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- Dec 18, 2012
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but everything you give me is false, because islam and god is a lie.
why are only the people not believing in allah are "dumb, deaf and blind", but the people not beliving in evolution are smart and knowledgeable? what is the diffrence between them? you can't know for absolute certainty that god exists and you can't know for absolute certainty that evolution is real. but you have no problem deciding that one is completly true and the other one is a lie.
i wanted a "maybe" option because i'm not sure, what baffles me is that you are so sure. how can you be 100% certain about it?
Humans are interesting critters.
On one hand - they are all faith-based.
I can run through the list of evidence that illustrates Evolution to be horribly incomplete, at best. People will still cling to it being a factual no-brainer until they die. Just as there are people who will cling to the idea that there are (or aren't) 'hidden factors' governing Quantum Mechanics.
Similarly - people will cling to their views on origins and the existence of a deity with nearly violent fervor until the day they die.
People need something to believe in - something to 'ground' their life experience around. It's a psychological need that runs even deeper than companionship.
The paradoxical, and highly intriguing point about it is that very, very few people actually have faith - despite being "faith based" (be that faith in a theoretical model, a deity, or just the inter-relation of the two) - many seem to acquire any and every little point they can find that can be perceived to support their 'faith' as evidence of its veracity.
Which undermines the entire concept of faith. Faith is a belief in the absence of conclusive (and sometimes supporting) evidence. It is the belief that a difficult (or impossible) to prove interpretation is the most correct. Faith acknowledges the possibility of a belief being false, yet seeks a determination for one's self.
While I'm not accusing you of it (you seem to be open to exploring concepts and ideas) - it is always very intriguing to watch how people are self-delusional. People who believe they have faith because they have evidence/proof ... is kind of self-conflicting. Likewise are the people who insist they have evidence/proof because they have faith (and the more with that faith, the merrier) are just as entertaining. One camp tends to inhabit organized religion, the other camp tends to inhabit those 'educated in science' without actually being the grunts on the research field (most of them have close encounters of the "WTF" kind enough to understand that we only marginally understand).
Generally speaking - the wisest standpoint to take on any and all issues is that 'there is more to the story than we currently know.' Be that with the debate over origins (and subsequent evolution - abiogenesis is a theory necessarily separate from evolution because evolutionary theory requires a self-replicating system) - or a debate over the merits of various religions and their respective deities.
We should always be ready to accept that our viewpoint will have to adjust to new information that may or may not be convenient for our fragile and meager understanding of the world.