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Originally posted by dave420
Grow up. Seriously. Why is it you find fault with science only when it discovers evolution, yet not when it got you the computer you're looking at right now?
In 1697, a French Jesuit missionary in China, Joachim Bouvet, introduced the I Ching to German mathematician and philosopher, Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibnitz, who was amazed by the Book of Changes and its use of binary arithmetic, then unknown in Europe. Leibnitz spread the good word, and thus our civilization was first introduced to binary arithmetic, which is not only the cornerstone of the Book of Changes but also the language of all modern computers. Leibnitz was not the only great mind fascinated with the I Ching. Foremost among those who extolled its merit was no doubt psychologist Carl C. Jung, who saw in the Book of Changes the most perfect illustration of his own Theory of Archetypes and referred to the I Ching as "the most profound book ever to come from the East."
Books that relate the history of computers generally credit the digital theory that is the foundation of computer systems to Gottfried Leibniz, who is many times referred to as "the father of the digital revolution". The picture on the left is an illustration of the binary system that Leibniz created, and the picture below is an illustration of the 64 hexagrams of the I Ching. There is not much difference between the two illustrations as the picture on the left merely uses the numbers 0 and 1 rather than the symbols of Yin and Yang.
"In his article Explication de l'Arithmétique Binaire (1703) Gottfried Leibniz writes that he has found in the hexagrams a base for claiming the universality of the binary numeral system. He takes the layout of the combinatorial excercise found in the hexagrams to represent binary sequences, so that |||||| would correspond to the binary sequence 000000 and |||||: would be 000001, and so forth."
Originally posted by dave420
Or when it got you your medication?
On the 28th of July, 2004, Reuters reported a study by HealthGrades, Inc., indicating that as many as 195,000 people a year could be dying in U.S. hospitals because of preventable errors. This number doubles previous figures from a 1999 study from the Institute of Medicine that said 98,000 people a year die from medical errors. Compared to various diseases, medical errors would be the sixth leading cause of death. I am not a medical professional, and to avoid quoting out of context, I attach below the original article in English for those interested readers.
Originally posted by dave420
Or when it got you cheap food?
Originally posted by dave420
Or when it got you the internet?
Originally posted by dave420Doesn't that strike you as strange, that you can find fault with the exact same methodology - the scientific method only when it contradicts something you've been taught by people with no knowledge of science? Why do you use a computer if its very existence is down to atheistic science? Or is one of the ten commandments "Thou must be a hypocrite and let everyone know it"?
Originally posted by dave420
Charlton Heston was a christian fruitcake. He wouldn't know science if it came up and drew him a diagram. You can tell that because he, and those of his ilk, try to debunk science with flawed logic. It's a common thing to see people like that try to take down all of science (which they'd have to if they wanted to paint evolution as bunk, thanks to all the evidence it has supporting it). Pathetic.
Of course the video could be shown in the UK. Heck, you can show stuff on British TV you can only see on HBO or Showtime in the US. The problem is, though, that with most brits knowing about science (having been educated), the video would be (rightly) viewed as a comedy.
Enlightenment must suck for you - it means more and more people calling you out on your childish "logic" and perverted world-view. Too bad.
Your views are border-line crazy and unsubstantiated by reality.
Originally posted by dave420
That's the best you could manage? Dear oh dear.
1. Read about what a computer is. Binary mathematics does not a computer make. They rely on many, many scientific principles and manufacturing techniques. Saying they exist solely because of binary maths is, well, retarded.
2. Unnatural medications have saved countless lives over the years.
Chances are, without them, one of your direct ancestors would have died, and you'd not be here.
3. No, I mean the study of plant biology that allows us to grow even healthier plants. Or entomology, which allows us to understand how to germinate plants effectively. And not to mention all the science that went in to producing the equipment that allows people to farm such large expanses of ground.
4. Computers are not ancient wisdom. Repeating it does not make it true.
Did the ancients know how to manufacture a solid-state transistor? Because if they didn't, then they didn't have a modern, useable computer, that is Turing complete. Knowing about 1s and 0s is not a computer.
5. "Science propaganda" is known to non-fundies as "knowledge". Shun it if you want to, just don't stop other people learning. That's what the Taliban did, and we had to whoop their asses.
6. Show me the real science behind it. Go on - get me the names of the scientists and the studies they quote. It's strange how you defend science when you imagine it's helping your argument, and shun it when it does the opposite. I don't have that problem - I know science is benign. I want to learn, not to wrap myself up in convenient lies that keep me warm at night.
I am well informed about computers (having been working with them since the early 90s, and having parents who coded since the 70s). I know that binary mathematics are an integral part of computers, but then I also know that binary is just base-2 (as opposed to our base-10), and as much is not that difficult to conceive of. As I said before, however, the solid-state transistor and the microprosessor are what makes today's powerful computers, and they weren't farted out by God.
Science developed them, from the very first idea, to the chips that power the PC you're looking at - science crafted them, and science alone.
You act surprised that all of a sudden something came into existence. Well, as you know, first things don't exist, then they do. The point in between is obviously a finite point somewhere in time. It has to land somewhere, and it landed where it did, in the 20th century. If that blows your mind, as it seems to, then you have bigger problems.
Originally posted by alienstar
I watched that show and do believe in the evolution theory.There is to much evidence to not support the theory we came from apes.Which evolved in billions of years from bacteria.
Chances are, without them, one of your direct ancestors would have died, and you'd not be here.
Originally posted by Hollywood11
I actually debunked that notion in a previous thread, maybe i'll bump it
Rest assured, you don't have "bacteria" DNA or "plant" DNA in you
www.abovetopsecret.com...
[edit on 10-6-2008 by Hollywood11]
Originally posted by Lasheic
Then I challenge you to sequence a base pair of DNA on this "essence" of computers. The "ancients" didn't "know better" than to use computers and science - because they had no concept of them. To know better, they would have had to have known about them in the first place. There is NO evidence ANYWHERE that they had ANY sort of advanced knowledge or technology comparable to the computers we have today.
Then I invite you to visit a nursing home or hospital and lead a campaign of euthenation too free those poor warped, bored, degerated souls of their misery. Lets see how far you get with that.
Look at the above map. Note which countries have the longest lifespans, and which the shortest. Think you can spot the countries which rely on modern medicine?
Apparently you've never met a diabetic.
Tell that to anyone who's ever relied on the Haber process to provide them the food they eat. I'm sure it won't be that hard, there's only a few billion of them.
I can't speak for him, but yes. I would much prefer my scientific first world near paradise compared to a midevel bronze-age life of toil and suffering. "Ancient Knowledge" is just that - ancient. It was replaced by new ways of thinking and newly discovered knowledge because it produced better results.
Oh those foolish Iron Age simpletons who neglected the wisdom of their Stone Age ancestors!
Ok. Go sailing and use that to navigate. I'll get a boat too, but I'll use GPS navigation, detailed satellite maps, and radio communications to warn of storms. We'll see who gets to the destination first. Oh, and watch out for those wacky sea monsters which populate your maps.
If you think scientists get rich from their research, then you are sadly mistaken. It is about exploration, discovery, and making people's lives better. But knowledge is inert. It can be used for both good and evil purposes. For both free exchange, and for commercialism. Knowledge, and science, just is.
From your insistence on NDE's, I'm going to go out on a limb and suppose that you had one yourself. You might want to go in for an MRI sometime to make sure there wasn't any permanent damage to your brain.
We've had 2,000 years of Jesus's "Golden Rule", much of it being well before modern science. It hasn't helped. Maybe it just needs another 2,000 years?
Explain Yin and Yang's role in Pi, please.
You mean like plastics? (Rubber and plastic aren't the same thing, btw)