Re: The what ever thread...
Posted: Wed Nov 19, 2014 2:26 pm
That's definitely what I wrote the first time...Chankgeez wrote:144
That's definitely what I wrote the first time...Chankgeez wrote:144
I struggled with the thought of mortality pretty hard when I first grew to accept that this is "all there is." I use the quotation marks because that line is pretty limiting. There's like 1,000,000 times more cool stuff in the world to learn about and experience than any of us could begin to conceptualize.Wes Mantooth wrote:I personally believe there's no god or higher power but I'm going to guess religion was started as more a of a morale booster for those struggling with purpose in their existence. I mean atheism is kind of depressing, you live, do shit and die and everything you've touched will eventually be forgotten, like it never existed.
Chankgeez wrote:Tardar sauce is gross.
BitchPudding wrote:Chankgeez wrote:The Desert of the Tartars is groovy.
Oh fuck yes.Chankgeez wrote:malt vinegar?
I always forget about malt vinegar when actually at a burger place.Chankgeez wrote:malt vinegar?
That goes in the tartar sauce silly.Chankgeez wrote:malt vinegar?
Feels that way to me, only my exploration of the worlds philosophy led me to god being more of an essence, then a creature.morange wrote:Humans have believed in gods as far back as we know; I think that counts for something, unless all of our ancestors were just dumb shits who didn't know any better. It's more likely they had some reason to believe what they did. Yeah I know, scientific revolution and all that. Also, it's a big claim to say the bible is a complete fabrication. It's hard now thousands of years later to tell what's true, but it seemed so to the people who lived during those times. I think our inherited human memory carries some credence, and qualifies as a reason to believe in a higher being.
The existence of life and the universe still point to a creator, and science has led us into a deeper understanding of what an excellent creation it is. There will always be things we don't fully understand, because we can't perceive everything. A definition of God can be formed based on observation. When we think about what caused the big bang, it takes as much faith to say it was completely spontaneous as to say it was God.
Natural and artificial selection never take a gene from a fly/virus/bacteria to insert it into the genome of a plant organism.jfrey wrote:FYI permaculture largely overlaps with GM. People don't understand what a GMO is. It's not a business model, it doesn't necessarily have anything to do with chemicals or pesticides, or anything else like that. All it is, is consciously guiding or otherwise affecting the growth and heredity of organisms. If you're doing permaculture, you're doing GM. Also, people act like GMOs are some new kind of thing. No one alive on this planet has ever eaten a single thing in their entire life that isn't technically a GMO.