Where Religious Belief And Disbelief Meet


Recommended Posts

?

As a theory it is valid, as a field tested truth its not. Empirical observation trumps theory anytime.
?

You could use Einstein to demonstrate the point but if you looked at history, his 1905 doctoral thesis was the one that shook the ground. That automatically granted him some credential because he was a PhD.

As a test, why don't try submitting a paper to a Neurological Journal and see if they like your work?

Remember our discussion on the Fat is bad theme. I clearly demonstrated that accepted peer reviewed science that fat is bad and a causative risk factor fro health was false.

Wouldn't say it's false. As stated many times before, fat is not bad. "Too much fat" is bad. The obesity paradox does not justify a motion to reverse our position on obesity.

Presumably, you have read about the advantages and disadvantages of both techniques. You may want to go back to those sources. Accepting one but not the other is weird.

No it's not weird. EEG is a very coarse analog measurement of brain activity. What you see is what you get.

FMRI is a very sophisticated abstract mathematical model representing with a good margin of doubt the oxygenation of the brain. It also assumes blandly that more oxygenation equals more activity regarding the phenomenon you are studying. Which may or may not be the case.

petrossa, grab a biochemistry textbook and a physiology textbook. It will help.

Yeah, like i'm going to dump a 1000 links to articles on the matter. Since i at minimum shown a correlation between religiosity and a defined are of the brain exists its way beyond the scope of this discussion to 'prove' it.?

I posed a known fact, founded it with enough venue for your own confirmation. If you say it's not true its up to you to disprove it.

In the literature, religiosity turns up a small amount of articles. If it was such an established field, I would have known about it. The fact that people are still researching sufficiently suggests that what you're saying is at best conjectural. You can draw on brain lesion and TCM study cases but as long as we can't establish what is going under the hood, there is still something that is calling out for us.?

Talked about this before. Philosophy without reference to justifiable empirical evidence. That's the traditional psychology style of doing things. I don't refute it because any theory in psychology is a good theory as long as it makes sense. True or not. No one knows.?

It says completely nothing Lam. The guy puts 30 persons in a lab, poses some inane questions which to his mind consist of religious/non religious content (angels, come on. I first thought it was a joke when i read it)

makes colorized images cleaned from a data analysis on oxygenation of the brain and comes up with:

I've seen something, don't know what, but since i asked questions which i think are relevant to religion it must be something which has to do with belief systems.

OK. If you're so good, take your time to design a substitute experiment. I'm interested.

This is exactly the kind of science which makes me believe the often heard complaint that the level of education gets dumbed down to accommodate for the less intelligent.

The 60's thinking that everyone must have a proper chance at education, so to open up education we lower the standards.

This film is meant as a satire, but its more true than is comfortable:

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0387808/quotes

Pvt. Joe Bowers: [addressing Congress] There was a time when reading wasn't just for fags. And neither was writing. People wrote books and movies. Movies with stories, that made you care about whose ass it was and why it was farting. And I believe that time can come again!

Well, I'll let you in on a secret: in science, in addition to writing papers with all the usual jargons, you have to practise writing for the general audience, i.e. write in a way that any person with reasonable literacy can read and understand the topic perfectly.?

Also in science, you learn to respect each other's expertise. That's why whenever my friends from other disciplines discuss their things, I listen and learn from them. More so with masters and PhD people.

And for your information, the dumbing down of education actually occurs in pre-tertiary levels. That's why lots of high school kids struggle when they enter university. A few people told me that they barely coped with my uni's standards even though they came from the same course but of another university. Different institutions set different levels of courseworks but the general consensus is high school is a world different from uni.

?

You could use Einstein to demonstrate the point but if you looked at history, his 1905 doctoral thesis was the one that shook the ground. That automatically granted him some credential because he was a PhD.

As a test, why don't try submitting a paper to a Neurological Journal and see if they like your work?

Well, I'll let you in on a secret: in science, in addition to writing papers with all the usual jargons, you have to practise writing for the general audience, i.e. write in a way that any person with reasonable literacy can read and understand the topic perfectly.?

Also in science, you learn to respect each other's expertise. That's why whenever my friends from other disciplines discuss their things, I listen and learn from them. More so with masters and PhD people.

And for your information, the dumbing down of education actually occurs in pre-tertiary levels. That's why lots of high school kids struggle when they enter university. A few people told me that they barely coped with my uni's standards even though they came from the same course but of another university. Different institutions set different levels of courseworks but the general consensus is high school is a world different from uni.

Now read the above again Lam. Its staring you right in the face in your own words.

a) There once was a time where science was not a cult, but an endeavor anyone could partake in. It got us lasers, nuclear energy and microwaves.

b) Since science has become a cult, only members are allowed to partake, so me submitting a new theory of everything to any science paper would get stranded on my CV. The guy opening the mail would look at my name, my CV, ?and throw my paper in the dustbin.

c) Now that science is a cult is has become a self centered bastion of preconceived notions, which get perpetuated by forming the cult leaders themselves. Climategate is not an incident, it's structural. Peer review has become a system for filtering out dissent, data manipulation the norm.

The system is flooded by mediocre members whose only goal is to score. So you get weirdos having found the cure for MS, others claiming to be able to follow the flow of conscious thought by looking at a computer simulation.

Now read the above again Lam. Its staring you right in the face in your own words.

a) There once was a time where science was not a cult, but an endeavor anyone could partake in. It got us lasers, nuclear energy and microwaves.

Even in the past, science was something that only people who possessed knowledge could participate in. If you look at it rationally, science was a lot more conservative back then than it is now.

Those inventions that you name were achieved by people who had training in the respective fields.

b) Since science has become a cult, only members are allowed to partake, so me submitting a new theory of everything to any science paper would get stranded on my CV. The guy opening the mail would look at my name, my CV, ?and throw my paper in the dustbin.

You have no research experience or any formal qualification in neuroscience, apart from reading articles and blogs. You don't have the required detailed knowledge about the other disciplines that are critical in neuroscience such as physiology, biochemistry and physics. How do you expect the peer reviewers to put some weight on your proposals? To qualify as a researcher, you must first complete at least an Honours degree where you take part in a project which you design yourself. That gives you the skills, experience and critical thinking needed. Then as your works begin to cumulate, you gain reputation and a higher credential.

With Einstein, he studied in the field and published the thesis in his field.?

If you're so passionate about this, go back to uni and pursue the road of research.

c) Now that science is a cult is has become a self centered bastion of preconceived notions, which get perpetuated by forming the cult leaders themselves. Climategate is not an incident, it's structural. Peer review has become a system for filtering out dissent, data manipulation the norm.

The system is flooded by mediocre members whose only goal is to score. So you get weirdos having found the cure for MS, others claiming to be able to follow the flow of conscious thought by looking at a computer simulation.

Refer to what I said above. I can read a lot about pathology, pharmacology, etc. but would I try replacing doctors? No. Because they have what I don't: proper training.

On that note, we should conclude it here. Sorry if I was too harsh, I just have to say what is right.

Edited by lamchopz
You have no research experience or any formal qualification in neuroscience, apart from reading articles and blogs. You don't have the required detailed knowledge about the other disciplines that are critical in neuroscience such as physiology, biochemistry and physics. How do you expect the peer reviewers to put some weight on your proposals? To qualify as a researcher, you must first complete at least an Honours degree where you take part in a project which you design yourself. That gives you the skills, experience and critical thinking needed. Then as your works begin to cumulate, you gain reputation and a higher credential.

Refer to what I said above. I can read a lot about pathology, pharmacology, etc. but would I try replacing doctors? No. Because they have what I don't: proper training.

On that note, we should conclude it here. Sorry if I was too harsh, I just have to say what is right.

Harsh? No you just voiced the opinion of your cult. WE decide who gets past the gates, WE set the rules of engagement, its our cult. WE don't suffer criticism, and surely not from the uneducated masses.

Einstein sure doesn't qualify being a mere maths teacher.

And for me, i call Groucho Marx on this:

I don't care to belong to a club that accepts people like me as members.

Around 1886 Albert Einstein began his school career in Munich. As well as his violin lessons, which he had from age six to age thirteen, he also had religious education at home where he was taught Judaism. Two years later he entered the Luitpold Gymnasium and after this his religious education was given at school. He studied mathematics, in particular the calculus, beginning around 1891.

In 1894 Einstein's family moved to Milan but Einstein remained in Munich. In 1895 Einstein failed an examination that would have allowed him to study for a diploma as an electrical engineer at the Eidgen?ssische Technische Hochschule in Zurich. >Einstein renounced German citizenship in 1896 and was to be stateless for a number of years. He did not even apply for Swiss citizenship until 1899, citizenship being granted in 1901.

Following the failing of the entrance exam to the ETH, Einstein attended secondary school at Aarau planning to use this route to enter the ETH in Zurich. While at Aarau he wrote an essay (for which was only given a little above half marks!) in which he wrote of his plans for the future, see [13]:-

If I were to have the good fortune to pass my examinations, I would go to Zurich. I would stay there for four years in order to study mathematics and physics. I imagine myself becoming a teacher in those branches of the natural sciences, choosing the theoretical part of them. Here are the reasons which lead me to this plan. Above all, it is my disposition for abstract and mathematical thought, and my lack of imagination and practical ability.

Indeed Einstein succeeded with his plan graduating in 1900 as a teacher of mathematics and physics. One of his friends at ETH was Marcel Grossmann who was in the same class as Einstein. Einstein tried to obtain a post, writing to Hurwitz who held out some hope of a position but nothing came of it. Three of Einstein's fellow students, including Grossmann, were appointed assistants at ETH in Zurich but clearly Einstein had not impressed enough and still in 1901 he was writing round universities in the hope of obtaining a job, but without success.

He did manage to avoid Swiss military service on the grounds that he had flat feet and varicose veins. By mid 1901 he had a temporary job as a teacher, teaching mathematics at the Technical High School in Winterthur. Around this time he wrote:-

I have given up the ambition to get to a university ...>

Another temporary position teaching in a private school in Schaffhausen followed. Then Grossmann's father tried to help Einstein get a job by recommending him to the director of the patent office in Bern. Einstein was appointed as a technical expert third class.

Einstein worked in this patent office from 1902 to 1909, holding a temporary post when he was first appointed, but by 1904 the position was made permanent and in 1906 he was promoted to technical expert second class. While in the Bern patent office he completed an astonishing range of theoretical physics publications, written in his spare time without the benefit of close contact with scientific literature or colleagues.

Harsh? No you just voiced the opinion of your cult. WE decide who gets past the gates, WE set the rules of engagement, its our cult. WE don't suffer criticism, and surely not from the uneducated masses.

Nar, it's your opinion that science is a cult. In every field, you're naturally more respected if you have the proper training. That goes for economics, psychological therapy, engineering, architecture, etc. Not just science. Look around you, petrossa. The evidence is all there. ?

Einstein sure doesn't qualify being a mere maths teacher.

And for me, i call Groucho Marx on this:

I don't care to belong to a club that accepts people like me as members.

Around 1886 Albert Einstein began his school career in Munich. As well as his violin lessons, which he had from age six to age thirteen, he also had religious education at home where he was taught Judaism. Two years later he entered the Luitpold Gymnasium and after this his religious education was given at school. He studied mathematics, in particular the calculus, beginning around 1891.

In 1894 Einstein's family moved to Milan but Einstein remained in Munich.In 1895 Einstein failed an examination that would have allowed him to study for a diploma as an electrical engineer at the Eidgen?ssische Technische Hochschule in Zurich. b>Einstein renounced German citizenship in 1896 and was to be stateless for a number of years. He did not even apply for Swiss citizenship until 1899, citizenship being granted in 1901.

Following the failing of the entrance exam to the ETH, Einstein attended secondary school at Aarau planning to use this route to enter the ETH in Zurich. While at Aarau he wrote an essay (for which was only given a little above half marks!) in which he wrote of his plans for the future, see [13]:-

If I were to have the good fortune to pass my examinations, I would go to Zurich. I would stay there for four years in order to study mathematics and physics. I imagine myself becoming a teacher in those branches of the natural sciences, choosing the theoretical part of them. Here are the reasons which lead me to this plan. Above all, it is my disposition for abstract and mathematical thought, and my lack of imagination and practical ability.

Indeed Einstein succeeded with his plan graduating in 1900 as a teacher of mathematics and physics. One of his friends at ETH was Marcel Grossmann who was in the same class as Einstein. Einstein tried to obtain a post, writing to Hurwitz who held out some hope of a position but nothing came of it. Three of Einstein's fellow students, including Grossmann, were appointed assistants at ETH in Zurich but clearly Einstein had not impressed enough and still in 1901 he was writing round universities in the hope of obtaining a job, but without success.

He did manage to avoid Swiss military service on the grounds that he had flat feet and varicose veins. By mid 1901 he had a temporary job as a teacher, teaching mathematics at the Technical High School in Winterthur. Around this time he wrote:- I have given up the ambition to get to a university ...b>

Another temporary position teaching in a private school in Schaffhausen followed. Then Grossmann's father tried to help Einstein get a job by recommending him to the director of the patent office in Bern. Einstein was appointed as a technical expert third class.

Einstein worked in this patent office from 1902 to 1909, holding a temporary post when he was first appointed, but by 1904 the position was made permanent and in 1906 he was promoted to technical expert second class. While in the Bern patent office he completed an astonishing range of theoretical physics publications, written in his spare time without the benefit of close contact with scientific literature or colleagues.

He graduated with a maths and physics degree. Why exactly wasn't he qualified to be a maths teacher?

Einstein is an exceptional and interesting case. He was born during the era of conservative education and most notably, his youth occurred after the conception of Maxwell's electromagnetism equations which were deemed the ultimate physics (it was the triumph of classical physics as we now know). The contemporary view at the time was that if you proposed something that could not utilise the known classical physics, you were largely in the wrong. This was what Einstein suffered when he was a kid because he saw something beyond the coursework. That is, he was [geniusu>[/b]b> that only came around every millennium and rose above the restrictive mindset that the time imposed. The groundbreaking proposition of energy-mass relation was entirely new to classical physics and Einstein himself was an advocate of the presence of atoms which was only recognised in chemistry. (But like anyone else, his ideas and many equations were based on his predecessors' works)

These days, you don't see that happening. If a student says something interesting and substantial, the idea may be pursued. As long as it is a good idea that can bsubstantiatedi>, it is worth a shot to consider it. That's how education has opened up over the past centuries. Science has taken a similar approach.?

What has remained is that as long as you don't have a proper training, you're likely not to be well received. That's the general rule that has been and always is. The same can be observed in other specialised fields such medicine, nursing, engineering, commerce, etc.?

Admittedly, university these days isn't the only way to become a success story but it takes ingenuity and luck to make it.

However, research is academic and the only way to be recognised in research is go through the usual procedure. Skills are what this procedure offer. What's so hard to get about it?

So let me finish this quarrel by citing my motivation:

I like your ideas. I like the fact that you pursued personal reading and forming your own opinions. However, you cross the line by displaying your arrogance: that is, you ridicule the people who actually went through years of training and are experts in their own fields while promulgating your own conjectures as if they're facts and nothing else matters. Do I make myself clear there?

A climategate is restricted to a small group. Yet, you mindlessly associate it to the entire scientific community which comprises thousands of individual groups in hundreds of different disciplines who are willing to give up thholidays, Christmas, New Year, etc. to see the end of what they consider a promising outcome that benefits the human race. It is the sort of dismissive, ignorant and arrogant attitude you have shown now and again that irked me.

Edited by lamchopz
Nar, it's your opinion that science is a cult. In every field, you're naturally more respected if you have the proper training. That goes for economics, philosophy, engineering, architecture, etc. Not just science. Look around you, petrossa. The evidence is all there. ?

It just has all the properties of a cult of late Lam. Let's replace einstein with bill gates if you will. Same thing, the guy wouldn't get a foot in the door.

Obviously being properly trained in research procedures helps. But imo by consistently lowering the schooling standards we have since a good 2 decades a whole lot of mediocre professionals in any field.

In fact mediocrity is the standard now, and being mediocre they are more obsessed with status quo than the advancement of science which results in a daily deluge of incredible 'scientific' claims which quite often contradict themselves or each other.

And the more this gets perceived by the uneducated masses the less credible science becomes. And this causes scientists to groupthink, ferociously fighting of any dissenting voice. They have created heir own little world of grantseeking, egoboosting claims in the knowledge that dissent is easily ridiculed by having a few of your friendly 'peers' write up a negative review.

Look at pharmaceuticals. Extremely toxic products get the go ahead based on 'peer reviewed' research.

Renewable energy, the latest craze. A flood of absurd studies go to 'prove' how it is feasible, the lone voice saying: but a perpetual motion machine is against the laws of nature gets blasted away in a sandstorm of peer reviewed disdain.

See the blue text in my previous post above. I went this far because of that. I had no interest in defending this particular study because the outcome is cursory and suggestive. It is the novelty of the outcome that I want to bring to everyone's attention. Neither I nor the authors advocated that the result was the everything of study of religiosity. More research is needed. Period.

See the blue text in my previous post above. I went this far because of that. I had no interest in defending this particular study because the outcome is cursory and suggestive. It is the novelty of the outcome that I want to bring to everyone's attention. Neither I nor the authors advocated that the result was the everything of study of religiosity. More research is needed. Period.

I think highly of you Lam, don't let my arrogance bother you. I am not much of a blind follower of authority i am afraid. I get prickly when reading yet another facetious claim, doesn't reflect on you personally so don't take it as such.

Climategate is not an incident, it's a porthole to settled science. This doesn't mean there aren't ****loads of enthusiastic integer people out there, it just means most Universities are now bastions of the settled order.

As an example, in the Netherlands all significant Uni's are politicized. And towards the leftwing politics.

Not to go into to great detail here, but the government actually stipulates the results they need and the Uni's provide the science to prove it's true.

I never thought of it as a personal attack on my character. I just think you should sometimes step back and appreciate what is happening, or if you want to input your opinion, have people consider it but don't outright dismiss the authors' proposal.

Had I not taken up a research project and seen it first hand, I would think the OP's study was funny. However, I now know that in research, there's nothing silly unless the design strays too far from conventions. The study mentioned conformed to the guidelines and accepted standards of neuroimaging (having the people read text/see pictures is a way to trigger cognitive processes). If they had used EEG to complement fMRI (which admittedly is tough work), the result would have been something more sensational but fMRI alone can serve as an indicator of something for future topic. My lecturer who majored in Physics but obtained PhD in physiology never saw anything wrong with fMRI and included it in his lecture on neuroimaging. If he (who obviously knows both physics and physiology a lot more than I do) still didn't see a problem with fMRI, I believe I can trust him.

Another point is that you totally forgot that I came from the Human Physiology background so while I have no idea what the other disciplines are doing (no doubt the climategate is a godforsaken mess), I know for a fact that most of the biological sciences (which make up numerous groups - private or institutional) don't yield to any political influences because the researchers simply provide the outcomes and recommendations, how the people use them is up to the people; nor the politicians can tell them what to do because the accuracy of the research means millions of lives are prolonged and saved. At my uni, a group didn't take their Christmas and New Year breaks because they were so close to the results involving promising treatment for sarcopenia. Such enthusiasm and dedication must not be tainted by association to the team (from another discipline) responsible for climategate.

I never thought of it as a personal attack on my character. I just think you should sometimes step back and appreciate what is happening, or if you want to input your opinion, have people consider it but don't outright dismiss the authors' proposal.

Glad to read that. We always have good discussions.?

As i wrote before, i already read the OP a while ago and had ample time to further look up how it fitted in with other literature on the subject because it was by accident a subject i researched very profoundly. Probably more profoundly then the OP since i'm not bound by any time/work issues nor am i preconceived by having a formal education in the field. Lets call it an open mind.

I was very exited at first when fmri studies which came out in general, hopeful it'd give a more detailed view without cutting someones head open. Which doesn't happen frequently enough and anyway the experiments done in the 60' are deemed unethical now.

After following up on researches done using fmri i started to realize its flaws as a tool.?

When i read this and other higher order research attempts i noticed a, let's say, eagerness to jump to conclusions. Which i voiced here.

I wasn't just shooting of my mouth.

The conclusions made from fMRI are usually indicative, not conclusive. Its purpose is to encourage more investigation into the brain region of interest. However, fMRI results are always accurate in pointing out the brain areas that are associated with stimulated tasks - how this association plays out will need to be further explored (fMRI gives the starting point; we then follow up on its outcome by using more laborious and sometimes invasive methods which may cost a fortune to do and at times require specificity, which fMRI provides). What you read is the standard set of suggestions that any author would draw from fMRI results. That's called "discussion" where they apply their interpretation based on conventional knowledge of the technique. It's how a paper is usually written. Its validity can only be confirmed by subsequent replications and further studies but as long as it conforms to guidelines, it's considered a valid finding.

The conclusions made from fMRI are usually indicative, not conclusive. Its purpose is to encourage more investigation into the brain region of interest. However, fMRI results are always accurate in pointing out the brain areas that are associated with stimulated tasks - how this association plays out will need to be further explored (fMRI gives the starting point; we then follow up on its outcome by using more laborious and sometimes invasive methods which may cost a fortune to do and at times require specificity, which fMRI provides). What you read is the standard set of suggestions that any author would draw from fMRI results. That's called "discussion" where they apply their interpretation based on conventional knowledge of the technique. It's how a paper is usually written. Its validity can only be confirmed by subsequent replications and further studies but as long as it conforms to guidelines, it's considered a valid finding.

Proper science at its best as you describe it. As usual the sensationalists mess it up in the public view.?

funny: http://neuroskeptic.blogspot.com/2009/09/f...-dead-fish.html

There's an old saying, especially preached here in the military:

"You'll never find an Athiest in a foxhole."

I still disagree with the way this "study" was carried out. But it does bring up some interesting questions.

The ones I posted above, along with examples like:

1. When someone is in a life-threatening postition- or at least believes themself to be- what area of the brain lights up when

they start yelling for help. Is it the same for athiests as it is for those believing in a Higher Power?

2. I would like to see the comparisson of someone lost in prayer and someone lost in meditation. (I firmly believe that

the basis of meditation is why prayer actually works.)

There's an old saying, especially preached here in the military:

"You'll never find an Athiest in a foxhole."

I still disagree with the way this "study" was carried out. But it does bring up some interesting questions.

The ones I posted above, along with examples like:

1. When someone is in a life-threatening postition- or at least believes themself to be- what area of the brain lights up when

they start yelling for help. Is it the same for athiests as it is for those believing in a Higher Power?

2. I would like to see the comparisson of someone lost in prayer and someone lost in meditation. (I firmly believe that

the basis of meditation is why prayer actually works.)

1) there have been crosscultural studies into the neardeath experience. Apparently it depends on the culture what kind of neardeath experience is most common. Also there have been results that the neardeath experience reflected the persons expectations. Criminals more frequently having a negative neardeath experience.

2) This is the case as far as current assumptions go this makes interesting reading: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/1828618/religionbrain.pdf

RELIGIOUS AND MYSTICAL STATES:

A NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL MODEL

by Eugene G. d’rlquili and Andrew B. Newberg

Abstract. This paper first considers the current confusion in categorizing and even describing mystical states, including experiences of God, the Void, and lesser religious experiences.

The paper presents the necessity of studying the neuropsychological substrate of such experiences both to understand them in greater depth and to help resolve scholarly confusion in this area. As a prelude to presenting a neuropsychological model, the basic principles of brain organization are reviewed, including hemispheri- city; primary, secondary, and tertiary sensory receptive areas; their motor analogues; prefrontosensorial polarity; and the integration of limbic functioning into cortical activity. A neuropsychological model for mystical states is then presented in terms of differential stimulation and deafferentation of various tertiary sensory association areas, along with integration of various patterns of limbiction areas, along with integration of various patterns of limbic stimulation. ?

Proper science at its best as you describe it. As usual the sensationalists mess it up in the public view.?

Limitation exists with study design. The OP's study was restricted (probably by funding problems which all researchers face) so it made the best of the results by making various suggestions. Remember in science, one paper is not the end point but only an open invitation for challenges and/or confirmations.

Well, that's the researcher's duty to report both corrected and uncorrected results as recommended. It is a fair point and it will be adopted sooner or later:

Some say that multiple comparisons correction is too conservative, and could lead to genuine activations being overlooked - throwing the baby salmon out with the bathwater, as it were. This is a legitimate point, but as Bennett says, in this case we should report both corrected and uncorrected results, to make it clear to the readers what is going on.

@McCordRm: religiosity doesn't seem to be a hot topic at the moment so don't expect lots of studies to roll out. With the advent of gene/cell therapy, a lot of research focus has been directed to neuropathology or exploring neural functions and their relationship to bodily controls (such as sustained sympathetic activity by the rostral ventrolateral medulla leads to pathological hypertension).

Limitation exists with study design. The OP's study was restricted (probably by funding problems which all researchers face) so it made the best of the results by making various suggestions. Remember in science, one paper is not the end point but only an open invitation for challenges and/or confirmations.

Well next time i challenge something try not to get irked?:rofl::

Nar. I repeatedly said that the OP put up some suggestions so everyone should take it at that because the authors did mention that more study was needed. I just didn't see how you could jump right in and say it was totally wrong (ugh). The OP's article wasn't even the original article. It just reported what the authors suggested.

The same goes for MS thread. The group found a high incidence of arteriosclerosis and MS so it set out to see if that was the case and potentially adding to our understanding. I pointed to the pathophysiology of stroke which, if you read in depth, took you by surprises because of the complex interactions at the molecular and organismic levels. As long as something has not been shown to be definitely wrong, it can be true.

Nar. I repeatedly said that the OP put up some suggestions so everyone should take it at that because the authors did mention that more study was needed. I just didn't see how you could jump right in and say it was totally wrong (ugh). The OP's article wasn't even the original article. It just reported what the authors suggested.

I did tell you i'd read the original study a while back and found many a fault with it and therefore discarded it for use in my religion blog.

@McCordRm: religiosity doesn't seem to be a hot topic at the moment so don't expect lots of studies to roll out. With the advent of gene/cell therapy, a lot of research focus has been directed to neuropathology or exploring neural functions and their relationship to bodily controls (such as sustained sympathetic activity by the rostral ventrolateral medulla leads to pathological hypertension).

Naw, when it comes to religion I don't really expect a whole lot on the intellectual level. It's the chicken and the egg arguement: I doubt we'll EVER be able to prove it one way or the other... but that doesn't stop people from arguing it incoherently 'till they're blue in the face. lol

Naw, when it comes to religion I don't really expect a whole lot on the intellectual level. It's the chicken and the egg arguement: I doubt we'll EVER be able to prove it one way or the other... but that doesn't stop people from arguing it incoherently 'till they're blue in the face. lol

A few centuries ago, laser was sci-fi. :)

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Weekend PC Game Deals: Steam Summer Sale 2026 Edition by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe Weekend PC Game Deals is where the hottest gaming deals from all over the internet are gathered into one place every week for your consumption. So kick back, relax, and hold on to your wallets. The Epic Games Store's freebie offer brought two more games to keep this week too. What you can grab this time are copies of RollerCoaster Tycoon 3 Complete Edition and Voidwrought. Roller Coaster Tycoon 3 is an enhanced version of the classic title that comes with enhancements like widescreen and 1080p resolution support. Its two expansion packs are included here too. Meanwhile, Voidwrought is a 2D action-platformer with tight platforming and high-speed combat against cosmic horrors. The double giveaway is slated to last until July 2. On the same day, I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream and River City Girls 2 will take the same freebie spot. The Humble Store introduced a couple of new game bundles earlier this week. The Going Rogue collection begins with Rogue Legacy, UnderMine, and None Shall Intrude in the starting tier for $5. If you pay the $10 it's asking to complete the bundle, you also get copies of Brutal Orchestra, Moros Protocol, Nightmare Reaper, Home Behind 2, and Lynked: Banner of the Spark. If it's fighting games you're looking for, the new Arc System Works Evo bundle is carrying plenty. The three tiers of this bundle that go up to $20 carry games like Melty Blood Actress Again Current Code, GUILTY GEAR Xrd REV 2, KILL la KILL - IF, Blazblue Cross Tag Battle, Guilty Gear -STRIVE-, Blazblue CentralFiction, and more. Big Deals One of the biggest sale events of the year, the Steam Summer Sale, has just kicked off, and that means almost every PC game available is now featuring discounts. We have plenty of games for you to look over in our special hand-picked big deals list for the weekend below: Baldur's Gate 3 – $44.99 on Steam Anno 117: Pax Romana – $41.99 on Steam S.T.A.L.K.E.R. 2: Heart of Chornobyl – $41.99 on Steam Indiana Jones and the Great Circle – $41.99 on Steam NINJA GAIDEN 4 – $41.99 on Steam Dying Light: The Beast – $39.59 on Steam Ghost of Tsushima DIRECTOR'S CUT – $35.99 on Steam Battlefield 6 – $34.99 on Steam Cities: Skylines II – $34.99 on Steam The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered – $34.99 on Steam The Outer Worlds 2 – $34.99 on Steam Borderlands 4 – $34.99 on Steam Sid Meier's Civilization VII – $34.99 on Steam Mafia: The Old Country – $34.99 on Steam Split Fiction – $32.49 on Steam Assassin’s Creed Shadows – $31.49 on Steam HELLDIVERS 2 – $29.99 on Steam Diablo IV – $29.99 on Steam ARC Raiders – $29.99 on Steam Forza Horizon 5 – $29.99 on Steam Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice - GOTY Edition – $29.99 on Steam No Rest for the Wicked – $27.99 on Steam Metaphor: ReFantazio – $27.99 on Steam Ready or Not – $24.99 on Steam Kingdom Come: Deliverance II – $23.99 on Steam No Man's Sky – $23.99 on Steam Marvel’s Spider-Man Remastered – $23.99 on Steam DOOM: The Dark Ages – $23.09 on Steam Mewgenics – $22.49 on Steam Persona 3 Reload – $20.99 on Steam Hades II – $20.99 on Steam Two Point Museum – $20.09 on Steam Mount & Blade II: Bannerlord – $19.99 on Steam God of War – $19.99 on Steam Warhammer 40,000: Rogue Trader – $19.99 on Steam Returnal – $19.79 on Steam Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 2 – $17.99 on Steam Cyberpunk 2077 – $17.99 on Steam Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora – $17.99 on Steam Star Wars Outlaws – $17.49 on Steam REPLACED – $15.99 on Steam Days Gone – $15.99 on Steam Age of Mythology: Retold – $14.99 on Steam Crusader Kings III – $14.99 on Steam Red Dead Redemption 2 – $14.99 on Steam Half-Life: Alyx – $14.99 on Steam Grand Theft Auto V Enhanced – $14.99 on Steam EA SPORTS FC 26 – $13.99 on Steam The Crew Motorfest – $13.99 on Steam Sea of Thieves: 2026 Edition – $13.99 on Steam Age of Empires IV: Anniversary Edition – $13.99 on Steam Dead Cells – $12.49 on Steam Schedule I – $11.99 on Steam BioShock: The Collection – $11.99 on Steam Fable Anniversary – $11.54 on Steam Hearts of Iron IV – $9.99 on Steam Kerbal Space Program – $9.99 on Steam Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Wildlands – $9.99 on Steam The Riftbreaker – $8.99 on Steam Stardew Valley – $8.99 on Steam Total War: WARHAMMER III – $8.99 on Steam Sons Of The Forest – $8.99 on Steam Assassin's Creed Origins – $8.99 on Steam Risk of Rain 2 – $8.24 on Steam Tom Clancy’s The Division 2 – $7.49 on Steam Call of Duty: Modern Warfare® II – $6.99 on Steam CONTROL Ultimate Edition – $5.99 on Steam Dead Space – $5.99 on Steam The Quarry – $5.99 on Steam RV There Yet? – $5.59 on Steam Euro Truck Simulator 2 – $4.99 on Steam Terraria – $4.99 on Steam PEAK – $4.95 on Steam Detroit: Become Human – $3.99 on Steam Far Cry 3 – $3.99 on Steam A Plague Tale: Innocence – $3.99 on Steam The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt – $3.99 on Steam Assetto Corsa Competizione – $3.99 on Steam PAYDAY 2 – $2.99 on Steam Wreckfest – $2.99 on Steam Rain World – $2.49 on Steam Watch_Dogs 2 – $2.49 on Steam Planet Zoo – $2.24 on Steam Bendy and the Dark Revival – $1.99 on Steam CARRION – $1.99 on Steam The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth – $1.49 on Steam Plague Inc: Evolved – $1.49 on Steam Don't Starve Together – $1.49 on Steam Metro 2033 Redux – $0.99 on Steam Hotline Miami – $0.99 on Steam RollerCoaster Tycoon 3 Complete Edition – $0 on Epic Store Voidwrought – $0 on Epic Store DRM-free Specials The GOG store is in the middle of its own summer sale. Here are some highlights from the DRM-free store: Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 - $39.99 on GOG Hollow Knight: Silksong - $14.99 on GOG Resident Evil Bundle - $12.49 on GOG Tomb Raider I-III Remastered Starring Lara Croft - $11.99 on GOG Alpha Protocol - $9.99 on GOG Vampire: The Masquerade - Bloodlines™ - $9.99 on GOG Fallout: New Vegas Ultimate Edition - $9.99 on GOG Disco Elysium - The Final Cut - $9.99 on GOG Dino Crisis Bundle - $8.49 on GOG Cold Fear - $8.25 on GOG Star Trek: Armada II - $7.49 on GOG Star Trek: Starfleet Command III - $7.49 on GOG Warhammer: Dark Omen - $7.49 on GOG Hollow Knight - $7.49 on GOG Mortal Kombat Trilogy - $6.49 on GOG Soldier of Fortune: Platinum Edition - $6.49 on GOG Heroes of Might and Magic 3: Complete - $4.99 on GOG SWAT 4: Gold Edition - $4.99 on GOG RollerCoaster Tycoon 2: Triple Thrill Pack - $4.99 on GOG Stranglehold - $4.99 on GOG ANSTOSS 3: Der Fußballmanager - $4.79 on GOG Firewatch - $3.99 on GOG Emperor: Rise of the Middle Kingdom - $2.99 on GOG Myst Masterpiece Edition - $2.99 on GOG Settlers 3: Ultimate Collection - $2.49 on GOG World in Conflict: Complete Edition - $2.49 on GOG Keep in mind that availability and pricing for some deals could vary depending on the region. That's it for our pick of this weekend's PC game deals, and hopefully, some of you have enough self-restraint not to keep adding to your ever-growing backlogs. As always, there are an enormous number of other deals ready and waiting all over the interwebs, as well as on services you may already subscribe to if you comb through them, so keep your eyes open for those, and have a great weekend.
    • Yup, that's a doozy right there 😄
    • It's a bundle of tools created by a variety of people, so things can go wrong sometimes. It's a great addition to Windows, and I use a lot of the tools on a daily basis. Also, it's still a 0.**** release so quick updates are to be expected 😉
    • Oh, I did. And it's even worse than I was hoping! Besides a lot of techno-babble jargon (yes I understand 100% of it but it's still all just techno-babble) there's 2 key points that make me super-weary about even considering testing this out. -- By default, after installation, a relay is automatically set up, so you do not need to care about that. * Non-chatmail apps use email servers as a long-term message archive while chatmail clients use email servers for ephemeral instant message relay. * Supporting the full variety of classic email setups would require considerable development and maintenance efforts, and complicate making chatmail-based messaging more resilient, reliable and fast. -- Basically, the end-user device is the 'server' (relay) so there is NO ARCHIVING whatsoever because every message is necessarily ephemeral. Great for techno-paranoia (and for illicit activities preferring no tracks to cover) but terrible for everybody else. It's also ironically contradictory to engineering principles of redundancies besides the transport layers due to the explicit absence of any persistent storage. Instead of 'classic email address' retaining multi-GB messaging archives on its server, now every device must retain 100% of those storage demands. (Email messages were originally meant to be short correspondences, not the multi-MB attachments boondoggle that now exists with unlimited spam engines flooding every potential recipient.) Any device swap or reset (or loss) makes the entire message history go bye-bye forever... lest there's an off-device auto-archival "relay" mechanism that's really a separate server that holds onto all transported messages (an email server) that utilizes 'chatmail email address' identities (like an email server) and its own persistent storage archive (like an email server). But... this solution is hoping to exist alongside real-world email address identities (based on the email server relay pathway) but simply render messages in chat thread format in an ephemeral manner (with contents being encrypted, and messages auto-expiring) ... In the end, it's a chat app/experience for the Web3/P2P-at-all-costs zealots. (I have accts on all sorts of federated web3 services so I understand the technical and non-technical alike.) For any practical users, however, it's just another service to download/install, register, cross-share id cards/qr codes, but know that there's no history/archive whatsoever (by design) so no account/message recovery whatsoever... update the device, install a bummed update patch, or dare upgrade your device... all history, poof, gone. Ya gotta start everything over again like they're a brand new person.
    • You've tried DuckDuckGo and Brave Search, now get serious with SearXNG by Paul Hill Over the last decade, it has become quite trendy to dump Google Search in favor of privacy-preserving alternatives such as DuckDuckGo, Startpage, and Brave Search. These search engines have done a very good job at highlighting dodgy practices by Google, such as adjusting search results based on what it thinks you’ll like (filter bubble) and stalking you around the web to advertise to you. While these search engines are good starting points when compared to non-private services like Google, there are still quite a few issues with them. For example, both DuckDuckGo and Brave Search require running non-free JavaScript in your web browser, which is comparable to running proprietary software on your computer, meaning you can be sure about what it’s actually doing in the background. Another issue is that these search engines are hosted on the respective companies’ servers, and you are using a service that you don’t control. Finally, DuckDuckGo, while offering privacy features, relies heavily on Microsoft’s infrastructure for its results and, in the past, has permitted Microsoft tracking scripts. If you are looking for a more private search solution than DuckDuckGo, Brave Search, and Startpage, then I recommend taking a look at SearXNG. It is a privacy-respecting metasearch engine that can be used via different public instances, which is useful for mobile users, or you can install it on your computer or server and run it locally with maximum control. Unlike Google, Bing, or Brave Search, which crawl the web and have their own search indexes, SearXNG is a metasearch engine, meaning it taps other search engines, stripping your identifying data, such as IP address, user agent, and cookies, in the process. Your search query is sent to the other search engines you enable before aggregating the results. SearXNG has deployment flexibility. If you are a casual user or a mobile user and don’t want to run SearXNG locally, you can use a public instance that is hosted by someone else. The main problem with this is that you are putting trust in the maintainer of the instance regarding stuff like logs that they may keep; good hosts should have a privacy policy explaining their policies. If you are trying to use SearXNG, you can also install the software on your device and then head to 127.0.0.1:8080 in your browser and search from there. While you don’t have to worry about a third-party admin like the public instances, search engines could ultimately block your IP address if they frown on you pulling in their search results locally. If you want to run it locally, it’s a good idea to use proxies or VPNs to hide your actual IP. You don’t have to worry about this with a public instance, as search engines never see your IP address. The main privacy benefit of using SearXNG is that it isolates your identity from the underlying engines that it’s capable of searching, such as Google and Bing. These search engines will only see requests coming from a generic server, so they can’t profile you and create a bubble filter that influences what results you see. This also ensures that your search engine doesn’t turn into an echo chamber that prevents you from reading alternative points of view. As a free software project, you are allowed to inspect SearXNG to make sure there are no negative features bundled inside. This sets it apart from the privacy search engines mentioned earlier because you can’t check their source code. As a meta search engine, you are not restricted to getting results from one source. Due to the fact that it scrapes content from other websites, your SearXNG instance will periodically get blocked from different providers, so it’s good to select a range of sources as a backup. While enabling all of the services will give you great results, this can make searching slower. I am personally happy with slower searches for the best results, but you can always check which providers are slowing down your search from the search results page and disable them to speed things up. If you want decent results quickly, enable the main search providers such as Google, Brave, DuckDuckGo, Qwant, Bing, and Yahoo. This way, you get wide coverage without the latency. On the Engines tab in Preferences, do note that there are different tabs, such as General, Images, and Videos, with their own providers that can be toggled and are not covered by "Enable all" while on the General tab, so be sure to dig into each. Just a note, if you want to enable everything, press "Enable all" in one tab, then hit save at the bottom of the page, then do the next tab, and so on. If you press "Enable all", then do that in each tab, and then save, nothing will stick. When I had just some of the search engines enabled, I searched “define nefarious” and results came back with the definition of “define” - obviously that was a sucky result. However, when I had everything enabled, it found dictionary pages for the word “nefarious” and even had an inline definition on the sidebar, which is quite nice too - that was delivered by WolframAlpha for anyone wondering! Probably the worst thing about this meta search engine is that the engines you select are saved with a cookie, so you must enable them on every new device you use SearXNG on, including if you decide to go into incognito mode with your web browser. Honestly, I would say this is the most annoying aspect, and perhaps if your browser lets you choose a separate private browsing search engine, then it would be best to use DuckDuckGo for this portion of your browsing. Another weakness of SearXNG is the random blocking of it by search providers. When you are on the results page, expand the “Response time” box, and it will show things like “Suspended: too many requests” or “access denied”. This is why it is good to enable several providers so that there is always a fallback to get results from. I won’t pretend SearXNG will be for everyone, however, if you enable all of the providers and put up with the slower response time, the results can be really amazing. Even if you don’t want to use it as your daily driver, keeping a bookmark handy that links to it is a good idea if you ever feel like doing a deep dive into a niche topic where other search engines are just failing to bring up any good result, due to the amount of sources it looks on. If you’re interested in radical user control over the software you use, installing SearXNG locally can also be a good idea, but be prepared to be temporarily blocked from sites if you trigger bot sensors without a VPN. Personally, I’ve opted to use a public instance, rather than install it myself. If you want to use it via a public instance, head over to searx.space to find a provider. Let us know in the comments if you have used SearXNG or its predecessor, Searx. What do you think about the quality of the results?
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Woland13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Woland13 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      bernmeister earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      502
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      226
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      158
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      75
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!