This statement again derives from a misunderstanding of what I said. I meant that the evidence supported it from an objective perspective, but the person convinced himself that it was subjective.
Alright. You seemed to be talking about some personal experience (“direct, immediate revelation”) in post 132. An experience itself is, by definition, subjective (mind-dependent). That’s why I was talking about something that is in the mind versus something out of the mind in the real world.
TruthSeeker60;7993973:
Lets apply this to a supposedly miraculous event. How does one determine what the most probable conclusion based off of the evidence is. Without knowing the details of a specific alleged miraculous experience,we can conclude that if the existence of god has not been proven aside from this, and the existence of schizophrenia has, then schizophrenia aught to be considered more probable by default. In that case, there needs to be some evidence that a god is a more probable explanation.
But we do have an understanding of the circumstances and details in multiple cases. The Eucharistic Miracle of Lanciano, Fatima, the Resurrection, we all have historical details on. - maybe from Quantum Physics - I can safely say the evidence leads to the conclusion that God did it.
The point of the paragraph you were responding to is if we have cases verified by evidence were A is the correct explanation, but have no cases yet in which B is verifies to be a correct explanation, A is more likely by default.
For example, one explanation for why Bob got struck by lightening is that Bob may have been in the wrong place at the wrong time during an electrical storm which is caused by certain weather patterns. Another explanation is that Bob was struck by a lightening dragon. Since we have cases of the former, although they are rare, they are, by default, more likely than the latter because we have no verified cases of the latter.
Now, those miracles you mentioned may be worth discussing. Although I’m certain
something happened, I’m certainly not convinced that anything magical, or supernatural, happened.
TruthSeeker60;7993973:
So you’re trying to say that it would dishonest to not accept claims extraordinary supernatural claims of magic based off of hearsay? Historians do not
do this. For example, one account of Caesar crossing the Rubicon mentions that he saw an apparition. Yet, no historian would take this hearsay seriously.
I said HISTORICAL TEXTS. Historical texts =/= hearsay. Primary Sources exist. Secondary sources which derive from reliable primary sources exist. These things can be used to prove the attestation of the apparitions and empty tomb, from which we can DEDUCE the resurrection.
You are basically saying that testimony itself is sufficient to demonstrate a miracle. This is what I’m contesting. Even if you had multiple primary sources, who were eyewitnesses, this would still be testimony. This is what I’m contesting.
You can find multiple, consistent eyewitnesses to an alleged alien abduction. Yet, you presumably don’t believe that aliens are coming to Earth to abduct people.
Historians generally don’t, as historians, consider multiple eyewitnesses to some magical event to be grounds for believing the event happened.
TruthSeeker60;7993973:
If you think I’m being unreasonable, how would you verify that a god (or anything else “supernatural”) is the most probable explanation for some seemingly miraculous experience?
By analyzing all the other reasonable options and seeing where the details lead. I mean, after we refute aliens, ghosts, and psychoses, if the claim is reliable that “Mary came and gave me a vision of hell” (that is, it isn’t fabricated at a later date), God is the best explanation.
Putting aside for a moment the fact that those alternatives you mentioned are unfalsifiable, you seem to think that rejecting alternative explanations is the same thing as proving your explanation. You don’t seem to see the logical disconnect.
The fact is we do have cases in which hallucination is the correct explanation (you’d probably use this as an explanation for those who experience alien abductions). Unless and until there is evidence that a god exists, a hallucination is, by default, more likely to be true.
I don’t need to wait until you come up with a new mental illness as an excuse . . .]
The explanations offered as alternative possibilities are largely irrelevant because the burden of proof is on those who claim they know.
Just to be clear, lack of belief in a god in no way hinges on any of these alternative explanations. Rather, it hinges on the fact that no evidence has been presented for the existence of a god. If one wants to consider some allegedly magical event as evidence, one must consider similar events for similar claims to be evidence for those claims.
Because I have just as high of a standard of evidence for the claim that a god is the best explanation for an alleged miracle as I do of claims of alien abductions, yet I wouldn’t consider testimony to be evidence of an alien abduction, I wouldn’t consider testimony itself to be evidence that a god exists.