Is there any point trying to reason with people whose worldview depends on the denial of cause? And, if they can't comprehend cause and effect does that mean that they have a reprobate mind?
Reprobate Mind
We (most of us anyway) have a conscience. When we do something wrong we feel bad about it. We may even fear the consequences of what we've done, karma, coming back on us because we reap what we sow.
What Caused the Universe?
We (that's me and the Holy spirit) are investigating how people regard the relationship of cause and effect by evaluating the responses we get to the question: what caused the universe?
Nonunicornism
Atheist science trolls (ASTs) pull apparently random stuff out of thin air in their eagerness to mock people of faith, but there are some recognizable patterns. One of them is to invoke a nonentity called Nonunicornism.
July 31st
The fifth axiom of popular science (SciPop) is Humanity is a product of biological evolution. It's wishful thinking, an inductive rationalization of the premise of evolution.
July 30th
The fourth axiom of popular science (SciPop) is "nuclear decay has always been constant." It's wishful thinking, a way to induce a rationalization of radiometric data to make rocks look older than they really are.
The Theory of Evolution
Evolution, naturally, goes back to Sir Charles Darwin and his infamous book: On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life.
July 29th
The third axiom of SciPop is stars are distant suns and galaxies. It's part of Galileo's Bluff. It's part of Galileo's Bluff, wishful thinking, an inductive rationalization of the premise that stars are distant suns and galaxies.
July 28th
If it's good enough for Star Trek, it's good enough for popular science (SciPop). Besides, if you've seen it in a Star Trek episode you already believe it. Slam dunk.
July 27th
There's no evidence for dark matter. It's a placeholder term for an unknown phenomenon in the popular science narrative of godless existence (SciPop).
