Thursday, August 13, 2009

Agnostic From: Admin Mickey McLean BobG In Vancouver Victor Reppert Nirmali Sivapragasam Andy Jess Tim Enloe Adam Parker Anthony Cusimano Matthew Archbold PsiCop /26674989

admin comes with a new idea:
By dirtyproduction on Aug 1, 2009 I buy into the I buy into the agnostic point of view. I do not buy into the atheist point of view. Saying you don t effin know is pretty honest. Saying that you know one way or another is complete horseshit.

Mickey McLean also takes into account the following fact:
I m glad I got married young, though I admit I would have liked more time to establish my work life before I started the family. Six moves in three years, however, didn t help that.

But BobG in Vancouver has a different opinion:
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But Victor Reppert says that's not all:
"It seems to me that what you re *really* bitching about ... in a manner quite analogous to Mr Reppert s bitching about *his* taxes even as he applauds additional taxes for other citizens ... is that your insurance company isn’t giving you a free lunch."

Nirmali Sivapragasam might have an idea about it:
Contact Photos Projects Book: ICT INFRASTRUCTURE IN EMERGING ASIA Rapid Response Program 2008-2010 Evaluating a Real-Time Biosurveillance Program (RTBP): A Pilot Project

Andy points out another thing aside from that:
@ suzigurl My desk goes through cycles of collect and purge; today is one of the rare purge dadys. 2 hours ago

Jess shows how it is done:
  NotConvinced View Public Profile Send a private message to NotConvinced Find More Posts by NotConvinced « Previous Thread | Next Thread »

Victor Reppert considers that:
At August 04, 2009 1:22 PM ,   Steve said..."Does your insurance company confiscate your possessions, or your life, if you attempt to “opt out?”"

For this reason, Victor Reppert says:
At August 03, 2009 5:15 AM ,   Walter said... "That you aligned yourself with Ingersoll says more about you than you think. I wouldn t be too proud of my "rational" agnosticism if I were you. You seem gullible." Anon, Since this is not an apologetic site out to engage the skeptic, then I will leave you with the last word. I normally have these discussions over at Freeratio.org under the user name of Deus Ex. I would be happy to continue the discussion there. Uncle e, Thank you. I do enjoy a polite discussion with those of faith.  

As Mickey McLean says:
I don t see your point, as I don t see it having much connection to anything I said or typically say on worldmagblog. I perceive several problems. One, I very much doubt the being described as God exists. I don t know this as a fact, so I call myself a high agnostic (an agnostic who leans very much toward an atheistic view of the universe). Holy Books such as the Bible, Koran, Hindu, and Buddhist holy books (and similar books) strike me as much more likely to be the products of human minds than of Divine voices. Second, even if consider the unlikely possibility that some sort of Deity exists, I see no more reason to believe in yours than any of the other ideas of God advanced over the course of human history.

Tim Enloe scans the other's answers and reply:
How Some Things Began to Change In an important sense, everything that has happened to me for the last 8 years, and so, everything that has occurred to alter the very much Fundamentalistic understanding of the Reformed Faith that I chronicled in the first part of this series, boils down to one key point: my discovery of and immersion in the classical Liberal Arts. Although I had been skirting the edges of the Liberal Arts for years in my own private studies, I did not enter into a really thoroughgoing engagement with them until I began my undergraduate work at New St. Andrews College in the Fall of 1999.

Adam Parker scans the other's answers and reply:
Musically, the album is very exciting; the first half of the album was not at all what I was expecting. I mean, it's not as major of a departure from the norm as

Victor Reppert notices:
At August 03, 2009 10:52 PM ,   WAR_ON_ERROR said... I do appreciate your tone in general, Victor. It reminds me to be less opportunistic when Christians polemically war with each other. Even though the Triabloggers come off as rather jaded, I can see plenty of skeptics who are equal and opposite to them in that regard, so it s hard to point confident tribal fingers. I m not sure that jadedness is something to shun, rather it seems something to sooth with understanding and forward thinking. Unless of course you want to be jaded about jadedness. haha Ben  

Similarly, Anthony Cusimano adds:
How Socrates Died Week 1 Post 10 Darwin s DNA Week 1 Post 9 Nicholas of Cusa Week 1 Post 8

matthew archbold imagines that:
Creative Minority Report: Brad Pitt's Odd Atheist Math skip to main | skip to sidebar Brad Pitt's Odd Atheist Math

Despite the previous arguments, PsiCop has many reasons to think otherwise:
A central Wisconsin man accused of killing his 11-year-old daughter by praying instead of seeking medical care was found guilty Saturday of second-degree reckless homicide.

Sources:
admin Mickey McLean BobG in Vancouver Victor Reppert Nirmali Sivapragasam Andy Jess Tim Enloe Adam Parker Anthony Cusimano matthew archbold PsiCop

Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment

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