subgenius wrote:It is possible by your own subscribed and prior declared philosophy......i can only assume you a referring to the biochemical process that occur inside the boundaries of a person's skin?
Were you just being poetic or is there an actual "process" that you know of?Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:Cognitive processes.
Impossible! you are contradicting yourself.....how is it possible for "personal feelings" (as opposed to impersonal feeling?) to influence external stimuli? These "personal feelings" are products of that stimuli, they are wholly reliant on that stimuli! If you are admitting your own inability to discern "feelings" then surely that must be either a developmental defect or a retardation in one of those "internal processes".Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:I was addressing your confusing objectivity with subjectivity.
what laws? laws like gravity...laws that govern chemical reactions...perhaps you are unaware that certain chemicals, when combined, will produce a reaction...and that reaction is inescapable...those chemicals are incapable of "reacting" any other way.
As for light being a wave or a particle, that question does not negate natural laws...our awareness of a natural law does not determine its existence....the earth was spinning around the sun before we ever realized it was.Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:Quantum physics. I recommend reading Who's Afraid of Schrodinger's Cat. Regardless, immutable laws are objective, and not influenced by your subjectivity.
ironically you just made a faith based statement....and it is completely impossible for your atheism/humanism to avoid that conclusion. Your own declaration of being an atheist/hunanist makes it impossible for you to deny that you are bound to the laws of the universe...whatever those laws may be.....unless you are claiming, now, that there is a supernatural?Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:I made a factual statement. It's impossible to truly know and understand your internal processes, experiences, etc... You can tell me to the best of your ability what you're experiencing, and I can attempt to relate to your statements, but ultimately you're alone with your experiences.
No, crime would still be possible..Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:Not according to your statement before. If every human process is predictable and consistent pre-crime units would be established and any crime would be preempted. Additionally, criminals would be identified early on and over a period of time be weeded out of the gene pool.
i am pretty sure they do not violate or circumvent the law of gravity...in fact they spend quite a bit of effort in order to adhere to that law....hint: big rocket engine. Me jumping in the air is not circumventing the law of gravity...in fact that action confirms it...the law requires me to exert a specific and immutable force due to gravity...i can not somehow magically render the law of gravity non-existent as you apparently imagine the magic rocket does.
If you have proof of NASA somehow suspending or negating the law of gravity, please post it.Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:Circumvent means to find a way around (an obstacle), or to overcome a difficulty. I'm pretty sure NASA has found a way around the problem of gravity. Let's not quibble over minutiae...
please...at best your trying to confuse correlation with causation....and your notion of "as society matures" is imaginary and without reference. You are suddenly on the objective-train? Please, provide evidence that society is "maturing"... exactly what is a "fully developed" society? The only reasonable conclusion form history is that atheists are a social defect.Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:Well. European countries are relatively mature. They're more Atheistic now than ever. Your description for Atheists being a social defect is offensive. I feel similarly toward Theists, but I wouldn't have said it because I'm trying to be civil.
Ultimately your claim that you are an atheist requires you to be amoral (not immoral...amoral)...Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:I'm not sure who gave you the authority to determine my morality, or that of an entire block of the population. I have my own set of morals therefore I'm not amoral.
yet you contradict that notion by claiming to be a humanist...i assume a secular humanist, because a religious humanist would negate your atheism...nevertheless, it might be interesting for you to start a thread where you provide, if possible, the basis for which you derive your moral code...my guess is that it is derived from the "seat of my pants" school of thought.Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:I suppose that's better than deriving it from the fantasies and tall tales of your parents which are most likely derived from a book of savages written 2,000 years ago, no?
V/R
Dr. Cam