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There is no scientific proof of a god, even after thousands of years. The proof against such a supernatural being is exactly that lack of proof.
You may not believe in forcing your beliefs on others, but christianity, and religions in general, have a long history of doing just that, and continue to practice such.
The complexity of life has been explained time and again by natural scientific means. IMO, there is no need to invoke the supernatural just to be awed and inspired by that complexity.
Your beliefs are well and good for you, but they are strictly beliefs, without any basis in fact. And while repeating your beliefs and ideas taught to you by your religious books may make you feel better about your place in life, it doesn't constitute proof of a god.
This is the type of thinking that I think is dangerous. Always thinking that everything is "gods will", or "I'm only human", gives too many people an excuse for not trying to change things.
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With or without religion, you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion.
Steven Weinberg, quoted in The New York Times, April 20, 1999
If your beliefs are based on faith, then proof of the existence regarding that religion nullifies your beliefs. From a scientific standpoint, lack of proof does not prove anything. Life has evolved for billions of years. Billions. Yet we don't have any proof how it started, we have theories. Does this lack of proof prove that our existence does not exist? Most certainly not.
I beg to differ. A protein is a fundamental element necessary for us to survive. I assume you are a DVM and have a scientific background, maybe slightly outdated (:smiley1: sorry). We only know the 3-D structure of very very few proteins. Many of the fundamental pathways involving proteins are still not understood. We just don't know. Is it impossible for us to not advance our knowledge? Of course not. Scientific process governs the complexity, no doubt about it. Natural process, such as like charges repelling one another, explain how molecules interact with each other. But it is so complex. I could go on and on about the complexity and really just scratch the surface for you. It is amazing. It is so complex I don't think it could happen without God's hand.
I started believing in God before I read the Bible.
What I said was God has a plan. And that I don't know it because, I'm not God. I don't know if everything is "God's will". My best friend's brother died of a brain aneurysm while he was in class at the local high school. Was it God's will he died like that? I don't know. Is he in a better place, yeah, he is.
Actually, from a scientific standpoint, lack of proof, especially after so long a period of time, is a very good reason to discard a hypothesis.
Also, scientists are collecting more evidence as to the origin of life every day. Your strawman argument relates to the exact moment life began, and its relation to our existence. The main problem with your example is, we can physically observe our existence. We can repeat that observation over and over. The same cannot be done for a god.
Proteins are amino acid chains, made up from 20 different amino acids, also referred to as residues, that fold into unique three-dimensional protein structures. The shape in which a protein naturally folds is known as its native state, which is determined by its sequence of amino acids. under 40 residues the term peptide is frequently used. A certain number of residues is necessary to perform a particular biochemical function, and around 40-50 residues appears to be the lower limit for a functional domain size. Protein sizes range from this lower limit to several thousand residues in multi-functional or structural proteins. However, the current estimate for the average protein length is around 300 residues. Very large aggregates can be formed from protein subunits, for example many thousand actin molecules assemble into an actin filament. Large protein complexes with RNA are found in the ribosome particles, which are in fact 'ribozymes'.
I would have to assume, from your incorrect statements about how much we know about proteins, that your knowledge of biochemistry is even more dated than mine.:smiley2: I was just scratching the surface of what we know. I regularly read biochem articles in scientific journals. The number of these articles is really staggering. But this really has nothing to do with our discussion.
What you're alluding to is an example of the "Watchmaker analogy" put forth by William Paley in 1803, and which has been debunked repeatedly since. The watchmaker argument basically says you can't have something complex, like a watch, without a watchmaker. For a complete explanation of the problems, and proof against such an argument you should read Dawkins, Richard, 1986. The Blind Watchmaker: why the evidence of evolution reveals a universe without design. New York: Norton.
First, you make observations. Then, you form a hypothesis. Then, you test this hypothesis. Lack of proof does not discredit a hypothesis. It does not confirm it either.
I'm familiar with biochemistry. My education is not outdated. We know that the interactions between amino acids drive conformation, but there is more to it than that. There are four degrees to conformation, with the fourh being how one protein interacts with another protein forming one functional 3-d protein. We know this. But our crystalline studies used to observe the 3-d structure is vague. We just don't have the observations of it. On some we do. But like I said these are very very few and far between. Does our lack of observation disprove 3-d shape? No, because we know it happens. It is just more research is necessary. And, I'm not talking about any watchmaker problem.
I didn't have an avatar of two-headed Carrie until the level of discourse here got ugly, then changed it. I don't complain about peoples avatars, it's a perfect way to express yourself, so if it bothers you, get over it. It's one thing to have an avatar expressing yourself, it's another to rant and rave about how much you hate anyone you disagree with.
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Can you describe the test you would use to test your hypothesis that god has a hand in the creation of life?
Actually, their are about 5,000+ proteins in a living organism, about 30% of which are lipid soluble (most are water soluble). It's these lipid soluble proteins that scientists were having a problem with. However, that problem was at least partially solved several years ago.
Anyway, you were using a "watchmaker argument" in your post. You stated that due to the complexity of life, you knew god had to have a hand in its creation.
1) It's K-E-R-R-Y
2) It's been two full years! Don't you have better liberals to pick on?
3) When did I ever say I hate you or anyone else? I pointed out that baiting the other side is just as pointless as dickering with them.
4) And since it's a perfect way to express myself, enjoy my new avatar!
Nah it's Carrie for me, since he seems to have the honesty of a 3 year old girl who hasn't learned the value of telling the truth and being honest upfront.
Didn't say you hate anyone, and I'm not baiting anyone, just replying to the baiting.
Your new avatar rocks, but trust me, I'll find a better one of Billary and get it up as soon as possible for your viewing pleasure!!:smiley31:
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4) And since it's a perfect way to express myself, enjoy my new avatar!
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You test a hypothesis to PROVE or disprove it.
If you hypothesize there is a god, YOU have to devise a test to prove such. If you put forth a hypothesis, without any corroborating evidence, your hypothesis will be summarily rejected.
Using your incorrect idea of the scientific method, if I were to say I have an invisible 60' tall shit monster in my back yard, the burden would be on you to prove my statement false.