Author Topic: Evidence of God  (Read 25375 times)

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #125 on: September 08, 2020, 03:40:45 PM »


I never claimed that everything was within the scape of science to investigate, I was making a specific point that a theory that implied an infinite universe but also made testable predictions could provide evidence for that sort of universe.


Quote from: Never Talk to Strangers on Today at 08:21:04 AM

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Not only is that a bizarre notion of "supernatural", which would make in mean something like "beyond our ability to investigate", it's also not strictly true. If we had the theory that made testable predictions and that also predicted that the universe was infinite, that would be scientific evidence

Stranger

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #126 on: September 08, 2020, 03:46:52 PM »
How about talking to me about what I think?

He has talked about his faith in science.

Not in the sense that you have suggested, I haven't - this is appears to be a barefaced lie.

Your bollocks about practical confidence in science is faith in science.

Drivel.

His notion that if you have a testable hypothesis which makes a prediction you have scientific evidence is wrong.

If you have a well tested theory that makes further predictions that you can't directly test, that is evidence (albeit not as strong as direct evidence) because it is evidence that you have a good model.

Also you cannot have it that the universe is infinitely old and therefore doesn't need a creator one moment and then argue that proposing an infinite universe isn't proposing an effect without a cause.

I don't think anybody is proposing any particular conjecture here. However a universe with an infinite past isn't an effect without a cause and, as I've explained to you countless times before, if general relativity is broadly correct, the universe isn't an effect at all, regardless of whether it has an infinite past or not.
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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #127 on: September 08, 2020, 03:53:22 PM »
How about talking to me about what I think?

Not in the sense that you have suggested, I haven't - this is appears to be a barefaced lie.

Drivel.

If you have a well tested theory that makes further predictions that you can't directly test, that is evidence (albeit not as strong as direct evidence) because it is evidence that you have a good model.

I don't think anybody is proposing any particular conjecture here. However a universe with an infinite past isn't an effect without a cause and, as I've explained to you countless times before, if general relativity is broadly correct, the universe isn't an effect at all, regardless of whether it has an infinite past or not.
If it is neither a cause and effect then you are in fucking difficulties trying to invoke science then aren't you.

Stranger

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #128 on: September 08, 2020, 03:56:31 PM »
Quote from: Never Talk to Strangers on Today at 08:21:04 AM

Quote
Not only is that a bizarre notion of "supernatural", which would make in mean something like "beyond our ability to investigate", it's also not strictly true. If we had the theory that made testable predictions and that also predicted that the universe was infinite, that would be scientific evidence

Which was made in the specific context of your claim that a past infinite universe would be supernatural. So I'm not claiming that everything is within the scope of science to investigate.

A point I made specifically (twice) in the same post:

Science will go on investigating as far as it can. There may well be questions that never get answers...
...
I don't have faith that science will explain everything about why things exists (I expect it won't)...
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Stranger

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #129 on: September 08, 2020, 04:12:12 PM »
If it is neither a cause and effect then you are in fucking difficulties trying to invoke science then aren't you.

No. The fact that you don't understand general relativity and have totally ignored several attempts by me to explain it in simple terms, does not mean it's not science.

Yet again: in GR, time, and hence cause and effect, are part of the four-dimensional manifold. The manifold itself is not embedded in time (it can't be inside itself) so the whole idea of it being either an effect or a cause, in any normal sense of the words, is nonsensical.

As I said, a quantum theory of gravity may change that picture - we simply don't know, but it's certainly a self-consistent scientific theory that has passed every test we've been able to perform.
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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #130 on: September 08, 2020, 04:13:01 PM »
Quote from: Never Talk to Strangers on Today at 08:21:04 AM

Quote
Not only is that a bizarre notion of "supernatural", which would make in mean something like "beyond our ability to investigate",


Meaning of Supernatural from Oxford Dixtionaries

supernatural
[ˌsuːpəˈnatʃ(ə)r(ə)l]
ADJECTIVE
supernatural (adjective)
(of a manifestation or event) attributed to some force beyond scientific understanding or the laws of nature.
"a supernatural being"

Powered by Oxford Dictionaries · Bing Translator


« Last Edit: September 08, 2020, 04:15:24 PM by The Suppository of Norman Wisdom »

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #131 on: September 08, 2020, 04:17:16 PM »
No. The fact that you don't understand general relativity and have totally ignored several attempts by me to explain it in simple terms, does not mean it's not science.

Yet again: in GR, time, and hence cause and effect, are part of the four-dimensional manifold. The manifold itself is not embedded in time (it can't be inside itself)
But alas Never it is abundantly clear that you are.

Stranger

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #132 on: September 08, 2020, 04:32:27 PM »
Quote from: Never Talk to Strangers on Today at 08:21:04 AM
 

Meaning of Supernatural from Oxford Dixtionaries

supernatural
[ˌsuːpəˈnatʃ(ə)r(ə)l]
ADJECTIVE
supernatural (adjective)
(of a manifestation or event) attributed to some force beyond scientific understanding or the laws of nature.
"a supernatural being"

Powered by Oxford Dictionaries · Bing Translator

Well, if you take it to be beyond current scientific understanding, then what is supernatural changes over time, so everything was supernatural at some point in the past.

If you take it literally as beyond any possible scientific understanding or the laws of nature, then we into blind guesswork both as to what science may discover in the future and as to what, if anything, is beyond the laws of nature (even if we can't discover them).

Being beyond scientific current investigation does not make something supernatural unless you're going to accept that the category changes with time. What's more, an infinite universe and the idea of a universe from "nothing" are things that are currently being investigated scientifically, albeit on a largely theoretical basis (although some of the ideas have made some predictions that could be tested, at least in principle).
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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #133 on: September 08, 2020, 04:49:14 PM »
Well, if you take it to be beyond current scientific understanding, then what is supernatural changes over time, so everything was supernatural at some point in the past.

If you take it literally as beyond any possible scientific understanding or the laws of nature, then we into blind guesswork both as to what science may discover in the future and as to what, if anything, is beyond the laws of nature (even if we can't discover them).

Being beyond scientific current investigation does not make something supernatural unless you're going to accept that the category changes with time. What's more, an infinite universe and the idea of a universe from "nothing" are things that are currently being investigated scientifically, albeit on a largely theoretical basis (although some of the ideas have made some predictions that could be tested, at least in principle).
Poor Never. Anything beyond the ambit of science is supernatural and anything beyond the ambit of current science is alas mere faith in science or more specifically, the promise of it.

My work here is Done. Thank you....and Goodnight.

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #134 on: September 08, 2020, 05:35:21 PM »
Pidge,

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That isn't what is being claimed by Christianity. Any empirical measurement of Jesus would not have yielded any scientific data concerning his divinity.

Wrong again. The Bible says that “God” appeared in human-like form on multlple occasions. That’s what Christianity claims. And if this god did that, then in principle at least those appearances were measurable events. Just pickling a different characteristic of the divine and asserting that to be non-measurable is just more evasion. 

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The basis of flitting in and out of materiality is that you have chosen to so extend the described properties of the Leprechaun.

Again, even if I had so what? My faith belief = my rules. As it happens though, I do have authority for it. Wiki tells us quite clearly that leprechauns are both “supernatural” (ie, not naturalistic) and able to appear as small Irishmen (ie, naturalistic). 

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In any case where Jesus passed the humanity test Leprechauns have failed any kind of test and the evidence is that people have added to the story and properties over the years. Something you yourself have a part in by making Leprechauns divine.

Irrelevant nonsense. Stick to the argument you continue to lose.

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Leprechauns though are Diminutive supernatural irishmen with beards and coats and hats. You have been polishing their diminutivity and Irishanity out of the picture while conflating the gamut of supernaturality.

And human-like manifestations of a god have eyes and ears and arms and legs. How many times to you have to be told that your god and leprechauns are both immaterial when they want to be and material when they want to be? They’re different objects of faith claims that happen to be able to perform the same trick. That no more implies that leprechauns are “divine” though than ducks laying eggs implies they must be crocodiles. Different entities, same trick.     

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Conflating the gamut of supernaturality. A fallacy ascribing all and any supernatural ability to any supernatural entity.

Incoherent gibberish.


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He has talked about his faith in science.

No he hasn’t. He talked about his “faith” in science – you’re just doctoring out the quotation marks again. I have “faith” that my car will start in the morning, by which I mean that I think it likely to happen based on previous attempts, the reliability of the brand etc. I have no faith (religious sense) in my car starting though because I think it has supernatural properties.   

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Your bollocks about practical confidence in science is faith in science.

Stop lying.

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His notion that if you have a testable hypothesis which makes a prediction you have scientific evidence is wrong.

And not true. He said no such thing. Stop lying.

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You seem to have shown yourself up a pair of committed dillitantes.....if not dillahunty's Ha Ha Ha.

Illiterate lying. You really should try to stop lying – maybe start with a once-a-year “Vlad not lying” day or something?   

Quote
Also…

When everything before has collapsed in a lying, irrational heap you cannot have an “also”…

Quote
…you cannot have it that the universe is infinitely old and therefore doesn't need a creator one moment and then argue that proposing an infinite universe isn't proposing an effect without a cause.

More lying. Try reading what’s actually proposed, not what you would like it to be.


Quote
Meaning of Supernatural from Oxford Dixtionaries

supernatural
[ˌsuːpəˈnatʃ(ə)r(ə)l]
ADJECTIVE
supernatural (adjective)
(of a manifestation or event) attributed to some force beyond scientific understanding or the laws of nature.
"a supernatural being"

Powered by Oxford Dictionaries · Bing Translator

But as every mindless, brain dead, dishonest, evasive, cringe-inducing effort you’ve ever made here implies the second meaning (“beyond…the laws of nature”) if you now want to resile from that to the first meaning, ie “OK, maybe my Christianity is built on various naturalistic phenomena after all that so far at least science hasn’t been able to explain” (“beyond scientific understanding”) that would be a pretty remarkable change of tack would it not?

Not that you will ever, ever answer any question of course, but why not just tell us what you do mean by “supernatural”? Is it “outside the laws of nature”, or “something the current state of science cannot explain”?     

What’s stopping you?     
« Last Edit: September 08, 2020, 06:04:47 PM by bluehillside Retd. »
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Stranger

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #135 on: September 08, 2020, 06:22:19 PM »
Pigeon chess again. You've totally ignored all my points.

Anything beyond the ambit of science is supernatural and anything beyond the ambit of current science is alas mere faith in science or more specifically, the promise of it.

Incoherent drivel. Either you are going to define 'supernatural' in terms of current science (which makes everything supernatural at some point in the past), or what is 'supernatural' (beyond science in principle or beyond the laws of nature, that science may never exactly know) is nothing but a guess. Either way, it's a totally useless concept.

And it obviously has nothing to do with faith in science. Science either will or won't be able to answer any given question. I don't claim to know what the limits of science are - specifically, I don't claim that science will explain everything about why things exist, quite the opposite - and anybody who claims they do would be guessing. And none of this actually changes the facts of the matter. Science is investigating those things you claim to be beyond it and we could never know when we had reached its limits anyway.

Once again, we then have to return to the fact that you (and every other theist that I've encountered) have totally failed to provide an alternative, objective methodology to distinguish between things that are probably true and just making shit up. Until and unless somebody does, we only have logic and science. Everything else is indistinguishable from guessing.

It's not even as if any theist (that I've heard of) has an 'answer' (blind guess) that doesn't leave us with more questions that are still unanswered. What do we call those unanswered questions - super-supernatural, maybe?
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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #136 on: September 08, 2020, 06:29:02 PM »
So, As I said.

It's Goodnight from me........And it's goodnight from the two wrongies. Hillside and Never.

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #137 on: September 08, 2020, 06:34:10 PM »
Pidge,

Quote
So, As I said.

It's Goodnight from me........And it's goodnight from the two wrongies. Hillside and Never.

Yes, I'd probably want to run away and hide too if I'd had a day like the one you've had.

PS Just checked my calendar: turns out 09 September 2020 is the first annual "Vlad Won't Tell Any Lies Today" day. Should be a novel experience for all concerned...
"Don't make me come down there."

God

Stranger

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #138 on: September 08, 2020, 06:35:36 PM »
So, As I said.

It's Goodnight from me........And it's goodnight from the two wrongies. Hillside and Never.

This is basically an admission that you have no actual reasoning to offer, so fine, goodnight to you too.
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Owlswing

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #139 on: September 08, 2020, 10:47:40 PM »

What was it that convinced you?


Convinced me of what, precisely?
The Holy Bible, probably the most diabolical work of fiction ever to be visited upon mankind.

An it harm none, do what you will; an it harm some, do what you must!

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #140 on: September 09, 2020, 06:33:52 AM »
Convinced me of what, precisely?
To become a pagan, start to believe in gods, follow paganism, join with other pagans?

jeremyp

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #141 on: September 09, 2020, 11:18:37 AM »
That isn't what is being claimed by Christianity. Any empirical measurement of Jesus would not have yielded any scientific data concerning his divinity.
Breaking news.

Christian admits Jesus wasn't divine.

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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #142 on: September 09, 2020, 11:39:31 AM »
Breaking news.

Christian admits Jesus wasn't divine.
Breaking news.....Breaking wind, surely. Empirical measurement not capable of detecting God Jeremy.

jeremyp

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #143 on: September 09, 2020, 11:51:58 AM »
Breaking news.....Breaking wind, surely. Empirical measurement not capable of detecting God Jeremy.

What? You just said that they are.

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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #144 on: September 09, 2020, 01:59:11 PM »
Pidge,

Quote
Breaking news.....Breaking wind, surely. Empirical measurement not capable of detecting God Jeremy.

Except of course on the eight recorded occasions when "He" appeared in "human like" form. Read your Bible. 
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God

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #145 on: September 09, 2020, 06:37:19 PM »
Pidge,

Except of course on the eight recorded occasions when "He" appeared in "human like" form. Read your Bible.
I dont want to stifle God but science doesn't do God. Decisions were taken as to the ambit of science by that community.
An incarnation such as Christ would I suppose only register as a person. Gods previous appearances might have yielded some but no data on divinity scientific data. Had there been scientists.
On hand to investigate who knows what scientific data would show.....but it wouldn't show the divine. That is detected by the human instrument.

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #146 on: September 09, 2020, 06:57:22 PM »
Pidge,

Quote
I dont want to stifle God…

It’s not “God”, it’s belief in god. You're overreaching. Anyway…

Quote
…but science doesn't do God.

No, but cameras for example would if “He” decided to appear in “human-like” form as the Bible claims.

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Decisions were taken as to the ambit of science by that community.

Gibberish.

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An incarnation such as Christ would I suppose only register as a person. Gods previous appearances might have yielded some but no data on divinity scientific data. Had there been scientists.

Irrelevant. A book you think to be authoritative says that “God” appeared in recognisably human form. Eight times apparently. Other books others believe say that supernatural leprechauns appeared in recognisably small Irishman form. Different faith objects, same trick.   

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On hand to investigate who knows what scientific data would show.....but it wouldn't show the divine. That is detected by the human instrument.

Take it up with whoever wrote the Bible, not me. 

Anyway, here we are back at the beginning again. You apparently believe in one supernatural entity able at will to flit from immaterial to material, who when in the latter arrangement appears as “human-like”. I believe in different supernatural entities also able to flit from immaterial to material, only when in the latter arrangement appear as small Irishmen-like.   

Why should your belief about that be taken any more seriously than mine do you think? 
« Last Edit: September 09, 2020, 07:04:25 PM by bluehillside Retd. »
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jeremyp

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #147 on: September 09, 2020, 08:24:33 PM »
I dont want to stifle God but science doesn't do God.
Yes but the question is why. Maybe science doesn't do God because God doesn't exist. In fact, that seems like the most parsimonious explanation.




Quote
An incarnation such as Christ would I suppose only register as a person.
Earlier you said an empirical test for divinity is possible. If somebody registers as a human under such a test, then they are not God.

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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #148 on: September 09, 2020, 08:36:43 PM »
Yes but the question is why. Maybe science doesn't do God because God doesn't exist. In fact, that seems like the most parsimonious explanation.
First of all science doesn't make any judgment on what exists, you'll find that is philosophical. Secondly science doesn't do a lot of things, the Rumba, values, morality, Tap dancing so I think that wraps it up for the parsimony thing.
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Earlier you said an empirical test for divinity is possible.
Did I ? If I did I retract that straight away there is no empirical test for divinity.
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No If somebody registers as a human under such a test, then they are not God.
There is no empirical  test for Divinity. What you are saying is the equivalent of trying to find out how good a footballer someone is by getting them to play the saxophone.
« Last Edit: September 09, 2020, 08:41:12 PM by The Suppository of Norman Wisdom »

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Evidence of God
« Reply #149 on: September 09, 2020, 09:00:47 PM »
Vlad,

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First of all science doesn't make any judgment on what exists,…

Not really. Perhaps not in an absolute sense, but science proceeds a least on the basis that, say, potassium is real but phlogiston is not.
 
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…you'll find that is philosophical.

In epistemic terms yes.

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Secondly science doesn't do a lot of things, the Rumba, values, morality, Tap dancing…

Depends what you mean by “do”. Science defines, describes and explains phenomena – it isn’t the phenomena themselves though.
 
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…so I think that wraps it up for the parsimony thing.

Nope. Gravity being naturalistic is a more parsimonious explanation – ie, it requires fewer assumptions - than pixies holding stuff down with very thin stings  so we can reasonably call the former “true” albeit with no reference to absolute positions.

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Did I ? If I did I retract that straight away there is no empirical test for divinity.

But there would be for a god showing up in person, or at least to the satisfaction of the Bible’s authors there would be.

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There is no empirical  test for Divinity.

Or any other test either. That’s the problem for people who would claim the divine and want the claim to be taken seriously.

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What you are saying is the equivalent of trying to find out how good a footballer someone is by getting them to play the saxophone.

Except there’s a test for good football playing that could be used instead. Your problem is closer to complaining that someone wants to apply the saxophone grade 8 exam to claims of Scotch mist knitting. Fine. Which test would you propose they use instead?   
« Last Edit: September 09, 2020, 10:04:46 PM by bluehillside Retd. »
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