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This book is a crash course, meant to catapult you into a world where you start to see things how they really are, not how you think they are. The focus of this book is on logical fallacies, which loosely defined, are simply errors in reasoning. With the reading of each page, you can make significant improvements in the way you reason and make decisions.
* This is for the author's bookstore only. Applies to autographed hardcover, audiobook, and ebook.
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Just a simple point, that your argument (homosexuality, pedophilia, etc.) is an analogy, and analogies are almost always faulty.
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answered on Thursday, Jan 09, 2020 09:39:54 PM by Bill |
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If I'm not mistaken aren't you a Creationist, or anti-evolutionist?
In the future, if you wish to argue a point I suggest you make the necessary citations. This is from Science Magazine, not Christianity Today: Ever since researchers sequenced the chimp genome in 2005, they have known that humans share about 99% of our DNA with chimpanzees, making them our closest living relatives. But there are actually two species of apes that are this closely related to humans: bonobos (Pan paniscus) and the common chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes). This has prompted researchers to speculate whether the ancestor of humans, chimpanzees, and bonobos looked and acted more like a bonobo, a chimpanzee, or something else—and how all three species have evolved differently since the ancestor of humans split with the common ancestor of bonobos and chimps between 4 million and 7 million years ago in Africa. The international sequencing effort led from Max Planck chose a bonobo named Ulindi from the Leipzig Zoo as its subject, partly because she was a female (the chimp genome was of a male). The analysis of Ulindi's complete genome, reported online today in Nature, reveals that bonobos and chimpanzees share 99.6% of their DNA. This confirms that these two species of African apes are still highly similar to each other genetically, even though their populations split apart in Africa about 1 million years ago, perhaps after the Congo River formed and divided an ancestral population into two groups. Today, bonobos are found in only the Democratic Republic of Congo and there is no evidence that they have interbred with chimpanzees in equatorial Africa since they diverged, perhaps because the Congo River acted as a barrier to prevent the groups from mixing. The researchers also found that bonobos share about 98.7% of their DNA with humans—about the same amount that chimps share with us. Bonobos Join Chimps as Closest Human Relatives https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2012/06/bonobos-join-chimps-closest-human-relatives<> |
answered on Friday, Jan 10, 2020 12:41:45 PM by mchasewalker |
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I would put it as Faulty Comparison, because he is comparing Homosexuality with Pedophilia, when they are really nothing alike and should not be compared. |
answered on Thursday, Mar 05, 2020 12:00:29 AM by Aryan | |
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