Quote from: B0B on Jun 27, 2017, 06:52AMSo... traditional gravity is well understood per einstein's work and those before him. We can calculate the force, determine when it happens, how it happens, have it pretty well figured out. However, when dealing on the quantum level with gravity, it isn't fully consistent between the two.
So does that mean that gravity doesn't exist and we should throw it out, or just that we don't fully understand?
Byron et al want to say that if we can't understand something, we can't count on it, or claim that it's there.Thewhowhatnow?
I argue no such thing. Here's the accurized version:
If we have no actual evidence of something we can't claim that it's there even if we feel very strongly that it is.
Until you can write a comparable first paragraph above about God rather than gravity, you don't have a valid comparison here.
And you should let me make my own arguments.
Quote from: B0B on Jun 27, 2017, 06:52AMThat there seem to be contradictions in the concept of God, therefor it shows how God doesn't really exist. But they don't say that for other areas... those areas, science areas, well... we just haven't gotten there yet. We haven't figured it out yet. Calling one just part of the way there, and the other invalid, mostly just serves to show the preference of the person proclaiming the call. Seeing what you want to, rather than applying your own logic consistently.Not quite.
With contradictions like the way light behaves, for example, just as with the difference between gravity and God, this is a Thing due to the evidence. Again, when you can write a comparable comment about how experiments produce evidence of God's apparent contradictions like you can explaining why light behaves as waves under some conditions and as particles under others, then you'll have a valid comparison. But the more you bring these false comparisons the more obvious it makes this rather glaring missing detail in your rhetoric.
Quote from: B0B on Jun 27, 2017, 06:52AMThe nature of God as we understand it is ultimately that God is a god and we are people, and the very nature of that is a gulf too great to comprehend. When Job questions God why God makes him suffer, God's response is basically... how can you possibly understand His motives?
So, yes, there are characteristics that we can ascribe, but the full comprehension just isn't there. And there will be inconsistencies, or seem that way... not because of what it, but because our understanding is limited. Runs into a major wall in this area. How does a fish understand a solar system? How does a fly understand the seasons?Yeah ... see, write a comment about quantum leaping that makes its case by arguing the gulf is too great to comprehend, so you'll just have to take out word on it and see if that might pass peer review.
A good rule of thumb is to determine if any given rhetoric about a given entity or alleged phenomenon might pass muster. If not, when you understand why (actually--not just what uncritically seems like a satisfying answer) you'll also understand why you don't really know whatever it is you're arguing about the given entity or phenomenon.