This is a fascinating presentation by Dr Michael Egnor – I don't fully embrace everything he says, but his presentation of the data certainly made me challenge certain assumptions.
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Interesting. How do you make the connection? The number 8 has a wide range of meaning across culture.I found his number 8 discussion interesting...why did he pick us looking at the number 8? Me thinks because we all turn it sideways in our mind and contemplate infinity.
Again ... such as?So much neural linguistic programming used in writing and delivering this sermon.
There are 9 numbers he did not select...and as soon as he said 8 before he said anything else..infinity came to mind...and when 8/infinity does not die came up. It cemented the concept...to me...in my Biased mind.Interesting. How do you make the connection? The number 8 has a wide range of meaning across culture.
Again ... such as?
His presentation (and interpretation) of the data ....yup.I don't fully embrace everything he says, but his presentation of the data certainly made me challenge certain assumptions
Snap! But I came at it from the other direction!Fascinating yes, intriguing yes, thought provoking yes. But my skeptical self was screaming is this just yet another aging atheist which is grasping at something later in life to feel comfortable about his mortality on this mortal coil, searching for some life extension albeit in the afterlife?
Again it's a case of evidence and conclusions – as you say, fascinating, intriguing and thought-provoking, I wonder why, if those born missing significant brain matter, can function reasonably because the brain just takes over doing the stuff the missing brain stuff was supposed to do, why does that not happen in cases of brain damage – stroke recovery, for example?There were many dmall red flags (which will make many not fully embrace everything he says) and yet again when you have a scientist speak so eloquently to the lay person and fit an inclined paradigm...the credibility factor is an influence.
A good point there, as even physicalists say mind is seated in the brain (head), whereas I do wonder about the other ganglia bundles around the body ... the heart has its own, too, and very clever it is ... but it seems to be system-oriented, rather than associated with mind/consciousness?The jump for me was no discussion of the other hundreds of millions of nerves in the body that assist the brain, including the large ganglia that resides near our digestive tract and provides us that gut instinct that made my spider sense perk when he said the brain does not, has not evolved and then muttered, nothing evolves....
Yep, that's a red flag right there ...Then to find out he avoided saying that he works/shills for the Discovery Institute, a prominent organization that promotes Intelligent Design, a view that posits an intelligent cause for the complexity of life and the universe.
Gotcha.While he touts his credentials and education and seemingly avoided stating this prominently as it would have turned some of us off immediately.
Yes, possibly, but I am sure we can all remember being patronized for our youthful opinions at some point. Age can certainly play a role, but in debate it is a two-way street.is this just yet another aging atheist which is grasping at something later in life to feel comfortable about his mortality
But that can be true for atheists too..his beliefs influence his conclusions
It looks to me that if you work in a scientific field and have a religion you either have to be one hell of a juggler or pretend one half of your beliefs don't exist.Appears he has definitely fallen out of favor with the bulk of the scientific community (as he rises in the theological one)