The initial answer would be refering to your signature, ie navels.
But I suspect it\'s a more complex answer than that.
But I suspect it\'s a more complex answer than that.
I say that 50% of the population seems to manage perfectly well without a prominent aiming device! lolOriginally posted by reverend
...I also raised the point that urination requires some kind of prominent aiming device.
What say you? ???
Originally posted by Amazon warrior
I say that 50% of the population seems to manage perfectly well without a prominent aiming device! loOriginally posted by reverend
...I also raised the point that urination requires some kind of prominent aiming device.
What say you? ???
Originally posted by reverend
Ah, banned again. This time for unnecessarily stupid behaviour. I thought I was talking sensibly.
Originally posted by Amazon warrior
I say that 50% of the population seems to manage perfectly well without a prominent aiming device! lol
You can ask difficult questions of science, just as you can religion. And science will always cop-out on the *really* tough questions.
\"We don\'t claim to be able to explain everything--only the patterns we can observe.\"
So what *really* behooves me, is how either side of the argument can claim to be \"superior\"----considering that we\'ve been \"thinking\" for about 50,000 years of that 13,000,000,000 years.....
Originally posted by Einion
To really bend your noodle think about why he had nipples.
The real reason men have nipples is perfectly logical, but from a pure theological (creationist) perspective though I don\'t think there\'s any supportive argument possible.
Einion
Originally posted by mattrock
So....as a Christian among you, I have to ask: why the animosity?
They\'ve got ink:Originally posted by Einion
A tomb is discovered in the Sinai. Inside are two bodies, a man and a woman, lying side by side. They are very well preserved. A professor of archaeology is called to examine them and as soon as he sees them he pronounces it\'s Adam and Eve.
How did he know?
See, we scientists seem to prefer admitting ignorance to pulling a textual description out of an ancient holy book and claiming it has validity equal to that of disciplined observation and experimentation.Originally posted by Rodnik
You can ask difficult questions of science, just as you can religion. And science will always cop-out on the *really* tough questions.
\"We don\'t claim to be able to explain everything--only the patterns we can observe.\"
i agreeOriginally posted by No Such Agency
Mattrock, want to know why some non-religious people seem antagonistic to Christianity? A good example would be this: I don\'t mind if people go to church, or synagogue or whatever. I don\'t mind if they believe in one god or many or none. I DO mind if they expect their scriptures, or their sexual morals, or their creation story, to be taught in public school science class, as if they had any scientific validity.
Godlikebuthumble\'s flowcharts, while perhaps insultingly frank, are essentially true. Some religious people criticize science for changing its ideas about the universe - we are \"inconsistent\". But we will reconsider anything in the face of strong enough evidence. Many religious people simply refuse to reconsider their beliefs at all, no matter what evidence is presented. And that is their right. But it is NOT their right to use the public institutions to seduce others to that inflexible viewpoint with theological sweet-talk and lies.
(Maybe that\'s what disturbs me the most, is the lies. Certainly, it\'s not a majority of believers who will lie to sway others\' minds. but the ones who do... are they pursuing faith in god, or power over man?)
See, we scientists seem to prefer admitting ignorance to pulling a textual description out of an ancient holy book and claiming it has validity equal to that of disciplined observation and experimentation.
Sorry, but it doesn\'t matter how old our discipline is. Seniority on its own is worthless, if it was not so, I\'d expect you to believe that the world came about when Apsu and Tiamat* mixed their sweet and salt waters, creating the sky and the earth.Originally posted by Rodnik
And that\'s my point. You claim superiority, when in fact, we scientists\' practice no discipline that is any older or more proven (in universal terms) than any other discipline. And it\'s not all scientist that claim ignorance....and some *do* resort to \"divine intervention\", rather than claiming ignorance, when explaining some things.
Stephen Hawking comes to mind.....
Originally posted by Rodnik
Fact is, humankind is generally ignorant. We\'re just too egotistical and bigoted to admit that we don\'t know *anything* about the universe....rather we cite from scientific observation (which is a limited view in *all* circumstances) OR we cite from a holy book (which is a limited view in *all* circumstances).