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Capitalizt
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Feb 2005
Location: USA
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cool, glad you enjoy his stuff. He gets a bad rap from some Christians because he is not a conservative, but I think he takes a fair and respectful approach to things.
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Apr-26-2011 14:48
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Halcyon+On+On
Liebchen

Registered: Sep 2004
Location: midcoast
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| quote: | Originally posted by Znack
It's in a way an argument in my direction. If you may not speak without evidence, anyone who believes in the alternative, ghosts and gods should remain silent.
- Not because I agree with that. I would like to hear peoples opinions and why they believe things without evidence. |
But the responsibility to never proceed without evidence is on those who exclusively adhere to the scientific method. People who might believe in the existence of the supernatural obviously don't tend to worry about that, as they are making faith-based assertions and projecting their confirmation bias given numerous authentic circumstances.
| quote: | | I would then like to acknowledge why some are: They lack critical thinking in one area. Intelligence in terms of theoretical physics is not the same as intelligence regarding the spiritual. What you are trying to do here is called an appeal to authority - "An intelligent person believes x, therefore you should believe it to - or therefore it is Intelligent to believe it to". This is wrong and it is of course clearly revealed by the fact that many scientists are not believers, including the two greatest minds in recent times, Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking. |
In what you suppose I am trying to do, you are in some way acknowledging yourself that theoretical physicists are an authority. After all, I wouldn't be appealing to them in argumentative faux pas, did I not hold the same sentiments, right? But then you turned around and appealed your argument to what you believe to be the greatest minds in recent times - obviously irrefutable authorities in the matter. Nice.
Anyway, it is my understanding that Einstein did indeed believe it was possible there was a God - albeit not the "Christian" god of authority or punishment, but the creator being of beauty and order through mathematics. Obviously not one worth praying to, unless you realize the fact that a life spent observing and calculating His creations and forces in a staggeringly non-chaotic universe, is simply another form of prayer and admonishment.
___________________
There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
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Apr-26-2011 16:13
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Znack
Senior tranceaddict

Registered: Aug 2010
Location: USA
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| quote: | Originally posted by Moral Hazard
It stands to reason that there would be nothing written about him in his life time, as during his lifetime he would have been a largely insigificant person... |
Not according to the Bible. I like to quote:
"Large crowds from Galilee, the Decapolis,[a] Jerusalem, Judea and the region across the Jordan followed him. Matthew" 4:25
"Meanwhile, when a crowd of many thousands had gathered, so that they were trampling on one another, Jesus began to speak Luke" 12:1
"The next day the great crowd that had come for the Feast heard that Jesus was on his way to Jerusalem. They took palm branches and went out to meet him, shouting,
"Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord! Blessed is the King of Israel!" John 12:11
- And much more. Should You Believe the Bible then Jesus was a very famous person in the entire Middle East, and it is downright absurd that no historian should have taken notice of it during his lifetime.
Should we not believe the Bible, and assume that he was unknown, then it's no longer the same Jesus we're talking about - it's just a guy named Yeshu who babbled around at the time, and it is likely there was a Yeshu.
So sorry, but it is simply wrong.
| quote: | | If nothing else the Jesus of the bible is a character of legend, legends are often based on some truth... |
And why is it a legend? Because people perceive it as being based on reality. That is what "legend" means. Maybe he was not a legend, but just a story.
- You can use that we call him a legend, as proof that he is a legend. It is circular logic.
| quote: | | in this case I would suggest that it's reasonable to assume there was a wondering teacher in Galalie and Judea by the name Yeshua in the first half of the first century CE. |
Exactly as I said: it is quite likely. Just like it is quite likely that in Wellton Town lives a family with two children named Johnson.
The likelihood alone is not a reason to believe it.
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Apr-26-2011 18:02
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