-quantum-mechanics.htm
Perhaps Seversky is trying to claim that the philosophy of materialism is the basis of modern science, (i.e. methodological naturalism). Yet that oft repeated claim of militant atheists is patently false. He, and other atheists, are either purposely ignoring, or purposely lying about, the fact that modern science was born out of the Christian worldview, and out of that worldview alone.
Science and Theism: Concord, not Conflict* – Robert C. Koons IV. The Dependency of Science Upon Theism (Page 21) Excerpt: Far from undermining the credibility of theism, the remarkable success of science in modern times is a remarkable confirmation of the truth of theism. It was from the perspective of Judeo-Christian theism—and from the perspective alone—that it was predictable that science would have succeeded as it has. Without the faith in the rational intelligibility of the world and the divine vocation of human beings to master it, modern science would never have been possible, and, even today, the continued rationality of the enterprise of science depends on convictions that can be reasonably grounded only in theistic metaphysics. http://www.robkoons.net/media/69b0dd04a9d2fc6dffff80b3ffffd524.pdf The Threat to the Scientific Method that Explains the Spate of Fraudulent Science Publications - Calvin Beisner | Jul 23, 2014 Excerpt: It is precisely because modern science has abandoned its foundations in the Biblical worldview (which holds, among other things, that a personal, rational God designed a rational universe to be understood and controlled by rational persons made in His image) and the Biblical ethic (which holds, among other things, that we are obligated to tell the truth even when it inconveniences us) that science is collapsing. As such diverse historians and philosophers of science as Alfred North Whitehead, Pierre Duhem, Loren Eiseley, Rodney Stark, and many others have observed, and as I pointed out in two of my talks at the Ninth International Conference on Climate Change (ICCC), science—not an occasional flash of insight here and there, but a systematic, programmatic, ongoing way of studying and controlling the world—arose only once in history, and only in one place: medieval Europe, once known as “Christendom,” where that Biblical worldview reigned supreme. That is no accident. Science could not have arisen without that worldview. http://townhall.com/columnists/calvinbeisner/2014/07/23/the-threat-to-the-scientific-method-that-explains-the-spate-of-fraudulent-science-publications-n1865201/page/full Several other resources backing up this claim are available, such as Thomas Woods, Stanley Jaki, David Linberg, Edward Grant, J.L. Heilbron, and Christopher Dawson. The Genius and Faith of Faraday and Maxwell - Ian H. Hutchinson - 2014 Conclusion: Lawfulness was not, in their thinking, inert, abstract, logical necessity, or complete reducibility to Cartesian mechanism; rather, it was an expectation they attributed to the existence of a divine lawgiver. These men’s insights into physics were made possible by their religious commitments. For them, the coherence of nature resulted from its origin in the mind of its Creator. http://www.thenewatlantis.com/publications/the-genius-and-faith-of-faraday-and-maxwell
Of supplemental note: Mathematics, and our ability to do mathematics, just like quantum mechanics does not reduce to materialism, certainly does not reduce to some material basis;
An Interview with David Berlinski - Jonathan Witt Berlinski: There is no argument against religion that is not also an argument against mathematics. Mathematicians are capable of grasping a world of objects that lies beyond space and time …. Interviewer:… Come again(?) … Berlinski: No need to come again: I got to where I was going the first time. The number four, after all, did not come into existence at a particular time, and it is not going to go out of existence at another time. It is neither here nor there. Nonetheless we are in some sense able to grasp the number by a faculty of our minds. Mathematical intuition is utterly mysterious. So for that matter is the fact that mathematical objects such as a Lie Group or a differentiable manifold have the power to interact with elementary particles or accelerating forces. But these are precisely the claims that theologians have always made as well – that human beings are capable by an exercise of their devotional abilities to come to some understanding of the deity; and the deity, although beyond space and time, is capable of interacting with material objects. http://tofspot.blogspot.com/2013/10/found-upon-web-and-reprinted-here.html "Either mathematics is too big for the human mind, or the human mind is more than a machine." Kurt Gödel As quoted in Topoi : The Categorial Analysis of Logic (1979) by Robert Goldblatt, p. 13
And yet this 'immaterial world' of mathematics, which we are privy to, (and which both Einstein and Wigner termed a 'miracle'), is far more integral to many of our modern inventions than many people seem to realize:
Describing Nature With Math By Peter Tyson - Nov. 2011 Excerpt: Mathematics underlies virtually all of our technology today. James Maxwell's four equations summarizing electromagnetism led directly to radio and all other forms of telecommunication. E = mc2 led directly to nuclear power and nuclear weapons. The equations of quantum mechanics made possible everything from transistors and semiconductors to electron microscopy and magnetic resonance imaging. Indeed, many of the technologies you and I enjoy every day simply would not work without mathematics. When you do a Google search, you're relying on 19th-century algebra, on which the search engine's algorithms are based. When you watch a movie, you may well be seeing mountains and other natural features that, while appearing as real as rock, arise entirely from mathematical models. When you play your iPod, you're hearing a mathematical recreation of music that is stored digitally; your cell phone does the same in real time. "When you listen to a mobile phone, you're not actually hearing the voice of the person speaking," Devlin told me. "You're hearing a mathematical recreation of that voice. That voice is reduced to mathematics." http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/physics/describing-nature-math.html
Thus since both quantum mechanics and mathematics are irreducible to a material basis, then seversky is found to be downright fraudulent in his claim about materialism being essential to modern inventions (i.e. space stations, iphones and a whole lot of other stuff). In fact, I would hold that reductive materialism has severely hampered modern science by constantly sending people down blind alleys. (Neo-Darwinism is certainly a prime example of atheistic materialism sending people down a blind alley!) Verse and Music:
John 15:5 "I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing. Evanescence - lies https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xx36Bfg4gE
bornagain77
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