you know exactly what form they are going to take. a prophet will claim X is going to happen, then the fulfillment of X will be shown to have occured at a later date.
Haha, this turned out exactly as I anticipated. More evasion, refusal to come up with the supporting evidence. Therefore I am going to address the crux of the matter without waiting for the (name removed by moderator)ut from WSP, which is clearly not forthcoming.
The fundamental claim is that some events are so very unlikely, or extremely improbable, that it is reasonable to assume a divine reason for them. Numbers are mentioned when discussing abiogenesis, and these numbers are in the vicinity of 10^(-60), 60 zeros after the decimal point. Those links WSP provided mention very low probabilities, and the supporting numbers are more than unreasonable, they are simply ridiculous (as a matter of fact they are ridiculously
high! The actual numbers are much lower).
What is missing, of course, any substantiation that unlikely events
need a supernatural explanation. This is just stipulated without any supporting evidence or justification for it. They do not assume any specific “extra”, they just assert that the sheer improbability of an event “proves” a divine interference.
Therefore I am going to deal with this problem. I am going to be very generous with my assumptions. Suppose that the Bible mentions
10000 prophecies. I doubt that anyone would suggest even a 100 of them. (Note: WSP refused to give even the slightest detail for his claim, not even
how many messianic prophecies he has in mind. So I had to pull this number out of thin air. If you think it is too low, just take
50 thousand or
a hundred thousand “prophecies”, if you like. The numbers are not significantly different.)
Suppose that the individual probability for each and every one of them in not a ridiculously high 50%, rather a more realistic
1 in 10 billion. Suppose, as WSP so unreasonably demands, that I accept that all of those 10000 (or more) prophecies were fulfilled, and the fulfillment was also properly substantiated by external documentation - even though they were not (of course!).
Now, what is the probability of all that? One in ten billion is 10^(-10). This “happened” 10 thousand times. The overall probability is therefore 10^(-100000), in other words one hundred thousand zeros after the decimal point. Compare that with the “measly” 60 zeros after the decimal point which is so proudly and irrationally mentioned in the case of abiogenesis.
What the proponents claim is that this number is so very incredibly low, that it could not have happened without God’s “guiding hand”. They say that such a coincidence is “impossible”, and thus it “proves” God’s existence.
The refutal: First, the proponents cannot substantiate that those prophecies actually happened and they were fulfilled. Second, even if it did, they cannot justify that such an incredibly improbable event cannot just happen by itself. They assert this claim, and don’t even try to come up with reason for it. They just hope that none of the skeptics will point out that the “
emperor has no clothes” - this claim is unsubstantiated. And, no, such a claim is not based on “common sense”, it is based upon the
profound lack of knowledge the claimants exhibit. Sadly, they are just happy in their ignorance, and don’t even want to listen when someone explains the error in their ways - what I and many others already did, many times.
Third, I will give a specific example to the contrary. Unbeliveably improbable events do
happen all the time - and no one of sane mind would suggest a divine “interference”. Take the old game of roulette. In every game there are 37 (or 38) outcomes, depending on the type of the roulette. During the history of this game at least 10 million games have been played. I am being conservative here, the number is probably higher than that. In every game the ball stops on one specific number, from 0 to 36. (If we would consider the double zero, the probability would become even less).
If we put these numbers into a row, in chronological order, we shall get a sequence of random numbers 10 million long. Now, imagine, that just one spin of the wheel would have been slightly different, the sequence would be different. The chance of this particular sequence is 37^(-10000000). This number is so low that the number quoted in the abiogenesis example (10^-60), or the number I gave above (10^-100000) simply pale in comparision. This number has
more than 15 million zeros after the decimal point! (There is no physical phenomenon which can be compared to this number. Suppose the whole visible universe would be trillions and quadrillions of times larger. Suppose, this incredibly huge space would be packed with neutrons touching each other, and one proton among them. Suppose you had one random selection to choose that lonely proton. The chance of that succeeding is much higher than having the roulette wheels producting that sequence above!)
Yet, this event actually happened! I could give examples of even
more unlikely events which happen all the time.
Do those claimants of divine guidance now claim that the roulette wheels and the balls were personally “guided” by God, so this particular event could happen? I would hope not. Not even they are
that irrational. So forget your claim WSP. The existence of God cannot be “proven” by your messianic claims, just as it cannot be proven by any other method. Be happy in your blind faith, because it will get you heaven. Remember what the Bible says about the meek…
Of course the problem is that the proponents of such nonsense have no idea what the theory of probabilities is all about. And they forget the old adage about “… rather than opening their mouth and prove it!”.