Author Topic: Shalom  (Read 2429 times)

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Offline Dan Ben Noah

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Shalom
« on: January 20, 2012, 11:48:17 AM »
Shalom
« Last Edit: June 25, 2016, 12:27:25 AM by Dan Ben Noah »
Jeremiah 16:19 O Lord, Who are my power and my strength and my refuge in the day of trouble, to You nations will come from the ends of the earth and say, "Only lies have our fathers handed down to us, emptiness in which there is nothing of any avail!

Zechariah 8:23 So said the Lord of Hosts: In those days, when ten men of all the languages of the nations shall take hold of the skirt of a Jewish man, saying, "Let us go with you, for we have heard that God is with you."

Offline muman613

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Re: New atheist book says the universe came from nothing
« Reply #1 on: January 20, 2012, 04:17:10 PM »
I am so lucky {or blessed} that I have never personally known anyone who is an atheist. Even those who question Hashem still hold out a small belief in him instead of deny his presence. I share more with all people of faith than I do with one who completely denies his Creator.

You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline edu

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Re: New atheist book says the universe came from nothing
« Reply #2 on: January 21, 2012, 11:38:36 AM »
The following is a quotation from http://www.vilnagaon.org/book/akiva.html
Quote
Rabbi Akiva’s Proof For the Existence of Hashem[G-d]

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A heretic once came and asked Rabbi Akiva, This world....who created it? He answered, The Holy One Blessed be He. Said the heretic: Show me clear proof! Said Rabbi Akiva, come back tomorrow.

The next day the sage asked, what are you wearing? A garment was the answer. Who made it? asked Rabbi Akiva. The tailor, was the reply. I do not believe you; show me clear proof.

The man protested, But what shall I show you? Do you not know that the tailor made it? Answered the sage, And what of you? Do you not know that the Holy One Blessed be He created this world?

The heretic left without reply.

But what is the proof? asked his disciples. Said the rabbi...Just as a house indicates a builder, a garment a tailor, and a door a carpenter, so too does this world tell, the Holy One Blessed be He created it.


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translation of Midrash Temura

Dovid: With this in mind, imagine for a moment that you saw a 35mm. camera lying on this table. Then someone came over to you and made the claim that the camera came into being by chance collision of atoms over billions of years. Would you take the claim seriously?

Pavlov: Certainly not.

Dovid: Well what’s more complicated, the human eye or a 35mm. camera? Before you answer, let’s examine the facts.

Just as a camera has a strong, box-like frame protecting its delicate interior, so too does the eye. Namely, the tough outer layer, known more technically as the sclerotic coat.

The sclerotic coat is an opaque, curved sheet of connective tissue which maintains the rigidity of the eyeball and protects its inner structure. It is white in color, except in the front of the eye, where this sheet becomes the thinner, transparent cornea.

The cornea admits incoming light and is kept moist and dust-free by the secretion of the tear glands. The curved surface of the cornea, along with the refractive properties of the liquids within the eyeball, begin the process of bringing the light into focus.

The lens, however, is the main element of the eye responsible for focusing the incoming light rays. It is located just behind the iris and is held in place by suspensory ciliary ligaments. Tension on the ligaments flattens the lens, and focuses the eye for far vision, the condition of the eye at rest. However, contraction of muscles attached to the ciliary ligaments relaxes the tension of the ligaments and permits the lens to take the near spherical shape needed for viewing objects at a close distance. In summary, these changes in lens shape enable the eye to shift its focus (accommodate) from far objects to near objects and vice versa.

Once the focused light enters the eye, the process is far from finished. The light must reach the rear of the eye to the light-sensitive retina. The retina is made up of an abundance of receptor cells called, according to their shape, rods and cones. The last time I checked into the statistics I learned there were about 125,000,000 rods and 6,500.000 cones.

The ability to see an external faint light depends on the amount of what is called “visual purple” in the retinal rods. An eye continually exposed to darkness is compensated for its environment by additional production of visual purple, which enable the rods to react to faint light. Bright light greatly reduces the amount of visual purple, but simultaneously, it activates the retina’s color-sensitive cones. As a result the eye is for the most part able to cope with major changes of light intensity.

Another aid for adjusting to problems of light is the choroid coat. It is a sheet of cells filled with black pigment which absorbs extra light and prevents internally reflected light from blurring the image.

The pupil also protects the eye from excessive illumination. This opening in the eye’s center enlarges or decreases in size, depending on whether the incoming light is dim or bright. With the aid of the surrounding iris, the pupil is regulated automatically to the width suitable, for both intense and weak light.

To sum up my point Pavlov, if you believe the camera box, lens, shutter, black lining, film and focusing devices of a camera, were made by a designer, you should hold the same belief for the sclerotic coat, the lens, the lids, the choroid coat, the retina and the muscles and ligaments, which change lens shape.

If you accept that there was a designer for the camera, logic dictates that you accept that there was a designer for the human eye.”

Pavlov: Who says Hashem is the designer? Perhaps a god not interested in human affairs is the designer.

Dovid: If he wasn't interested in human affairs, why then bother to create us at all?

Offline Kahane-Was-Right BT

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Re: New atheist book says the universe came from nothing
« Reply #3 on: January 22, 2012, 03:45:37 AM »
I'm confused.

1.  Big bang does not "prove" or have anything to do with coming from nothing because einsteins equations and other laws of physics are being applied to estimate the conditions under which the big bang occurred.   That is NOT something from nothing.   That (the big bang) is something from a state in which time, matter etc already exist, ie something from something.

2.  If we ignore all of that for a second:  something from nothing is an atheist argument?  How so?  And since when?  The Rambam uses creation ex nihilo as a fundamental principle for the belief in G-d.  The whole point of that is that it is not a scientific concept.  I guess this atheist is trying to give scientific basis for a divine creation ex nihilo.  That makes a lotta sense.

Offline Kahane-Was-Right BT

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Re: New atheist book says the universe came from nothing
« Reply #4 on: January 22, 2012, 01:28:47 PM »
Then this atheist or others like him are trying to redefine science.  Because by definition and scientific principles, something cannot come from nothing.   Matter exists and can only come from existing matter.   Creation ex nihilo (ie by God) is the only way to transcend this conundrum if one believes that the world had a beginning.    Energy, processes, matter etc emerging from nothing is a scientific impossibility the way science is currently defined.   Although I usually won't say this sort of thing on something I haven't read this kind of theory book strikes me as a bunch of junk by someone looking to promote an agenda, not science.

Offline Kahane-Was-Right BT

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Re: New atheist book says the universe came from nothing
« Reply #5 on: January 22, 2012, 08:11:09 PM »
Of course it's a bunch of junk, it has an afterword by Witchturd Dawkins.

Lol