"thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's wife, nor his manservant, nor his maidservant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor any thing that is thy neighbour's." Wow, this is a big enumeration.
Leviticus 19:27, Do not cut your hair or clip the edges of your beard
I want to see the "I am not ashamed to admit I am a Chritian" Presidential Candidate actually follow this one: Deuteronomy 15:1, At the end of every seven years you must cancel debts.
No, I meant that, for example, KJV reads "Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moths and vermin destroy, and where thieves break in and steal" for Matthew 6:19.
@fabianhjr Or pigs carried a variety of deadly diseases back then, and he was trying to save everyone the trouble. Then again, people today tend to view commands without justification, as being a dick.
The whole religious dogma is therefor uncalled for. We all have common sense, and now we have laws that state what you should and shouldn't do, yet we got people conviniently using the Bible/Christ/God as justifications.
@fabianhjr You may have common sense, but you're not applying it very well when you read. Yet you conveniently use quotes out of context to justify calling God uncalled for. (See what I did there)
@fabianhjr To the needs of an era that didn't have anti-bacterial soap.\
If God told them to boil all water before drinking, would you guilt me for that, or recognize that we have water treatment plants. That command is still relevant to nomads in Africa.
Well, the again you have Leviticus 20:9 which explicitly states you should murder anyone that curses their parents. Which of course would go with the slavery/I am the master context of the era.
I guess it is poor wording from our part like rigged interviews.
:/ Well, I already stand corrected in the Context sense. I never tought of reading it in socity without soap context.
Or wording for that fact.
Let me just think for a bit.
I guess my criticism is driven by the people wanting to use the Bible/God as their meaning of life like those wanting to be Na'vi as in the Avatar creatures. It just doesn't make sense.
I see the Bible as a Mythological Tale, I am at fault at getting intolerant with people constantly referencing it.
Take this for instance: learnnavi.org I will commit suicide if that becomes the most common language in the future.
@RMartinhoFernandes Can you please explain, what do you mean by consistency? Is operator a keyword? i thought it was plain function name. For example add() and not add()(int i)
You have to take what's in the Bible with a grain of salt, and some creative thinking. We've lost perspective, cultural references, identity, context, etc. All we have left are a set of instructions and stories. A few things are apparent as fact: These people did in fact believe in God. The historical context did occur on some scale or form. The books were written by different people.
@Xaade I believe Avatar has cultural and historical significance. I heard it was somehow ground-breaking in terms of 3D (thus historical) and people do refer to it in popular culture.
if a function that accepts an int array is declared as function_name(int arr[]) , note no sign of array size, why is the corresponding template declared as function_name(T (&arr)[N]) where N specifies size of arr
Xaade: however in that case we move from highly unlikely to likely, to being daily business. Deities have moved backwards from being daily business to likely, to unlikely.
@RMartinhoFernandes so when an array parameter is to be specified as reference, is it necessary to specify the size of array also? can i simply not say function_name(int (&arr)[])
C++ inherited arrays from C where they are used virtually everywhere. C++ provides abstractions that are easier to use and less error-prone (std::vector<T> since C++98 and std::array<T, n> since C++11), so the need for arrays does not arise quite as often as it does in C. However, whe...
@DeadMG I'll concede that. Ok, then let's discuss the nature of string theory as an unknown theory. Suppose the theory held, but was unable to be observed. One person might admit that the absurd portions of the theory were unbelievably unlikely. Then one day, we observe that effect. It always existed, still exists, and influences the world.
an equivalent suggestion would be that a bunch of cavemen invented String Theory, believed it for thousands of years when there was not one single scrap of evidence in favour of it, or any of the quantum mechanics it depends on or any physics or maths at all, and then it turned out to be true
@fabianhjr Consider that one day we postulate a method for mathematically proving God's existence, and it qualifies as a theory. Then, both are waiting on the point of observation.
@Xaade All I'm saying is that there are simple, natural explanations for absolutely everything we have ever observed, including the existence of mass religion, that do not depend on any God in any form
@DeadMG That's not impossible. It's only unbelievably unlikely. Which is not a relevant issue, or a fact. The only thing that matters is whether the theory accurately describes reality.
One of my friends used to say that the Bible is a great source of information about life and creation. The only problem is that it's a little bit out of date. And like Windows, it needs Automatic Updates.
@Xaade It is perfectly useful. The things which are less likely to be are, well, less likely to be.
the difference between the existence of God and the existence of, say, quantum mechanics, is that there are things which cannot be explained without quantum mechanics
why can compiler not deduce the type of a non type template. For example template<int> add(int x) {} if i call add(2), compiler will not compile, but if i say add<3>(2), then code compiles and works fine. My question is why do i need to specify an integer in <> the template instantiation such as add<3>(2).
@fabianhjr That was pretty much what he was implying. The Bible holds information that was widely believed to be true at the time it was written. Now, things have changed.
@RMartinhoFernandes Actually, there is. The wave function cancels itself out within one period. Quantum effects only occur when the wave function hasn't gone an entire period.
@Xaade And Quantum Mechanics explains them entirely well. We have never needed to replace Newton's Laws for motion on the macro scale, and we will never need to replace quantum mechanics to replace the inner workings of the atom.
because QM's predictions accurately reflect our reality