P
Perplexity
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I wasn’t disagreeing with this part of Summa’s post.Actually, we believe that our natures will be perfected in heaven. So I don’t see where we have to believe that God ever has revealed himself through something other than what Summa Wrestler called an “avatar” or manipulation of the physical world. Since any revelation, however explicit, still must occur to us through the physical world, at least while we’re alive, any revelation will always be counterable by saying our perceptions of the physical world can be wrong.
Sure, but how does that effect your outlook on Schellenberg’s argument? The apostles were grown men with all kinds of goodies in their background knowledge etc. whereas Schellenberg’s argument is concerned with children.And as long as you’re talking about what we believe, did Jesus reveal himself explicitly? Well, in one sense it’s hard to imagine how much more explicit he could have been, and yet Judas doesn’t appear to have believed he was God. And the apostles all appear, from the accounts, to have lost faith in Jesus’ divinity when he was crucified, despite the fact that (according to the Gospels) three of them had seen the Transfiguration.
I wasn’t disagreeing with that. I was saying out natures cannot adequately explain why God is hidden, not why he can only reveal himself through the physical world.So I think the point still stands. It is reasonable to assume that the nature of living human beings are sufficiently different from God that God can only reveal himself to them through the physical world. Christians believe that God has actually done this numerous times, to numerous people, in a wide variety of ways, most markedly through the life, miracles, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Sure, it’s possible. But, ever heard the saying ‘seeing is believing’? I think when we encounter something in a physical way, it’s much, much harder to disbelieve. But, in any case, all Schellenberg and I are interested in showing is that this experience would be such that any following disbelief would be culpable, not that there wouldn’t be disbelief.However, our nature is also such that we can choose to disbelieve any physical evidence whatsoever. Even rationally. People will argue for mass hallucinations rather than believe something that they believe is, a priori, impossible.
hmm, this is surprising to me, but to each his own.I have followed and agreed with Danser’s arguments about coercion, but as I have said before, it’s harder and harder for me to imagine how, totally apart from the problem of coercion (which remains a significant argument to me) God could *indubitably * reveal himself to ANYONE, let alone to everyone.
Thanks for giving it a go anyways! I guess I haven’t seen any reason to doubt it yet.Well, I can’t answer an argument that isn’t presented and I’m pretty sure I’m not going to be getting the book in the near future. Since the arguments you’ve presented from Schellenberg haven’t convinced me so far, I’m not going to assume this one would either.