B
Bradski
Guest
Late to the thread, but my lack of belief is simply not being presented with anything coming within a bull’s roar of being credible.
The accounts of the miracles of Jesus in the Bible were given by eye witnesses. They were not just made up stories. The apostles and about 5oo people saw Jesus alive after His death on the cross.Late to the thread, but my lack of belief is simply not being presented with anything coming within a bull’s roar of being credible.
That Jesus was meant to have performed miracles was written many decades after the events were supposed to have taken place. That Jesus was seen by 500 people was almost a throw away line by Paul. And written a few weeks travel from where Jesus was meant to have been seen. Any idea who told him about this? Who these people were? Whether they knew Jesus? How he knew it was 500?The accounts of the miracles of Jesus in the Bible were given by eye witnesses. They were not just made up stories. The apostles and about 5oo people saw Jesus alive after His death on the cross.
Isn’t this enough credibility for you?
have you read post #110 & 111 yet?late to the thread, but my lack of belief is simply not being presented with anything coming within a bull’s roar of being credible.
I guess you don’t believe Columbus discovered America or the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock since they didn’t write it down, immediately!That Jesus was meant to have performed miracles was written many decades after the events were supposed to have taken place. That Jesus was seen by 500 people was almost a throw away line by Paul. And written a few weeks travel from where Jesus was meant to have been seen. Any idea who told him about this? Who these people were? Whether they knew Jesus? How he knew it was 500?
And you should look up the definition of eye witness.
You should do some reading on the subject. The Vikings beat Columbus by hundreds of years.I guess you don’t believe Columbus discovered America or the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock since they didn’t write it down, immediately!![]()
I’m afraid so.have you read post #110 & 111 yet?
The documents we have from decades after the events arent the first ever written, they are the only and earliest surviving documents we have.That Jesus was meant to have performed miracles was written many decades after the events were supposed to have taken place.
Citation needed.…That Jesus was seen by 500 people was almost a throw away line by Paul.
If I state, on the record, that 1000 people also saw the thing I am reporting, isn’t that twice as much corroboration than if I state that only 500 saw it? #peer_review…And you should look up the definition of eye witness.
Citation? It’s in the bible. Corinthians from memory.Citation needed.
If I state, on the record, that 1000 people also saw the thing I am reporting, isn’t that twice as much corroboration than if I state that only 500 saw it? #peer_review
Nice round figure. Nothing to corroborate it. No details given. Only mentioned the once. Just slipped it in so people two thousand years down the track can say: Hey, hundreds of people say the risen Christ! That’sgood enough for me!You claimed that Paul"s reference to the 500 was “a throwaway line”.
Can you back that up exegetically?
Your examples are actually quite instructive in this matter of historical evidence,I guess you don’t believe Columbus discovered America or the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock since they didn’t write it down, immediately!![]()
Then we disagree at the semantic level here. “Supernatural” events, if they exist, are the deeds of supernatural beings. The notion that some prayerful human can control these independently (or if not independently, at least authoritatively) is errant in my view. Thus your experiment cannot occur in a controlled environment.It seems to mean different things to different people. I presented it there as a realm that people, with faith, believe they can channel the power of it to alter this reality.
It is wrong. The supernatural being that performs supernatural deeds may or may not be deterministic in those deeds. I simply couldn’t know.You’re particular take on this seems to be, Jesus take the wheel, approach. Predestination type or is that a wrong assessment?
Absolutely. And absent an already proven hypothesis to stand as the null, the null that you reject to is “undefined”. Not “no”. Failure to internalize this fact would inhibit your ability to successfully pass a college-level stats course.The default position, aka the null hypothesis, about belief is to affirm a disbelief in the topic presented until the person making the positive claim has meet the burden of proof to their audience.
As we’ve covered extensively, the clear distinction between knowing and believing is subjective and arbitrary. The Gettier Problem proves this.…they change from not believing the claim to believing the claim. It’s not a knowledge claim…
Only a material and determinable reality. As the theist concedes that not every real thing falls into these categories, it is insufficient for addressing questions that are non-materialistic and non-deterministic. As, frankly, we’ve covered ad nauseam.This is why the current scientific process works best for getting to the truth of reality.
Then your process contains within it the inherent disclaimer that no thing is certain. There can’t be “truth”, only “best guess so far”. The latest belief about gravity is subject to a “self-correction” at any time - as has occurred on that particular subject within my lifetime.Sure, but if my process continues to have a solid track record of self-correction…
I’m ever concerned with “justifiable belief”, not absolute belief. Anything we ever experience as a human being is limited and we have yet to ever fully understand anything to absolute certainty for how it operates. This is why the idea of believing something as an absolute as absurd to me. We can only hold beliefs as tentative justified beliefs. Unless you can clarify how we can ever hold anything as an absolute? I don’t see how anyone could ever get to absolute truth/belief about anything since we are limited to the human experience. Our experience is always limited understanding about everything, so we have to go with “justified” belief as a default basis.As we’ve covered extensively, the clear distinction between knowing and believing is subjective and arbitrary. The Gettier Problem proves this.
Ergo, any conclusion you draw or system you propose that fundamentally requires such a distinction is not objectively valid. The objectivity there simply doesn’t exist.
Only a material and determinable reality. As the theist concedes that not every real thing falls into these categories, it is insufficient for addressing questions that are non-materialistic and non-deterministic. As, frankly, we’ve covered ad nauseam.
Then your process contains within it the inherent disclaimer that no thing is certain. There can’t be “truth”, only “best guess so far”. The latest belief about gravity is subject to a “self-correction” at any time - as has occurred on that particular subject within my lifetime.
Then its a relativist construct and not objective truth, thus you can’t craft indubitabe rhetoric with it.I’m ever concerned with “justifiable belief”, not absolute belief.
The same way you posited the above: via axiom.Unless you can clarify how we can ever hold anything as an absolute?
Because of how we derive pi, this isn’t a good example (problem of proxy). Do you have another?For example, if all we can currently understand about the value of Pi is to the 12th decimal place.
Because it solves metaphysical problems. As we’ve also discussed, the metaphysical is beyond the reach of quantitative analysis.I don’t see how what the religious are claiming could fall under justified belief since it is, currently, indistinguishable from an imagined idea.
We do. It’s called “reasoning”.We, currently, do not have anyway of investigating those claims and it’s the investigation part that makes an imagined idea go to a justified belief about reality.
Forgot to add this part:Then its a relativist construct and not objective truth, thus you can’t craft indubitabe rhetoric with it.
All of your arguments will have to begin with “Assuming that…” and anyone’s free to ask “So if I don’t assume that…?”
The same way you posited the above: via axiom.
Because of how we derive pi, this isn’t a good example (problem of proxy). Do you have another?
Because it solves metaphysical problems. As we’ve also discussed, the metaphysical is beyond the reach of quantitative analysis.
We do. It’s called “reasoning”.
It seems what you would call “objective”, I would call “strongly justified belief”. I prefer my definition since I have yet to be convinced of the idea that we can know absolutely everything about anything in reality. This isn’t really a problem for me that I can see since it’s all premised around the idea of, this is what we currently understand about reality and how it functions. Once you claim you have absolute knowledge of something, you are convinced that you are in no way in error of it in the future and would not be likely to accept contrary claims and data on the point.Then its a relativist construct and not objective truth, thus you can’t craft indubitabe rhetoric with it.
All of your arguments will have to begin with “Assuming that…” and anyone’s free to ask “So if I don’t assume that…?”
It’s an analogy that works as I see it. Supplement any other process we use to understand reality and it’s still the same. IE: gravity - we can only analyze gravity up to a “justified understanding” of reality but may not ever know it absolutely. 12th decimal place is the limit currently based on our technology to investigate it, our mathematical understanding of reality, etc.Because of how we derive pi, this isn’t a good example (problem of proxy). Do you have another?
could you give me an example of a metaphysical problem?Because it solves metaphysical problems. As we’ve also discussed, the metaphysical is beyond the reach of quantitative analysis.
Reasoning is a good place to show us where to look for something in reality, but we have to actually investigate reality to see if it is there or not. Einstein reasoned, through mathematics, that gravity waves should exist. But we did not teach them as a fact about reality until we could actually detect them in 2015. There are numerous mathematical/reasoned conclusions about reality that have failed to offer actual results/truths about reality when investigated. Until we can investigate them, they just remain on the chalk board as imagined ideas.We do. It’s called “reasoning”.
And, again ad nauseam, the Gettier problem shows that they are not readily distinguishable from one another with consistency.Forgot to add this part:
As I currently understand it, again ad nauseam, knowledge is a subset to belief.
You only accept as “real” the things that can be quantitatively analyzed. Again, this is a problem for those that concede that not all things are material. “Love”, for instance.Many ideas are easily dismissed if they can not be justified to be part of reality. They remain in the realm of imagined ideas about reality and are not held as justified belief about reality until they can be demonstrated to be part of reality and investigated.
And again, theists would make an identical claim…I use reality as a reference point for justified belief as we interact with it.
Moral Dilemma like:Could you give me an example of a metaphysical problem?
Reasoning is a good place to show us where to look for something in reality, but we have to actually investigate reality to see if it is there or not.