My apologies on misunderstanding your position, but hey, if I didn't mess up, I wouldn't be corrected, huh?rusmeister wrote:Well, when you start by expressing my thoughts incorrectly, it's not a surprise that you'll get a different result. I didn't say "proof of a designer" (even though I do also think that to be the case - it is proof according to the criteria that I accept). Check what I actually said.Orlion wrote:You know, I've decided to test your assertation about biologists and have questioned bona fide biologists (which are plentiful on a college campus). None of them seem to say what you say they say. None of them say that life is proof of a designer, or anything else. To tell you the truth, the only people I've talked to that say this are not bona fide biologists at all... they're people who dabble in certain areas of science looking for proof to a conclusion that they've all ready accepted. That's a logical fallacy and is in no way a search for any sort of objective truth.
Also, let's not forget Richard Dawkins is a bona fide biologist, and he obviously seems to disagree on many of your points (I'm not going to say all, I don't know his position on things like, say, abortion).
That being said, it doesn't matter. You're able to draw your own conclusions, and I'm able to draw mine exactly because of the principle of tolerance (the one you seem to oppose) that I expounded on earlier. You were tolerated to develope your views as I was tolerated to develope my views. Those of dissenting opinion may have tried to persuade us, but they haven't used (or at least succeeded) in using force to make us accept 'X'. Without that principle, your worldview may very well not have existed.
I agree with what you say on fallacy - I just think that works for unbelievers as well as believers - in fact. more so.
If you speak of "the purpose" of a thing, then you may be trying to say "purpose with a meaning" or "purpose without meaning". The latter is just plain illogical. As soon as anyone, formal biologist or not, begins speaking of "the purpose of genitals" or whatever, they are already, whether they consciously intend to or not, assuming meaning. That, to me, can only mean design. But I'll let that last point go because so many of you do not see that. The point I WON'T let go of is that you can't one minute speak of the purpose of anything, and then the next deny that it has a purpose. If eyes, ears, or genitals "have a purpose", then we must admit that, and THAT is what any self-respecting biologist must admit. Having admitted that, they must then admit that homosexual behavior is contrary to that natural use (purpose).
Also, it is conceivable that my viewpoint exists only because it has been "tolerated". But it is equally conceivable that it exists because it is the truth - in which case it wouldn't matter whether it were "tolerated" or not, any more than the failure of the Catholic Church to tolerate Galileo in the 16th century affected what we believe to actually be the case today.
Richard Dawkins is no doubt a biologist - what he is ignorant on is religion - he doesn't know the thing of which he speaks - or more accurately, he has familiarized himself to a degree with the more primitive versions, and has learned little to nothing about the histories of either the Catholic or Orthodox Churches, let alone their theology, and he is evidently completely ignorant of apologetics as well. For the same reason Bertrand Russell and similar thinkers also disqualify themselves. If you're going to rail against something, for heaven's sake learn the best that your opponents have to offer and defeat that!
I need a large-size image with the circle and line through it saying "No scarecrows!" Can anyone oblige?
For the sake of refining language, would you also say that "function" has the same meaning as "purpose"? I do agree that "purpose" implies intent, but I don't think function does. For example: the purpose of the eye is to see could imply that it was intentionally made as a seeing instrument. However, saying the function of the eye is to transmit various changes in photorecceptors to the brain implies only what the eye does, not that there is any intent (though it definately doesn't rule it out).
As far as Dawkibs is concerned, I don't care much for his views on religion for about the same reason as you don't. Sometimes his theological arguments are laughably devoid of any substance. However, if he speaks as a biologist, I think then that his words have value, since he is an authority on the subject.