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 Stephen Hawking Says There's No God, What You Have to Say Religious Men?

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SUSpetpenyubobo
post Jan 5 2024, 03:12 PM

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QUOTE(Revoz @ Jan 5 2024, 02:42 PM)
Most globalist dun bilip in goat.
Including shwab right wing man.


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Why should they?

With their control over money, influence and power they manipulate religious movements to fool the masses.

That's why they don't believe in God because they themselves know its a scam.

That's usually the modus operandi of NGO organizations, the money has to come form somewhere and the people donating large sums of it ain't giving it out for free without expecting you to do something for favors.

If Communism wants to infiltrate society NGOs and religion is their best weapon. Same to terrorists groups.
Revoz
post Jan 5 2024, 03:30 PM

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QUOTE(petpenyubobo @ Jan 5 2024, 03:12 PM)
Why should they?

With their control over money, influence and power they manipulate religious movements to fool the masses.

That's why they don't believe in God because they themselves know its a scam.

That's usually the modus operandi of NGO organizations, the money has to come form somewhere and the people donating large sums of it ain't giving it out for free without expecting you to do something for favors.

If Communism wants to infiltrate society NGOs and religion is their best weapon. Same to terrorists groups.
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They wanna become God to control human being. brows.gif


30624770
post Jan 5 2024, 03:32 PM

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QUOTE(YH1234 @ Jan 5 2024, 04:08 PM)
you contradict yourself, justified with forked (komunis) tongue as usual. i just tell facts. no say right or wrong. you otoh tell both extreme is not wrong, as long as its ccp and china.
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Which part contradicts myself? I was stating facts about China populations growth.

You are the one who say China killed millions babies due to its 1 child policy. You even say Mao was responsible together with Deng for the 1 child policy but it was clearly Deng’s idea as it was introduced after Mao died. Die already still he can make decisions? LOL!

My question to you is simple. If China did not have 1 child policy, what do you think is China’s population today?

Cannot answer properly and accuse people of forked tongue!
knumskul
post Jan 5 2024, 03:44 PM

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QUOTE(and85rew @ Jan 5 2024, 01:56 PM)
There are things unexplained by science
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Yet

The sun and moon were unexplained by science once upon a time
touristking
post Jan 5 2024, 03:46 PM

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QUOTE(petpenyubobo @ Jan 5 2024, 04:44 AM)
Stephen Hawking On God

Here's some comment I want to add with the first video.

Notice he NEVER mentioned about reincarnation and karma but said that there's no Heaven and Afterlife? icon_idea.gif

Which is in correlation with Einstein's Conservation of Energy theory.
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Science also say, if you can't prove it's existence, it merely means you don't know how to look for it or measure it etc


sportivo
post Jan 5 2024, 05:08 PM

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Free lesson good knowledge shares by astrophysicist Dr Neil DeGrasse Tyson with Chuck
The Intersection of Science and Religion


Ewww!
post Jan 5 2024, 10:10 PM

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Errr...
pzki
post Jan 6 2024, 01:42 AM

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user posted image
Vista-X
post Jan 6 2024, 01:58 AM

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QUOTE(iazmin @ Jan 5 2024, 11:50 AM)
Those atheists, if their airplane is about to crash, will immediately pray to God to avoid the crash.
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those extremist will beg to gods when their airplane is about to crash. but it still crash.
DM3
post Jan 6 2024, 07:25 AM

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https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-...es-in-miracles/

B0ss_ku
post Jan 6 2024, 07:34 AM

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QUOTE(poweredbydiscuz @ Jan 5 2024, 12:13 PM)
Ya it's really funny. They forgot God is the one crashing the airplane. It's part of God's plan.
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Every theist wants to go heaven meet their maker but no one want to die
SUSAccord2018
post Jan 6 2024, 07:40 AM

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QUOTE(Vista-X @ Jan 6 2024, 01:58 AM)
those extremist will beg to gods when their airplane is about to crash. but it still crash.
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No immoral atheist will dare to camp inside a peer reviewed haunted mansion. So their opinion is worthless till they dare to camp there because the CCTV can observe they being disturbed by ghostly.
gashout
post Jan 6 2024, 07:40 AM

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QUOTE(Kaya Butter Toast @ Jan 5 2024, 11:51 AM)
2024 still got sohai believe in God? Lol
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I do. No God no me. Look at the intricacy of your hands and how your facial features are made. I see miracles everyday. Certainly not a product of big bang with no specific algorithm.

Not a holy one. Don't pray everyday. Only pray when I'm in deep shit.

Religion, when examined closely, is history. One has to verify all claims even the book of religion. You need to determine if it's real history or fake history.
gashout
post Jan 6 2024, 07:42 AM

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QUOTE(pzki @ Jan 6 2024, 01:42 AM)
user posted image
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The book of ecclesiastes. Starts with

Everything is meaningless.

assage
Resources
Hebrew/Greek
Your Content
Ecclesiastes 1
New International Version
Everything Is Meaningless
1 The words of the Teacher,[a] son of David, king in Jerusalem:

2 “Meaningless! Meaningless!”
says the Teacher.
“Utterly meaningless!
Everything is meaningless.”

3 What do people gain from all their labors
at which they toil under the sun?
4 Generations come and generations go,
but the earth remains forever.
5 The sun rises and the sun sets,
and hurries back to where it rises.
6 The wind blows to the south
and turns to the north;
round and round it goes,
ever returning on its course.
7 All streams flow into the sea,
yet the sea is never full.
To the place the streams come from,
there they return again.
8 All things are wearisome,
more than one can say.
The eye never has enough of seeing,
nor the ear its fill of hearing.
9 What has been will be again,
what has been done will be done again;
there is nothing new under the sun.
10 Is there anything of which one can say,
“Look! This is something new”?
It was here already, long ago;
it was here before our time.
11 No one remembers the former generations,
and even those yet to come
will not be remembered
by those who follow them.

My fav book in the Bible.
DM3
post Jan 6 2024, 08:05 AM

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QUOTE(DM3 @ Jan 6 2024, 07:25 AM)
Copy of some of the discussions;

One of the World’s Most Powerful Scientists Believes in Miracles
NIH director Francis Collins, winner of the 2020 Templeton Prize, answers questions about God, free will, evil, altruism and his Christian faith in a 2006 interview

By John Horgan on May 20, 2020
One of the World's Most Powerful Scientists Believes in Miracles
Francis Collins: “We may understand a lot about biology, we may understand a lot about how to prevent illness, and we may understand the life span. But I don’t think we will figure out how to stop humans from doing bad things to each other.”

When I talk to my students about the tempestuous relationship between science and religion, I like to bring up the case of Francis Collins. Early in his career, Collins was a successful gene-hunter, who helped identify genes associated with cystic fibrosis and other disorders. He went on to become one of the world’s most powerful scientists. Since 2009, he has directed the National Institutes of Health, which this year has a budget of over $40 billion. Before that he oversaw the Human Genome Project, one of history’s biggest research projects. Collins was an atheist until 1978, when he underwent a conversion experience while hiking in the mountains and became a devout Christian. In his 2006 bestselling book The Language of God, Collins declares that he sees no incompatibility between science and religion. “The God of the Bible is also the God of the genome,” he wrote. “He can be worshipped in the cathedral or in the laboratory.” Collins just won the $1.3 million Templeton Prize, created in 1972 to promote reconciliation of science and spirituality. (See my posts on the Templeton Foundation here and here). This news gives me an excuse to post an interview I carried out with Collins for National Geographic in 2006, a time when Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett and others were vigorously attacking religion. Below is an edited transcript of my conversation with Collins, which took place in Washington, D.C. I liked Collins, whom I found to be surprisingly unassuming for a man of such high stature. But I was disturbed by our final exchanges, in which he revealed a fatalistic outlook on humanity’s future. Collins, it seems, has lots of faith in God but not much in humanity. – John Horgan

Horgan: How does it feel to be at the white-hot center of the current debate between science and religion?

Collins: This increasing polarization between extremists on both ends of the atheism and belief spectrum has been heartbreaking to me. If my suggestion that there is a harmonious middle ground puts me at the white-hot center of debate--Hooray! It’s maybe a bit overdue.

Horgan: The danger in trying to appeal to people on both sides of a polarized debate is--

Collins: Bombs thrown at you from both directions!

Horgan: Has that happened?

Collins [sighs]: The majority have responded in very encouraging ways. But some of my scientific colleagues argue that it’s totally inappropriate for a scientist to write about religion, and we already have too much faith in public life in this country. And then I get some very strongly worded messages from fundamentalists who feel that I have compromised the literal interpretation of Genesis 1 and call me a false prophet. I’m diluting the truth and doing damage to the faith.

Horgan: Why do you think the debate has become so polarized?

Collins: It starts with an extreme articulation of a viewpoint on one side of the issue and that then results in a response that is also a little bit too extreme, and the whole thing escalates. Every action demands an equal and opposite reaction. This is one of Newton’s laws playing out in an unfortunate public scenario.

Horgan: I must admit that I’ve become more concerned lately about the harmful effects of religion because of religious terrorism like 9/11 and the growing power of the religious right in the United States.

Collins: What faith has not been used by demagogues as a club over somebody’s head? Whether it was the Inquisition or the Crusades on the one hand or the World Trade Center on the other? But we shouldn’t judge the pure truths of faith by the way they are applied any more than we should judge the pure truth of love by an abusive marriage. We as children of God have been given by God this knowledge of right and wrong, this “Moral Law,” which I see as a particularly compelling signpost to His existence. But we also have this thing called free will which we exercise all the time to break that law. We shouldn’t blame faith for the ways people distort it and misuse it.

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Horgan: Isn’t the problem when religions say, This is the only way to truth? Isn’t that what turns religious faith from something beautiful into something intolerant and hateful?

Collins: There is a sad truth there. I think we Christians have been way too ready to define ourselves as members of an exclusive club. I found truth, I found joy, I found peace in that particular conclusion, but I am not in any way suggesting that that is the conclusion everybody else should find. To have anyone say, “My truth is purer than yours,” that is both inconsistent with what I see in the person of Christ and incredibly off-putting. And quick to start arguments and fights and even wars! Look at the story of the Good Samaritan, which is a parable from Jesus himself. Jews would have considered the Samaritan to be a heretic, and yet clearly Christ’s message is: That is the person who did right and was justified in God’s eyes.

Horgan: How can you, as a scientist who looks for natural explanations of things and demands evidence, also believe in miracles, like the resurrection?

Collins: My first struggle was to believe in God. Not a pantheist God who is entirely enclosed within nature, or a Deist God who started the whole thing and then just lost interest, but a supernatural God who is interested in what is happening in our world and might at times choose to intervene. My second struggle was to believe that Christ was divine as He claimed to be. As soon as I got there, the idea that He might rise from the dead became a non-problem. I don’t have a problem with the concept that miracles might occasionally occur at moments of greatsignificance where there is a message being transmitted to us by God Almighty. But as a scientist I set my standards for miracles very high. And I don’t think we should try to convince agnostics or atheists about the reality of faith with claims about miracles that they can easily poke holes in.

Horgan: The problem I have with miracles is not just that they violate what science tells us about how the world works. They also make God seem too capricious. For example, many people believe that if they pray hard enough God will intercede to heal them or a loved one. But does that mean that all those who don’t get better aren’t worthy?

Collins: In my own experience as a physician, I have not seen a miraculous healing, and I don’t expect to see one. Also, prayer for me is not a way to manipulate God into doing what we want Him to do. Prayer for me is much more a sense of trying to get into fellowship with God. I’m trying to figure out what I should be doing rather than telling Almighty God what He should be doing. Look at the Lord’s Prayer. It says, “Thy will be done.” It wasn’t, “Our Father who are in Heaven, please get me a parking space.”

Horgan: Many people have a hard time believing in God because of the problem of evil. If God loves us, why is life filled with so much suffering?

Collins: That is the most fundamental question that all seekers have to wrestle with. First of all, if our ultimate goal is to grow, learn, discover things about ourselves and things about God, then unfortunately a life of ease is probably not the way to get there. I know I have learned very little about myself or God when everything is going well. Also, a lot of the pain and suffering in the world we cannot lay at God’s feet. God gave us free will, and we may choose to exercise it in ways that end up hurting other people.

Horgan: The physicist Steven Weinberg, who is an atheist, has written about this topic. He asks why six million Jews, including his relatives, had to die in the Holocaust so that the Nazis could exercise their free will.

Collins: If God had to intervene miraculously every time one of us chose to do something evil, it would be a very strange, chaotic, unpredictable world. Free will leads to people doing terrible things to each other. Innocent people die as a result. You can’t blame anyone except the evildoers for that. So that’s not God’s fault. The harder question is when suffering seems to have come about through no human ill action. A child with cancer, a natural disaster, a tornado or tsunami. Why would God not prevent those things from happening?

This post has been edited by DM3: Jan 6 2024, 08:08 AM
Frozen_Sun
post Jan 6 2024, 08:14 AM

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Universe isn't a random accident
khelben
post Jan 6 2024, 08:17 AM

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QUOTE(iazmin @ Jan 5 2024, 11:50 AM)
Those atheists, if their airplane is about to crash, will immediately pray to God to avoid the crash.
*
During desperate, panic moments it's very normal for a person to have irrational thoughts.
Gon Freaks
post Jan 6 2024, 08:22 AM

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QUOTE(kcal @ Jan 5 2024, 11:58 AM)
how u know? from survivor testimony?
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Eerie whispers trapped beneath my pillow
Won't let me sleep, your memories
And I know you're in this room, I'm sure I heard you sigh
Floating in between where our worlds collide
It scares the hell out of me
And the end is all I can see
And it scares the hell out of me
And the end is all I can see
Yeah-yeah, yeah-yeah, yeah-yeah, whoa
And I know the moment's near
And there's nothing we can do
Look through a faithless eye
Are you afraid to die? Yeah-yeah, yeah-yeah
SUSKaya Butter Toast
post Jan 6 2024, 08:23 AM

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QUOTE(gashout @ Jan 6 2024, 07:40 AM)
I do. No God no me. Look at the intricacy of your hands and how your facial features are made. I see miracles everyday. Certainly not a product of big bang with no specific algorithm.

Not a holy one. Don't pray everyday. Only pray when I'm in deep shit.

Religion, when examined closely, is history. One has to verify all claims even the book of religion. You need to determine if it's real history or fake history.
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You dont understand how evolution works.

And your human body is full of flaws and vestigial parts. Just have to open your eyes and read to see
70U63
post Jan 6 2024, 08:23 AM

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U ask the wrong question in wrong country.

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