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#1
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The debate forums have been rather dead as of late so I decided to make this post. So far, everyone has been arguing about topics that apply to real life situations or a system of values but what about debate for the sake of debate? Every once in a while I will post a random statement to discuss whenever we exhaust all of our arguments for the previous topic. These statements will generally come from common topics used to help train debaters in the critical thinking process. I will not always argue for what I believe is the correct side. For the sake of having a spirited debate I may choose the minority view.
The first topic: ![]() Do you agree or disagree with this statement and why? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Current Topic: Quote:
Last edited by Banefull; 12-27-2010 at 08:02 AM. |
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#2
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Logically no, you did. You typed it (well, I guess someone else might have, but it is impossible for something to spontaneously create itself)
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#3
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Not necessarily true. The message may not have been spontaneously created. The message is a combination of symbols that we interpret as having meaning. If at a given time there was only one symbol and the presence of that symbol had an influence on the formation of another symbol nearby it, then did not the message create itself? If the steps in the formation of the message are not independent events, then did it not create itself? The message could have very well been generated through pseudo random processes.
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#4
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Quote:
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#5
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I used the term "pseudo random processes" because the formation of the message may appear to have occurred through random processes when in all actuality, each step in its formaiton was not independent. For ex: computers cannot truly generate random numbers. Each generated value is not truly independent of each other but the overall distribution of values of a large group of these numbers appears to be very close to true randomness. The question becomes whether the message can influence its own process of creation and/or whether its parts can have a common pre-determined design goal. Last edited by Banefull; 10-22-2010 at 09:30 PM. |
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#6
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Quote:
Sorry; that's the first thing that popped into my head when I read that.
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#7
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No, it in no way rules out spontaneous formation or mutation, it DOES rule out creating matter from nothing, for example - so quite the opposite
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#8
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What about the formation of the universe? Did not matter come into existence then?
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#9
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There is no evidence or proof to suggest it assembled itself: it's the same as any other pile of words. Therefore, I respectfully dissagree.
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#10
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How can you know that it was assembled by a human or by outside intelligent design (not by itself)? The only way to truly know was if you assembled it yourself or you were present to observe every stage of its process of creation.
Last edited by Banefull; 10-22-2010 at 09:53 PM. |
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#11
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True. But then how would I know that it assembled itself?
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#12
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The message says it assembled itself. That is a piece of evidence. Given that we have one piece of evidence for the claim that it did assemble itself and no evidence for the opposite view, the only way to prove that it did not assemble itself is to show that it is impossible for the message to assemble itself for all circumstances.
Last edited by Banefull; 10-22-2010 at 09:57 PM. |
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#13
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In order for the message to have assembled itself, it first must have existed before coming into existence. Since something cannot exist before it exists, the message could not have assembled itself. I am assuming that by "assembling" it came into existence.
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"I would rather be a could-be if I cannot be an are,
Because a could-be is a maybe that is reaching for a star. I would rather be a has-been than a might-have-been, by far, For a might-have-been has never been, but a has was once an are". -Milton Berle |
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#14
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Would you not say that DNA is a kind of message? Does not DNA assemble itself?
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#15
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Would you be able to provide me with a source that supports DNA being a message and that it is self assembling (and that such an assembly is not the result of a process that exists outside of the DNA itself)?
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"I would rather be a could-be if I cannot be an are,
Because a could-be is a maybe that is reaching for a star. I would rather be a has-been than a might-have-been, by far, For a might-have-been has never been, but a has was once an are". -Milton Berle |
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