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Does God exist? (4 Viewers)

do you believe in god?


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Garygaz

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does it say in the bible that god is omnipotent?
Revelation 19:6 says that God is "omnipotent". Matthew 28:18 says that God gave "all power" unto Christ, His Son.
Matthew 19:26 says "with God all things are possible"

God is all knowing. Read 1 Samuel 2:3, Matthew 6:8, Psalm 139:1-4, and Hebrews 4:13


Copied from some random Christian website from some hardcore bible poster, so I'll assume it's correct.

P.S I can't believe people are resorting to the old 'heavy' stone arguement. Good job guys, really fucking relevant argument.
 

-Hey-

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Revelation 19:6 says that God is "omnipotent". Matthew 28:18 says that God gave "all power" unto Christ, His Son.
Matthew 19:26 says "with God all things are possible"

God is all knowing. Read 1 Samuel 2:3, Matthew 6:8, Psalm 139:1-4, and Hebrews 4:13


Copied from some random Christian website from some hardcore bible poster, so I'll assume it's correct.

P.S I can't believe people are resorting to the old 'heavy' stone arguement. Good job guys, really fucking relevant argument.
YEAH MATE. COOL. Even though the 'old 'heavy' stone arguement' actually is a 'Omnipotence Paradox' and is the most important aspect to consider when considering the validity of the Christian God. Simply because, he is regarded as Omnipotent. So, if you take away his Omnipotence, you then take away the fundamental teachings of the bible, which in turn puts pressure on the bible's accuracy as the 'word of god'.
 

SeCKSiiMiNh

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this whole argument is pointless and all it's done is reaffirm my disbelief in a god

so, i propose that we put this whole "does god exist" thing to rest alright?

i mean, its so obvious that he doesn't exist :D
 

Geoffo11

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Poses a good question. And, relates to;

'Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able?
Then he is not omnipotent.
Is he able, but not willing?
Then he is malevolent.
Is he both able, and willing?
Then whence cometh evil?
Is he neither able nor willing?
Then why call him God. - Epicurus
This makes several assumptions in order to rule God out as a whole.
Even though it is Socratically argued, the first two lines are complete nonsense.

It assumes God can't be both able and willing. By what means? Since when? Given that evil is our fault, it is not his duty to clean up our messes. Similarly, if he gave his creations free will, and they sin, then that is their undoing alone. Since evil is the absence of God much like dark is to light, then sinning is the absence of God by choice of those who sin. He is able, but chooses not to act because that would intervene with free will.

Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able?
Yes willing, and yes able.

Is he able, but not willing?
Yes able, and yes willing assuming we approach him and follow him.

Is he both able, and willing?
Then whence cometh evil?
Both able and willing, it is people who create evil and not him. He creates people with choice to be evil (or good). We wouldn't be a very clever creation if we didn't have a choice, and he wouldn't be much of a God if he didn't give it to us.

Is he neither able nor willing?
No.
 

scuba_steve2121

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this whole argument is pointless and all it's done is reaffirm my disbelief in a god

so, i propose that we put this whole "does god exist" thing to rest alright?

i mean, its so obvious that he doesn't exist :D
if it is so obvious then why do people believe in god??
 

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This makes several assumptions in order to rule God out as a whole.
Even though it is Socratically argued, the first two lines are complete nonsense.

It assumes God can't be both able and willing. By what means? Since when? Given that evil is our fault, it is not his duty to clean up our messes. Similarly, if he gave his creations free will, and they sin, then that is their undoing alone. Since evil is the absence of God much like dark is to light, then sinning is the absence of God by choice of those who sin. He is able, but chooses not to act because that would intervene with free will.

Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able?
Yes willing, and yes able.

Is he able, but not willing?
Yes able, and yes willing assuming we approach him and follow him.

Is he both able, and willing?
Then whence cometh evil?
Both able and willing, it is people who create evil and not him. He creates people with choice to be evil (or good). We wouldn't be a very clever creation if we didn't have a choice, and he wouldn't be much of a God if he didn't give it to us.

Is he neither able nor willing?
No.
A HA! 'By what means? Since when? Given that evil is our fault, it is not his duty to clean up our messes.' Your a dumbass. Your jumping into the quote, assuming its evil is OUR fault. Take a step back mate. Your assuming god is all good. But you cant seem to comprehend that it is possible that god is not only good, but evil, if he is the creator of all things, there is a possibility that he is also the creator of all evil.

Just because you bought a $2 bible, doesnt mean you can comment on the PERSONALITY and INTENTIONS of what you cant even prove exists.


Thanks, Have some cheese.
 

Geoffo11

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A HA! 'By what means? Since when? Given that evil is our fault, it is not his duty to clean up our messes.' Your a dumbass. Your jumping into the quote, assuming its evil is OUR fault. Take a step back mate. Your assuming god is all good. But you cant seem to comprehend that it is possible that god is not only good, but evil, if he is the creator of all things, there is a possibility that he is also the creator of all evil.

Just because you bought a $2 bible, doesnt mean you can comment on the PERSONALITY and INTENTIONS of what you cant even prove exists.


Thanks, Have some cheese.
"A fool shows his annoyance at once, but a wise man overlooks an insult."

~ Proverb 12:16

"And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose."

~ Romans 8:28

1) "Your a dumbass. Your jumping into the quote, assuming its evil is OUR fault. Take a step back mate. Your assuming god is all good."

Firstly, it's spelled "you're". Secondly, evil IS our fault. It's not a blame game. It's nobody's fault but our own for sinning.

"For the LORD is good; his mercy is everlasting; and his truth endureth to all generations."

~ Psalms 100:5

2)"But you cant seem to comprehend that it is possible that god is not only good, but evil, if he is the creator of all things, there is a possibility that he is also the creator of all evil."

Since when is this a matter of comprehension? "It is possible that god is not only good but evil"
Is it now?
Do you know the story of Adam and Eve? They lived in harmony with nature until they were deceived by the serpent and ate the forbidden fruit from the tree of knowledge. That is the essential origin of sin, and the passage shows us it was the creations' choice to sin as a result of deception and temptation. Did God create that event intentionally? Probably.

3)"Just because you bought a $2 bible, doesnt mean you can comment on the PERSONALITY and INTENTIONS of what you cant even prove exists. "

Since when does the price of a Bible affect its quality of meaning? What if a homeless man wants to buy a Bible with what little money he has, is it still unacceptable in your eyes? Do they have to be expensive to mean more?

You're saying that being a follower of God does not validate you to talk about God…

Lastly, can you prove he doesn't exist?
 

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You're saying that being a follower of God does not validate you to talk about God..


Well, Sorry mate. I hate to tell you, but if you bothered to read the start, you would realise why we dont use the bible as a point of reference in this topic. Oh and about the above, thats so fucking righteous. I mean, for fucks sake. You claim to follow god, but so do 1.5 BILLION MUSLIMS. So are you right or wrong? Get off your high horse.

• Why you cannot use a religious text to prove God’s existence

The claim here is that the religious text (Bible, Quran, etc) proves that God exists. This argument makes the fallacy of begging the question (or circular reasoning). When the argument is set out clearly this becomes obvious:

How do we know God exists?
God exists because the Bible says so.
Why should we believe the Bible?
Because the Bible is the word of God.
How do we know God exists?
God exists because the Bible says so.
Why should we believe the Bible?
Because the Bible is the word of God.

How do we know God exists?

(etc, ad infinitum.)

You cannot use the conclusion you are trying to prove (that God exists) as one of your premises. The premise “the Bible is the word of God” already assumes the truth of the conclusion.

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• Rebuttal: The First Cause Argument

Claim:

Every event has a cause. The universe itself had a beginning, so it must have had a first cause, which must have been a creator God.


Response:

1. The assumption that every event has a cause, although common in our experience, is not necessarily universal. The apparent lack of cause for some events, such as radioactive decay, suggests that there might be exceptions. There are also hypotheses, such as alternate dimensions of time or an eternally oscillating universe, that allow a universe without a first cause.

2. By definition, a cause comes before an event. If time began with the universe, "before" does not even apply to it, and it is logically impossible that the universe be caused.

3. This claim raises the question of what caused God. If, as some claim, God does not need a cause, then by the same reasoning, neither does the universe.


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• Rebuttal: Design Arguments

Claim:
Complexity indicates intelligent design.

Response:
1. This is an argument from incredulity. Complexity usually means something is hard to understand. But the fact that one cannot understand how something came to be does not indicate that one may conclude it was designed. On the contrary, lack of understanding indicates that we must not conclude design or anything else.

Irreducible complexity and complex specified information are special cases of the "complexity indicates design" claim; they are also arguments from incredulity.

2. In the sort of design that we know about, simplicity is a design goal. Complexity arises to some extent through carelessness or necessity, but engineers work to make things as simple as possible. This is very different from what we see in life.

3. Complexity arises from natural causes: for example, in weather patterns and cave formations.

4. Complexity is poorly defined.

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Claim:
Intelligent design has explanatory power. It accounts for a wide range of biological facts. This makes it scientific.

Response:
1. Merely accounting for facts does not make a theory scientific. Saying "it's magic" can account for any fact anywhere but is as far from science as you can get. A theory has explanatory power if facts can be deduced from it. No facts have ever been deduced from ID theory. The theory is equivalent to saying, "it's magic."

2. "Intelligent" and "design" remain effectively undefined. A theory cannot have explanatory power if it is uncertain what the theory says in the first place.

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Claim:

Life looks intelligently designed because of its complexity and arrangement. As a watch implies a watchmaker, so life requires a designer.


Response:

1. Nobody argues that life is complicated. However, complexity is not the same as design. There are simple things that are designed and complex things that originate naturally. Complexity does not imply design; in fact, simplicity is a design goal in most designs.

2. In most cases, the inference of design is made because people cannot envision an alternative. This is simply an argument from incredulity. Historically, supernatural design has been attributed to lots of things that we now know form naturally, such as lightning, rainbows, and seasons.

3. Life as a whole looks very undesigned by human standards, for several reasons:
In known design, innovations that occur in one product quickly get incorporated into other, often very different, products. In eukaryotic life, innovations generally stay confined in one lineage. When the same sort of innovation occurs in different lineages (such as webs of spiders, caterpillars, and web spinners), the details of their implementation differ in the different lineages. When one traces lineages, one sees a great difference between life and design. (Eldredge has done this, comparing trilobites and cornets; Walker 2003.)
In design, form typically follows function. Yet life shows many examples of different forms with the same function (e.g., different structures making up the wings of birds, bats, insects, and pterodactyls; different organs for making webs in spiders, caterpillars, and web spinners; and at least eleven different types of insect ears), the same basic form with different functions (e.g., the same pattern of bones in a human hand, whale flipper, dog paw, and bat wing) and some structures and even entire organisms without apparent function (e.g., some vestigial organs, creatures living isolated in inaccessible caves and deep underground).
As mentioned above, life is complex. Design aims for simplicity.
For almost all designed objects, the manufacture of the object is separate from any function of the object itself. All living objects reproduce themselves.
Life lacks plan. There are no specifications of living structures and processes. Genes do not fully describe the phenotype of an organism. Sometimes in the absence of genes, structure results anyway. Organisms, unlike designed systems, are self-constructing in an environmental context.
Life is wasteful. Most organisms do not reproduce, and most fertilized zygotes die before growing much. A designed process would be expected to minimize this waste.
Life includes many examples of systems that are jury-rigged out of parts that were used for another purpose. These are what we would expect from evolution, not from an intelligent designer. For example vertebrate eyes have a blind spot because the retinal nerves are in front of the photoreceptors. Orchids that provide a platform for pollinating insects to land on, the stem of the flower has a half twist to move the platform to the lower side of the flower.
Life is highly variable. In almost every species, there is a spread of values for anything you care to measure. The "information" that specifies life is of very low tolerance in engineering terms. There are few standards.
4. Life is nasty. If life is designed, then death, disease, and decay also must be designed since they are integral parts of life. This is a standard problem of apologetics. Of course, many designed things are also nasty (think of certain weapons), but if the designer is supposed to have moral standards, then it is added support against the design hypothesis.

5. The process of evolution can be considered a design process, and the complexity and arrangement we see in life are much closer to what we would expect from evolution than from known examples of intelligent design. Indeed, engineers now use essentially the same processes as evolution to find solutions to problems that would be intractably complex otherwise.

6. Does evolution itself look designed? When you consider that some sort of adaptive mechanism would be necessary on the changing earth if life were to survive, then if life were designed, evolution or something like it would have to be designed into it.

7. Claiming to be able to recognize design in life implies that nonlife is different, that is, not designed. To claim that life is recognisably designed is to claim that an intelligent designer did not create the rest of the universe.

8. As it stands, the design claim makes no predictions, so it is unscientific and useless. It has generated no research at all.


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• Rebuttal: My religious text is scientifically and historically accurate

Claim:

My religious text’s accuracy on various scientific and historical points shows its overall accuracy.


Response:

1. The accuracy of the text is not remarkable. All of its accurate points can be explained by simple observation of nature or by selective interpretation of scriptures.

2. Accuracy on individual points does not indicate overall accuracy. Just about every thesis that is wrong overall still has some accurate points in it.

3. Claims about accuracy assume that the purpose of the religious text is to document scientific data. There is not the slightest indication that the text was ever intended as a scientific textbook. It is intended to teach people about God; even those who claim scientific accuracy for it use it with that intent.

4. Specifically, the Bible is not entirely accurate. If its value is made to depend on scientific accuracy, it becomes valueless when people find errors in it, as some people invariably will.

5. If occasional scientific accuracy shows overall accuracy of the text, then the same conclusion must be granted to the Bible, Qur'an, Zend Avesta, and several other works from other religions, all of which can make the same claims to scientific accuracy.

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• Rebuttal: Prophecies prove the accuracy of my religious text

Claim:

The religious text contains many prophecies that have accurately been fulfilled, proving it is a divine source.


Response:

1. There are several mundane ways in which a prediction of the future can be fulfilled:
Retrodiction. The "prophecy" can be written or modified after the events fulfilling it have already occurred.
Vagueness. The prophecy can be worded in such a way that people can interpret any outcome as a fulfillment. Nostradomus's prophecies are all of this type. Vagueness works particularly well when people are religiously motivated to believe the prophecies.
Inevitability. The prophecy can predict something that is almost sure to happen, such as the collapse of a city. Since nothing lasts forever, the city is sure to fall someday. If it has not, it can be said that according to prophecy, it will.
Denial. One can claim that the fulfilling events occurred even if they have not. Or, more commonly, one can forget that the prophecy was ever made.
Self-fulfillment. A person can act deliberately to satisfy a known prophecy.
There are no prophecies in religious texts that cannot easily fit into one or more of those categories.

2. In biblical times, prophecies were not simply predictions. They were warnings of what could or would happen if things did not change. They were meant to influence people's behavior. If the people heeded the prophecy, the events would not come to pass. A fulfilled prophecy was a failed prophecy, because it meant people did not heed the warning.

3. Specifically, the Bible contains failed prophecies, in the sense that things God said would happen did not (Skeptic's Annotated Bible n.d.). For example:
Joshua said that God would, without fail, drive out the Jebusites and Canaanites, among others (Josh. 3:9-10). But those tribes were not driven out (Josh. 15:63, 17:12-13).
Isaiah 17:1-3 says that Damascus will cease to be a city and be deserted forever, yet it is inhabited still.
Ezekiel said Egypt would be made an uninhabited wasteland for forty years (29:10-14), and Nebuchadrezzar would plunder it (29:19-20). Neither happened.

4. Other religions claim many fulfilled prophecies, too.

5. For Christians, divinity is not shown by miracles. The Bible itself says true prophecies may come elsewhere than from God (Deut. 13:1-3), as may other miracles (Exod. 7:22, Matt. 4:8).

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• Rebuttal: Rebuttal: First Law of Thermodynamics Claim

Claim:

The first law of thermodynamics says matter/energy cannot come from nothing. Therefore, the universe itself could not have formed naturally.


Response:

Formation of the universe from nothing need not violate conservation of energy. The gravitational potential energy of a gravitational field is a negative energy. When all the gravitational potential energy is added to all the other energy in the universe, it might sum to zero (Guth 1997, 9-12,271-276; Tryon 1973).

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• Rebuttal: Creationism explains what science cannot

Claim:

Cosmologists cannot explain where space, time, energy, and the laws of physics came from.


Response:

1. Some questions are harder to answer than others. But although we do not have a full understanding of the origin of the universe, we are not completely in the dark. We know, for example, that space comes from the expansion of the universe. The total energy of the universe may be zero. Cosmologists have hypotheses for the other questions that are consistent with observations (Hawking 2001). For example, it is possible that there is more than one dimension of time, the other dimension being unbounded, so there is no overall origin of time. Another possibility is that the universe is in an eternal cycle without beginning or end. Each big bang might end in a big crunch to start a new cycle (Steinhardt and Turok 2002) or at long intervals, our universe collides with a mirror universe, creating the universe anew (Seife 2002).

One should keep in mind that our experiences in everyday life are poor preparation for the extreme and bizarre conditions one encounters in cosmology. The stuff cosmologists deal with is very hard to understand. To reject it because of that, though, would be to retreat into an argument from incredulity (fallacy).

2. Creationists cannot explain origins at all. Saying "God did it" is not an explanation, because it is not tied to any objective evidence. It does not rule out any possibility or even any impossibility. It does not address questions of "how" and "why," and it raises questions such as "which God?" and "how did God originate?" In the explaining game, cosmologists are far out in front.

As a bit of help.
 

SeCKSiiMiNh

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Firstly, it's spelled "you're". Secondly, evil IS our fault. It's not a blame game. It's nobody's fault but our own for sinning.
god gave us the capacity to do evil. i mean, we humans could produce a robot and not give it the function to kill - not counting skynet ofc :)

Do you know the story of Adam and Eve? They lived in harmony with nature until they were deceived by the serpent and ate the forbidden fruit from the tree of knowledge. That is the essential origin of sin, and the passage shows us it was the creations' choice to sin as a result of deception and temptation. Did God create that event intentionally? Probably.
only a fool could believe in the story of adam and eve - for obvious reasons.

Since when does the price of a Bible affect its quality of meaning? What if a homeless man wants to buy a Bible with what little money he has, is it still unacceptable in your eyes? Do they have to be expensive to mean more?
lol i'm not gunna bother



Lastly, can you prove he doesn't exist?
prove that santa clause doesn't exist. the flying spaghetti monster. allah. jehova. gremlins. unicorns. harry potter-esque magic. the greek gods. egyptian gods. the dream time. ghosts. the tooth fairy. the male g spot.

lol to sum up, stop contaminating the internet with your ridiculous thoughts. theres enough shit on here.

and also, get off the internet. yo mumma needs to use the net.
 

Geoffo11

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For my own sake I'm just going to stop posting in this thread. I could not be bothered to argue.
 

-Hey-

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Agreed. Unfortunately, it seems that Christians are stuck in circular reasoning.

If god is on my side, I can justify anything. Too many times do you watch CI and hear about how Jesus told me murder my family. Well, if he did, then it MUST OF BEEN OKAY.... Also, you cant disprove God, but you certainly cannot prove him, AND MORE THEN THAT, you cannot use what people have said, 2000 years ago+, to justify why you are more logical then me, if i dont believe in god. The onus is not on me to disprove god, the onus is on you to prove his existence. If you cannot, then i can say im an alien, and dont need to justify myself, because people have faith in what ive told them.


If i cannot prove that im an alien, i am not, until it is proven that i am.


Thanks Mr Highhorse. Think outside the bible.
 

-Hey-

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For my own sake I'm just going to stop posting in this thread. I could not be bothered to argue.
Praise the LORD! HAHA! Until next time...


Let me just say one more thing.

You cant go off the Bible to explain the existance of God. Its unfeasible. There is no more logic in that, (and truth), then me just speculating. You have no evidence. Go and find some.
 

Garygaz

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YEAH MATE. COOL. Even though the 'old 'heavy' stone arguement' actually is a 'Omnipotence Paradox' and is the most important aspect to consider when considering the validity of the Christian God. Simply because, he is regarded as Omnipotent. So, if you take away his Omnipotence, you then take away the fundamental teachings of the bible, which in turn puts pressure on the bible's accuracy as the 'word of god'.
I'm not religiously inclined though you have to admit that hypothetically if a god existed it would be pretty futile to use our reasoning/logic to prove/disprove the existence of something infinitely more powerful in its logic/intelligence then us.
 

aboudism

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Immanuel Kant rejected not only the ontological argument but the teleological and cosmological arguments as well, based on his theory that reason is too limited to know anything beyond human experience. However, he did argue that religion could be established as presupposed by the workings of morality in the human mind ("practical reason"). God's existence is a necessary presupposition of there being any moral judgments that are objective, that go beyond mere relativistic moral preferences; such judgments require standards external to any human mind-that is, they presume God's mind.
 

Scorch

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Immanuel Kant rejected not only the ontological argument but the teleological and cosmological arguments as well, based on his theory that reason is too limited to know anything beyond human experience. However, he did argue that religion could be established as presupposed by the workings of morality in the human mind ("practical reason"). God's existence is a necessary presupposition of there being any moral judgments that are objective, that go beyond mere relativistic moral preferences; such judgments require standards external to any human mind-that is, they presume God's mind.
But Immanuel Kant also wrote in a time where science had not yet begun to understand the way that such moral statements we consider objective and that are more universal through societies all over the world are simply statements mirroring the biological and sociological realities of our species and the world we inhabit.

Those timeless and universal ideas, such as an aversion to murder and theft, are the ones that are biologically ingrained into us, upon which we have invented morality. The ones that break down, such as aversion to homosexuality, are the ones that are not based on biological realities but instead were established thousands of years into the history of human culture based on societal discourse and imposition. As we learn about the world around us and discover more and more, these barriers and impositions are broken down.
 

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The question is not wether or not God exists. It is wether or not Christians, Muslims, Jews and the like, can accept that they have NO proof concerning the existence of god, outside of their books. Even writers outside of their historical timeframe and religious doctrines are vague and unclear. '"Thank the Lord"? That sounded like a prayer. A prayer in a public school. God has no place within these walls, just like facts don't have place within organized religion" - Superintendent Chalmers.

Speaks for itself.:hammer:
 

mirakon

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But Immanuel Kant also wrote in a time where science had not yet begun to understand the way that such moral statements we consider objective and that are more universal through societies all over the world are simply statements mirroring the biological and sociological realities of our species and the world we inhabit.

Those timeless and universal ideas, such as an aversion to murder and theft, are the ones that are biologically ingrained into us, upon which we have invented morality. The ones that break down, such as aversion to homosexuality, are the ones that are not based on biological realities but instead were established thousands of years into the history of human culture based on societal discourse and imposition. As we learn about the world around us and discover more and more, these barriers and impositions are broken down.
Perhaps, however you seem to have missed the central point of his argument. The materialism of science and logic, and their universal truth, seem to be taken axiomatically as irrefutable and fact.

Science is based on observation and therefore is 'flawed' in the sense that it cannot deal with immaterial concepts. Logic is 'flawed' as it is based on the manipulation of semantics. Logic is taken as truth because it aids us with progress, the only reason why it exists, and hence is warped into what we wish to perceive so that the world makes sense. The foundation of logic and reason as undeniable should be questioned just as we question that of God's 'irrefutible' truth.

Scince is limited as I said before, based on the observations of human beings. That which we cannot immediately perceive doesn't imply it doesn't exist, merely that it is not a physical reality. How are we to know that there is no immaterialism beyond physical reality. The concept that there is only matter, that immaterialism is nothing was philosophically obliterated in ages past.
 

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