Forums | Chat | News | Contact Us | Register | PSU Social |
PSU: Do you find my mini-chaingun sexy?
Forums | Chat | News | Contact Us | Register | PSU Social |
Home | Forum | Chat | Wiki | Social | AGN | PS2 Stats |
|
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
2012-06-25, 03:27 PM | [Ignore Me] #16 | |||
First Sergeant
|
You have that half right.... except religion likes to define what isn't |
|||
|
2012-06-25, 03:53 PM | [Ignore Me] #18 | ||
Second Lieutenant
|
I'll cop to it, I was trolling him a bit. About half. The other half was just sort of a textual facepalm at the incredibly dumb things he's saying which may all be just trolls.
I mean... scientists being responsible for the deaths from missiles. As if science is to blame. That's like blaming language for arguments. Gah. |
||
|
2012-06-25, 03:59 PM | [Ignore Me] #19 | |||
First Sergeant
|
Albert Einstein was at one point German. He made a Bomb. He's a Nazi. I use this formula for all scientist. It all goes back to either A.) Being a Nazi B.) Being a Russian C.) Magic (I may or may not use the Indiana Jones films as research). |
|||
|
2012-06-25, 09:20 PM | [Ignore Me] #23 | ||
Lieutenant Colonel
|
The world is made of mass. Mass is the equivilent of energy as per E=MC2. So yes, the world is a ball of energy.
__________________
Retired NC CR5, Cerberus Company. Not currently playing PS2. Anyone with a similar name is not me. My only characters are listed in my stats profile here on PSU. |
||
|
2012-06-26, 06:16 AM | [Ignore Me] #25 | |||
Lieutenant General
|
Like the earth in your example. You can use heat pumps to siphon some earth warmth out of it, but you can't actually mine the earth's kinetic energy. You can however slingshot satellites by creating kinetic energy with a planet's gravity, but that doesn't mean you can use that to drive your car. |
|||
|
2012-06-26, 10:14 AM | [Ignore Me] #26 | |||
Brigadier General
|
A perfect circle is a good example of a proper use of an infinite. It's a very simple concept. We'll never see a true perfect circle, but it's a concept that we can clearly define. We know exactly what a perfect circle would look like. But what is a perfect human being? There are so many variables, and we don't have a clear guideline for what makes a more perfect or less perfect human in each complex category. Ideas like an all powerful god get even more absurd, since the very concept implies some contradicting infinite attributes, aka the omnipotence paradox. So what exactly is a soul? If it's "a part of us that goes on after our physical body dies," then what part of us is it? As has been mentioned several times in this thread, huge portions of our personality are clearly tied to our physical brain, so what is it exactly that survives? What form of energy does this soul exist as? Is it electromagnetic? Is it some form of energy that we haven't yet observed? Through what mechanism does this soul interact with our physical brain and nervous system? We need a solid idea of what we are talking about if we are going to even begin to accept the idea of a "soul" on any kind of rational basis. I can have reasoned discussions about the merits of certain definitions of a god entity, but other definitions are too ludicrous to waste much time with. There are so many different versions of god, that I usually like to make sure I know what a person means by "god" when I start talking with them about it, and if it consists of vague, nonsensical and/or contradictory ideas, there isn't much that's worth discussing. If a soul is just a blueprint as eclipse seems to be suggesting, then that sounds like a synonym for physics. Physics doesn't suggest that much of anything of our minds and personality live on after we die though. Physics just indicates that the matter and energy that made up our living bodies converts into other forms. We live on as dirt and water. At best, we seem to live on through our actions when we were alive, through other peoples memories and the repercussions of what we did while alive, and through our children. But that hardly seems like the kind of eternal soul that most people talk about. Maybe eventually we'll have an eternal soul through technology though. It's already starting to happen with "ghost in the machine" type stuff with the internet, and it's only going to explode from there once we start interfacing computers directly with our brains. |
|||
|
2012-07-05, 03:01 PM | [Ignore Me] #27 | ||
First Lieutenant
|
Here's a curveball - teleporters. When you use a teleporter, does your entire being transfer across, or do you die and the version people see on the other side is a soulless replica?
Another version of this is the TRON digitizer. When The Dude is digitized into Encom's network, what happened to his soul? Dis it gut sucked in the machine too? Does that mean the MCP could have killed him and captured his soul, or would it have derezzed with the rest of his code? Also, when does the soul begin? The moment a sperm finds its way in an egg? Or is it more along the Jewish traditional lines, where life only begins when God breathes your first breath into you? Where does it come from, does it grow with the fetus, or is it summoned down as raw ethereal matter from Heaven?
__________________
|
||
|
2012-07-07, 01:21 PM | [Ignore Me] #28 | ||
Sergeant Major
|
Warborn you missed the whole point of Eclipse's comment about the star.
Yes, we know, through science, how stars are born and their life cycles, as well as how they die. What we don't know is why any of the constants in our universe are set to their parameters. Why does gravity exist? Why did Hydrogen come from nothing during the big bang, then coalesce into the first stars and galaxies? What is the blueprint for all the physical laws of our universe? I think that is what DJEclipse was getting at. |
||
|
2012-07-07, 06:00 PM | [Ignore Me] #30 | |||
First Sergeant
|
It's one thing to believe in something you have no proof of, it's another to believe in something piled under other shit that you have no proof of. This is the very problem with religion. |
|||
|
|
Bookmarks |
|
|