J
JapaneseKappa
Guest
Yes, I brought up the aliens here because I think it drives a number of useful wedges. Specifically:JapaneseKappa’s position is basically that the evidence for both aliens and Christianity is about the same. So if you don’t accept the stories about aliens, you shouldn’t accept Christianity and if you accept Christianity, you’ll have to accept the alien stories as well. The fact that Christians accept one story but not the other proves their bias and inability to apply the same standards of scepticism and evidence to their religion as they do to the alien-theory.
- It demonstrates that “Well religion was invented by either man or God” is a false dilemma.
Well lets think about what the alternatives are. If man didn’t invent religion, then how did religion come to be?
- It introduces the need for “capability to assess” into the discussion of the credibility of any ancient religious accounts. I know that a lot of people have put a lot of effort into creating apologetic defenses of the honesty of the NT authors, but I have seen practically no defenses of competence.
One way you might do this would be to establish the capability of the authors of the NT to accurately assess “divinity,” as well as their honesty.
- It questions whether or not people are setting the correct evidenciary bar for supernatural claims. BEFORE we consider the evidence for a claim, we decide how skeptical we will be. I believe the correct skepticism level for supernatural claims is essentially the same as the skepticism level for extraterrestrial claims, but that Christians hold the NT claims to a much more lax standard.
I actually believe the “aliens” argument is rather weak, but that it is not weaker than the religious argument.
In other words, what is going on in this discussion is that you are failing to give evidence to show that your religious explanation is superior to one of the weakest alternatives that I could think of.