VolsSportsFan
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I don't agree with the bible. It could have been written better according to me. Even though, by naturalism, which i'm forced to embrace, i have no objective basis to judge anything. My thoughts and faculties are the result of unguided, purposeless events on a spec of dust in an vast cosmos. Therefore, Jesus didn't rise from the dead. Ok, got it.
Ignore all the other parts in the bible where it speaks of honoring women, sacrificial love for a spouse, volumes of information on ethics within Psalms and Proverbs. Pick out parts that seem odd in our culture and dismiss the rest. Sounds good.
I don't agree with the bible. It could have been written better according to me. Even though, by naturalism, which i'm forced to embrace, i have no objective basis to judge anything. My thoughts and faculties are the result of unguided, purposeless events on a spec of dust in an vast cosmos. Therefore, Jesus didn't rise from the dead. Ok, got it.
Ignore all the other parts in the bible where it speaks of honoring women, sacrificial love for a spouse, volumes of information on ethics within Psalms and Proverbs. Pick out parts that seem odd in our culture and dismiss the rest. Sounds good.
A single reference to slavery being ok or killing someone for working on a certain day of the week should discredit any document in the mind of reasonable people.I don't agree with the bible. It could have been written better according to me. Even though, by naturalism, which i'm forced to embrace, i have no objective basis to judge anything. My thoughts and faculties are the result of unguided, purposeless events on a spec of dust in an vast cosmos. Therefore, Jesus didn't rise from the dead. Ok, got it.
Ignore all the other parts in the bible where it speaks of honoring women, sacrificial love for a spouse, volumes of information on ethics within Psalms and Proverbs. Pick out parts that seem odd in our culture and dismiss the rest. Sounds good.
Just because it has parts that "good" doesn't cancel out the "bad" parts, and the "bad" parts aren't automatically "good" just because "God said so."
And lol that things "seem odd" in our culture; yes endorsed slavery, a passive attitude to rape, and women as property sure as hell seem odd. And it seems odd to condone such things because apparently the all powerful, all knowing creator of the universe was bound to the traditions and customs of man and seemingly powerless to, you know, tell people to stop doing those things.
It's just incredulity
Right, nothing but unmitigated incredulity informs my rationale for rejecting the divine authorship of the Bible. Meanwhile your dismissal of evolution is based solely upon sound logical reasoning.
I've been overwhelmed by gratuitous incredulity in my refusal to accept the Bible as the word of God, but you can view a picture like this and continue to think that humans aren't just another mammal species.
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You're the one who's allowed incredulity and arrogance to corrupt your faculties.
I personally believe that everyone has a right to believe in what they want so long as they do not infringe upon the rights of others. For example, if parents desire for their children to learn creationism vs evolution, there should be an optional elective. Likewise, parents who want their children to learn evolutionary studies should have a right for their children to take that class.
I personally believe that everyone has a right to believe in what they want so long as they do not infringe upon the rights of others. For example, if parents desire for their children to learn creationism vs evolution, there should be an optional elective. Likewise, parents who want their children to learn evolutionary studies should have a right for their children to take that class.
Terrible idea.
Science (biology in this case) class should be mandatory. If evolution is the leading scientific theory, then that is what should be taught. If another scientific theory subplants evolution, then that theory should be taught.
If creationism is taught, it should either be an elective (not that I could ever see it being an elective by itself) or within an elective such as theology, philosophy of science, philosophy of religion, etc.
I can see your point. In defense of my argument, if teaching violate someone's religious beliefs then it should not be force upon. However, the guardians should be required to sign something that makes them liable for their students/ children to not receive this instruction.
I can see your point. In defense of my argument, if teaching violate someone's religious beliefs then it should not be force upon. However, the guardians should be required to sign something that makes them liable for their students/ children to not receive this instruction.
I am talking on an individual basis for these kids. It wouldn't be a detriment to other students and I believe the schools could reasonably accomadate this request.
Private religion based schools and some home schoolers already do this.
While some of you may not agree with this, how would you feel if the situation was reversed? I am offering options that respect the interests of all involved. Just like some of you don't want to be force fed religion, the religious (fundamentalists) don't want to be force fed views that contradict what they believe in.
I am talking on an individual basis for these kids. It wouldn't be a detriment to other students and I believe the schools could reasonably accomadate this request. Private religion based schools and some home schoolers already do this. While some of you may not agree with this, how would you feel if the situation was reversed? I am offering options that respect the interests of all involved. Just like some of you don't want to be force fed religion, the religious (fundamentalists) don't want to be force fed views that contradict what they believe in.
