D
danserr
Guest
youtube.com/watch?v=5M9pphsSLPs
It is a common skeptical assertion that “Extraordinary events require extraordinary evidence.” I’ve seen it a few times on this board and other boards here, often especially when evidence for the resurrection comes up and though it would be fun to discuss. The link above is a pretty good response to that view, in my opinion, but I’ll still write out my thoughts.
“Extraordinary events…” has always struck me as sort of a cop-out. A theist/historian/scientist etc. can put together some good thoughtful evidence for God or the Resurrection, present it, and the skeptic only has to reply “well, extraordinary events require extraordinary evidence, so there.” And the skeptic doesn’t even have to consider or respond to the evidence. Furthermore, there are serious problems with the idea.
3b). Applied to the resurrection. Even if a thiest granted that the Resurrection is improbable taken in isolation, he knows something else. He knows that it is very improbable that we should have things like the empty tomb, the Resurrection appearances, and the origin of Christian belief if the Resurrection did not occur. But since we have these things, it is probable that the Resurrection occurred.
It is a common skeptical assertion that “Extraordinary events require extraordinary evidence.” I’ve seen it a few times on this board and other boards here, often especially when evidence for the resurrection comes up and though it would be fun to discuss. The link above is a pretty good response to that view, in my opinion, but I’ll still write out my thoughts.
“Extraordinary events…” has always struck me as sort of a cop-out. A theist/historian/scientist etc. can put together some good thoughtful evidence for God or the Resurrection, present it, and the skeptic only has to reply “well, extraordinary events require extraordinary evidence, so there.” And the skeptic doesn’t even have to consider or respond to the evidence. Furthermore, there are serious problems with the idea.
- If the skeptic is applying this claim to God’s existence, what basis does the skeptic have to say that God’s existence is extraordinarily improbable? At most, it could be improbable relative to the evidence, but then the skeptic has to confront the evidence and cannot use “ext.ev.req.ext.evid” as a way to reject the evidence.
- More importantly, as the video shows, the claims that "extraordinary events require extraordinary evidence is demonstrably false.
- example. I buy a lottery ticket on the way home from work. The next day I hear my number reported on the news as the winning number of 20 million dollars, 10, 18, 59, 35, 22, 23. I get excited. Visions of sugarplums and excessive wealth dance in my head. But then I calm down. I realize that “extraordinary events require extraordinary evidence.” I realize that that number being called is extraordinarily improbable, that me winning 20 million dollars is extraordinarily improbable . So I tear up my ticket and throw it in the trash.
- Obviously, I have behaved irrationally, in basing my disbelief in the view that “extraordinary events req. extraordinary evidence,” so where did I go wrong? Because besides knowing that that number being picked is extraordinarily improbable, I know something else. I know that it is very improbable that the news would actually report that number as the winning number, unless it really was the winning number. So you don’t just consider the probability of the event or proposition in isolation, but you have to consider the likelihood the the evidence would be what it is, if the event in question did not occur.
3b). Applied to the resurrection. Even if a thiest granted that the Resurrection is improbable taken in isolation, he knows something else. He knows that it is very improbable that we should have things like the empty tomb, the Resurrection appearances, and the origin of Christian belief if the Resurrection did not occur. But since we have these things, it is probable that the Resurrection occurred.