subgenius wrote:no worries, clearly you have had your fill.
Well, it does mix well with curelom and cumom.
subgenius wrote:no worries, clearly you have had your fill.
AmyJo wrote:Half of the stardust in our bodies come from faraway galaxies.
Doesn't that make you wonder at the marvel of it all?
Dr. Shades wrote:...
Every element in our solar system heavier than helium--to include every element in us--was formed when our original star went supernova. The resulting nebulaic cloud condensed to form our current solar system as it exists today.
So, the "stardust" (a.k.a., every element heavier than helium) of our bodies didn't even come from faraway stars, much less faraway galaxies.
Dr. Shades wrote:It's all quite predictable and mundane.
canpakes wrote:subgenius wrote: ... because they maintain the Christian traditions that permeate their society/life/existence....they have no other well to draw from.
Looks like you are putting the cart before the horse. It appears that what you could call “Christian tradition” can also be seen to exist outside of that religion, and has a history predating it, as well.
canpakes wrote:You can try to credit “Christianity” with being the source of social order and common sense, but you won’t find many folks in your corner, especially given that a break from strict religious thought helped push the Enlightenment along.
But perhaps you disagree that over the past 2 centuries the majority of Americans did not spend their formative years within walking distance of a Christian church, or having grandparents that were Christians, or pledging allegiance to a nation "under God", or hearing the "golden rule", or learning about Jesus.
subgenius wrote:Dude, I did not claim that Christianity was the fountainhead so don't argue what is not being argued...all i said is that the Christian tradition is an inescapable foundation for every self-proclaimed atheist...
EAllusion wrote:But perhaps you disagree that over the past 2 centuries the majority of Americans did not spend their formative years within walking distance of a Christian church, or having grandparents that were Christians, or pledging allegiance to a nation "under God", or hearing the "golden rule", or learning about Jesus.
"Under God" was added to the pledge in the mid 1950's after a political campaign by the Knights of Columbus, so maybe Christianity didn't do enough to bless you with a foundation of math.
canpakes wrote:subgenius wrote:Dude, I did not claim that Christianity was the fountainhead so don't argue what is not being argued...all i said is that the Christian tradition is an inescapable foundation for every self-proclaimed atheist...
There you go, again.
It’s only a foundation if you insist that Christianity was the fountainhead.
canpakes wrote: It wasn’t. If Christianity adopted or incorporated certain general existing sensibilities such as ‘do not kill’ into their own social codex - at least as long as doing so was more convenient than killing, at any particular moment - this does not then follow that atheist attitudes are dependent upon Christian values or beliefs.
canpakes wrote:But, please, feel free to type out a few more paragraphs of circular reasoning. I’ll go get a coffee while you slap a new post together.
subgenius wrote:1. Do you agree that something can be a "foundation" for something else without being the "origin"?
2. Are you the product of your environment?
see also previous post wherein:
Dude, I did not claim that Christianity was the fountainhead so don't argue what is not being argued...all i said is that the Christian tradition is an inescapable foundation for every self-proclaimed atheist....or do you suddenly want to proclaim "Darwin be damned" and dismiss your own belief that environmental influence exists and an individual person possess a magical-supernatural power for free-will?