- Navigation
- Hot
- New
- Recent Comments
- Activity Feed
- Marketplace
- Members Directory
- Producer's Lounge
- Producer's Vault
- The Gulch: Live! (New)
- Ask the Gulch!
- Going Galt
- Books
- Business
- Classifieds
- Culture
- Economics
- Education
- Entertainment
- Government
- History
- Humor
- Legislation
- Movies
- News
- Philosophy
- Pics
- Politics
- Science
- Technology
- Video
- The Gulch: Best of
- The Gulch: Bugs
- The Gulch: Feature Requests
- The Gulch: Featured Producers
- The Gulch: General
- The Gulch: Introductions
- The Gulch: Local
- The Gulch: Promotions
Previous comments... You are currently on page 4.
Rhetorical questions: Why was there a need for sacrifices to God in the first place? Sounds like a fix for a problem that never existed. Was he running for office?
+10
The issue here is whether revealed truth that has nothing to say about the universe is antithetical to Objectivism. My thought is if the "truths" have nothing to say about the real world, they're neither consistent with nor contrary to Objectivism. They're unrelated, like our personal likes and dislikes... as long as they don't venture into scientifically falsifiable claims.
I imagine the answer is you think, "What could he have been thinking here when he called this function." If your assumption that a thinking mind wrote the code is correct, this line of thinking could be productive.
But if you're examining something unlike Java code that may not have been created by a mind, the assumption can lead you in the wrong direction.
Thanks for the chance to ask religious/theological questions I would avoid working on a project I'm involved with.
Load more comments...