_Morpheus,
Its a good exercise, maybe a cord is struck somewhere for some, but mostly its as i described.
To me the question I consider more often these days is the following: How is atheism influencing Christianity in the 21st century?
C0ntr013r
I want to restart this issue with you and ask you a question. This question requires a basic explanation before it is asked and is actually a recap of my original argument:
In human history there are many stories about fairies. Some are stories, some are legends, some are related to the practice of magic. These stories, myths and legends go back centuries. So in history there have been many people that have believed in fairies and even today in esoteric culture some people still do. Fairies purportedly have little wings and they seem to love flowers. So postulating that fairies may in fact pollinate plants is plausible. But it is also an extraordinary claim. For that claim to be true one would expect some very compelling evidence, but it is lacking. So the question is this:
1.On what basis can science dismiss fairies, or is stating that fairies don't exist unscientific?
cappytan
The problem isn't a lack of evidence full stop. The problem is a lack of evidence where there should be evidence.
Here's my mantra: Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.