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manlian wrote:In the question of God, where does the burden of proof lie?
I'll give my opinion to start it off:
I feel the burden of proof is upon believers. This is because you cannot "prove" a negative. How do you find evidence of non-existence? Find something that is "not-God?" Find something that is "not-the-spirirt-world"?
If there is no evidence, then that fact alone warrants dismissal. Anything beyond that, you might as well argue economics with Stalin.
Anyway, thoughts, opinions?
SamiBoy wrote:manlian wrote:In the question of God, where does the burden of proof lie?
I'll give my opinion to start it off:
I feel the burden of proof is upon believers. This is because you cannot "prove" a negative. How do you find evidence of non-existence? Find something that is "not-God?" Find something that is "not-the-spirirt-world"?
If there is no evidence, then that fact alone warrants dismissal. Anything beyond that, you might as well argue economics with Stalin.
Anyway, thoughts, opinions?
It falls on the claimer. In law the proof of guilty falls on the accusing side. The people who follow accuse the others of being of the "Wrong Religion" therefore if we look at it as relative to the legal world. It falls on the religious.
Furthermore, if they ever do prove there is a god, he better have a pretty damn good explanation of all the parts of the bible telling you to murder people.
FrozenRose wrote:I was flipping through the channels and it saids in 2012 Jesus is coming again...
Louis Weisberg - published in the 09/03/1998 edition of Windy City Times wrote:Less than three months after Pat Robertson forecast "serious hurricanes" for Orlando, Fla., Hurricane Bonnie, the first major Atlantic storm of 1998, struck Virginia Beach, Va., home of the televangelist's Christian Broadcasting Network. Bonnie downed trees and powerlines throughout Virginia's Tidewater region, leaving 250,000 people without power and causing $25 million in damage.
Robertson had predicted storms for Orlando as God's punishment for Disney World's hosting of Gay Day. The annual, privately sponsored event draws thousands of gay men and lesbians to the amusement park, which is decked out with rainbow flags for the occasion. That year was the first for the City of Orlando to also fly gay-themed banners from light poles to mark gay Pride.
"I would warn Orlando that you're right in the way of some serious hurricanes, and I don't think I'd be waving those flags in God's face if I were you," Robertson said June 8 (1998).
Although both Florida and North Carolina are susceptible to hurricanes during the late summer and early fall, Bonnie was unusual in that after its arrival on the North Carolina coast, the storm slowed to a virtual crawl. It spun wind, rain and heavy surf throughout eastern North Carolina for more than 24 hours, killing at least two people and causing an estimated $1-$2 billion in damage. Then it veered off to Virginia Beach, regained some of the strength it lost over North Carolina and delivered what local reports called a "sucker punch" to the area.
In the past, Robertson has claimed to have successfully "prayed" hurricanes away from the Virginia coast.
steve14 wrote:i used to be an atheist but could not think of any thing good to say while getting a blow job
FrozenRose wrote:suprised more arnt talking about what I written before hand lol oh well
SubmissMe wrote:
Ok, a german philosopher called Anselm said that the definition of God was "that of which nothing greater can be concieved". Anselm said that an existant God was better than a non existant God so therefore, by sheer definition, god MUST exist
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