We're saying essentially the same thing.Yes, it is theoretically possible for "miraculous" things to happen but believing in them without an appropriate (read: lots) amount of evidence is not congruous with science.
11/26/2013 4:32:44 PM
[Edited on November 26, 2013 at 4:35 PM. Reason : ^said it better]
11/26/2013 4:34:39 PM
oh i misread what you posted. right.
11/26/2013 4:50:02 PM
ohmy, why do you keep insisting that we should all become nihilists if we followed materialism to its logical end? We don't HAVE to follow it to its logical end. There is no appeal to the supernatural or delusion required to reject a fucking philosophy. How is it so difficult for you to understand that people can naturally be happy with life without believing in a sky daddy? Is it because you haven't read it in a book by some famous philosopher?Also wouldn't the logical end of a Christian be to kill yourself to get into heaven and live with Jesus for eternity? I mean what's the point of living in this shitty world with that ahead of you?[Edited on November 26, 2013 at 6:15 PM. Reason : .]
11/26/2013 6:02:40 PM
Besides, theism to its "logical end" is that even if a god is capable of revealing things to you, you have no way of verifying that what you're getting is accurate or even not a delusion.So no matter how rational you think your basis for belief in a god or a particular god is, you cannot get past the epistemic barrier that everyone else has.
11/26/2013 8:51:11 PM
Every time the Pope tweets, speaks, or writes something, my facebook seems to blow up with lefties who are suddenly finding value in religion. I find it interesting, especially in this case as someone who is not anti-capitalism.http://www.businessinsider.com/the-pope-on-the-financial-system-inequality-money-2013-11#ixzz2llrxXKdT
11/26/2013 9:17:48 PM
^Wut? You can find value in the Pope's words without being religious.
11/26/2013 9:55:43 PM
And that in no way validates his position as a conduit to a god in a silly robe and hat.
11/26/2013 11:52:56 PM
but that in no way invalidates a lot of the positive things this pope has said
11/27/2013 8:37:23 AM
For ohmy:http://www.youtube.com/watch?list=ALGLx1orRGw4Xp78r8wo73pJN2NExtopiV&v=q9GOyGKC004(except that one bit about the Lord up above)
12/6/2013 4:30:54 PM
arguing for god is morally equivalent to arguing for the nazis.wars of religion in europe and taiping rebellion here in china.a retarded baseless idea that appeals to fear, jealousy, envy, and all the other primitive obsolete emotions while disrespecting elite newer sexually selected skills like reason, love, selflessness, community spirit
12/7/2013 10:33:22 PM
I'm presently reading The Reason for God, since ohmy couldn't be bothered to make his own arguments.Just having read the introduction, and I'm not excited about the attempt to equivocate properly basic beliefs with the presuppositions of theists. Two problems here: Christians have all the same assumptions about reason and reality that everyone else has and their additional presumptions are even less plausible and require more evidentiary support (which they presently lack).Other than that, it reads like you'd expect: addressing both skeptics and Christians but with a rather large explicit wink towards the Christians. Maybe I'll post a response to each chapter as I read it.
12/8/2013 10:29:11 AM
Cool. Yeah, you're right, he definitely reasons form different angles, and will come to the conclusion that Christianity is the most plausible alternative. But I think he begins from a more objective grounds. Admittedly, though, because everyone's biased and no one can escape subjectivity, I want to warn you the case for the Christian God certainly comes harder towards the end.And you're right there are a lot of assumptions we do make. It's definitely not clear that Christianity requires more assumptions or faith leaps rational speaking. In today's empiricist age, it certainly does. But empiricism vs. rationalism is certainly another debate entirely. Only in the sciences did empiricism win. In even the most secular modern university philosophy departments, it usually loses.
12/8/2013 1:56:53 PM
Reason told us that Mercury should orbit following Newton's celestial mechanics and observation told us otherwise.Which won?When it comes to reality, evidence will always be preferred to arguments because arguments are hollow.
12/8/2013 9:27:03 PM
Chapter One: There Can't Be Just One ReligionHe's labeled the first part of the book "The Leap of Doubt" indicating that he's going to address common criticisms against Christianity by the doubters and to illustrate how their doubt is itself faith-filled. I was tempted to skip this chapter since this isn't a criticism I have ever read or seen any skeptic ever make of Christianity. Of course there *could* be one true religion, why don't you demonstrate how yours is it?He never even answers his own question, but he does bring up a good point that believing that Christianity is true does preclude any other religion being true as well so "Christians" who believe that other religions (including Judaism and Islam) are also true are being inconsistent.I almost stopped reading entirely after seeing this on page 5:
12/9/2013 8:50:44 AM
You've made huge faith-based assumptions throughout this thread- in trusting your sensory experience especially, in empiricism, in the promise of progress, etc.And I spent a lot of time studying Nazi Germany and Hitler last year. Any comprehensive study shows that he did not believe in any form of orthodox Christianity and did try to suppress all other faiths besides his own very twisted ideology. Also a lot of evidence to support that he didn't believe any of the Christian Bible at all, but used it here and there exploitatively when it suited his purposes (like so many politicians today)
12/9/2013 9:53:39 AM
Le sigh. From here on out, just put an asterisk on any knowledge claim I make: *to the degree of certainty possible due to the epistemic barrier we all suffer and given the evidence available supporting this claim."I think you theists really do understand this, but you want so hard to categorize belief in your pet god as properly basic you think this word game will work.
12/9/2013 11:33:40 AM
And let me state for the record:Empiricism is trusted more than religion because it works INDUCTIVELY. I freely admit that I assume induction is valid because this is a properly basic belief. We can't even have a conversation if you don't assume induction, deduction, and a few other "beliefs".The same can't be said about any god, no matter how hard the presuppositionalists try to argue that it is.
12/9/2013 12:15:24 PM
Noooo. I really don't think belief in God is basic. Tim Keller doesn't either. But I think he does make the case in the book, that unlike Dawkins and some of the new atheists' arguments, Christianity is plausible (and for many reasons...we think the most plausible).I agree with you that we all suffer from these epistemic barriers. I guess one of the bigger points I'm making is the evidence is not so cut and dry, but it's interpreted according really to our own biases. And so the best we can do, if we are really interested in truth, is to try to work towards a more "objective" understanding of these things in the meantime.So I think you, me, and Tim Keller would all agree there are major epistemic barriers we all suffer from. You put a lot of trust (often with good reason) in empiricism and your own sensory faculties and interpret evidence accordingly. We put a lot of trust (often with good reason) in rationalism and the whole of human experience (meaning, transcendence, possibility of God). And then as evidence comes along we wrestle with it accordingly.
12/9/2013 12:18:04 PM
http://vimeo.com/81215936really long, but interesting. starts around 7 minutes and continues to gain steam throughout. insights into the scientific community, as well as some specific scientific points.[Edited on December 10, 2013 at 12:13 AM. Reason : Q&A the past 30 minutes is pretty good]
12/10/2013 12:00:30 AM
As I suspected, "God works in mysterious ways" is Keller's out in Chapter Two of the suffering in the world.Nevermind the fact that God could supposedly do *ANYTHING* so what happens is precisely what he desires. Don't give me that free will bullshit either, what does free will have to do with microbes, tsunamis, earthquakes, etc?The Universe behaves and appears as though our existence doesn't matter. Not only is it almost entirely uninhabitable to the kind of life we know, it's actively trying to kill us. Arguments from design or fine tuning are a joke in the face of the reality that surrounds us.I'm slogging through the second half of Chapter Two where he's just citing Bible verses like that has any bearing on reality. Two chapters into a book which is supposedly a rational defense of belief in God and we're talking Scripture? I think I might not even continue. Chapter one was addressing a question that no skeptic ever puts before Christianity and Chapter Two is presuming the historical accuracy of the Gospels. [Edited on December 10, 2013 at 8:31 AM. Reason : .]
12/10/2013 8:28:06 AM
He has a later chapter on the reliability of Scripture. (I think) So it's not like he's expecting you to just take it all at face value.Also, the existence of pain and evil is not an argument for the existence of God. But it certainly is not an argument at all against the existence of God. I forget what Keller says about that in that chapter, but see...http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/tgc/2013/12/09/do-tummy-aches-disprove-god/
12/10/2013 9:19:56 AM
this is almost funny
12/10/2013 10:03:32 AM
I love when the peanuts form the peanut gallery who have never questioned their own worldview and done any heavy lifting in thinking besides what their friends and teachers have told them, then come in and offer their very constructive insights. Really constructive for the dialog.
12/10/2013 10:09:05 AM
do you want him to give you a book list to read, and let the authors of the books do the heavy lifting?[Edited on December 10, 2013 at 10:13 AM. Reason : you know, like you do?]
12/10/2013 10:12:37 AM
oh, i see lots of text in my posts, lots of points, lots of arguments. if all it's done is point out that the secular worldview has lots of holes in it (which previously many wouldn't admit), just like the religious worldview, then I'll consider this conversation progress.but yeah, most of the heavy lifting is done reading books, and not in a TWW thread, so yes I'd prefer him to recommend a book over his "contributions" so far. I'm not surprised though. It's the internets, you can only take it so seriously I guess.[Edited on December 10, 2013 at 10:26 AM. Reason : ]
12/10/2013 10:23:59 AM
12/10/2013 10:29:19 AM
^^read this one (actually everyone in TSB should read it)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prometheus_Rising
12/10/2013 10:32:54 AM
12/10/2013 6:35:48 PM
I would like you to address this (along with many other things you keep ignoring by others):
12/10/2013 10:47:43 PM
To be fair to Christians, there's tons of Scriptural backup for the idea that they must spend every waking moment spreading the Word. They believe that that's what they were put on the earth to do.Now, to respond to Ohmy....Over 6 million children suffer and die each year and you link to an opinion piece reducing it to a tummy ache? You, Keller, C.S. Lewis all believe this is the best Yahweh can do? I'm not certain why you'd worship such a being even if he did exist![Edited on December 11, 2013 at 12:19 AM. Reason : .]
12/11/2013 12:18:22 AM
new crazy cults was so common that the romans had to have laws against it with punishments like crucifiction.it shouldn't be a surprise that the one that rose to the top glorifys mediocrity and has a built-in requirement of self perpetuation.it didn't raise up and it didn't fly
12/11/2013 1:03:17 AM
12/11/2013 2:18:33 AM
There is also scripture supporting not evangelizing, and lots of denominations do not evangalizeEDIT:in keeping with the theme of this thread: just read works by Ernest Renan and William Wrede!![Edited on December 11, 2013 at 8:26 AM. Reason : !!]
12/11/2013 8:19:13 AM
Well, yeah, clearly there's "Scripture" supporting many different contradictory views hence many different contradictory denominations. You'd think an omnipotent god would prevent something like that from happening if getting his message across was actually one of his goals.
12/11/2013 8:29:37 AM
Did you read any books yet by the discontinuity scholars regarding evangelism? I'm not going to respond until you read those.
12/11/2013 8:58:29 AM
a ton of stuff to respond to in here, can't get to it all, but for now...
12/11/2013 11:11:02 AM
12/11/2013 11:19:49 AM
uh.... yeah, please show us this historical evidence also:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inanna(context: egyptian myth about the goddess of sexuality who hung naked on a stake, then descended into the underworld, then returned 3 days later. mix in a German pagan holiday and you get Easter)
12/11/2013 11:42:15 AM
That tummy ache opinion piece and all other attempts to address the Problem of Evil can be summed up as "We can't know what god is planning so it's not a problem."Which is bullshit. You say god has properties (allpowerful, loves us, etc), the Universe appears as though he doesn't have those properties or he just doesn't exist.Explain to me in your own words why God couldn't have a better plan that meant less suffering.And that opinion piece pulls the "well, we just proved that it's not rational to think this way so atheists must be arguing from emotion" card. Ipso Facto, problem of evil is solved!
12/11/2013 1:45:46 PM
^good point about the commonalities that span religions and cultures. religions don't start humanitarian efforts- something "good" in the human species does. The Bible calls that being made in the image of God, fingerprints of the divine, natural, moral law. and religions don't propose raping kids- sin does. and religions don't start wars- sin does. there goes some of Dawkins' most ardent arguments.saw this yesterday, seems fitting: http://carm.org/religion-cause-warso you're right- it's dumb for me to point to the outcome of christians working for humanitarian causes. I think it's a different argument though to say that the Bible makes the best case of any worldview to work for the poor and the oppressed. (The Bible, not the hypocritical Christians who exploit the Bible to their own means, just like sin causes people to do to all popular belief sets, atheist or religious.) Based on the "Define your own meaning" priorities of the relativists/existentialists and the "pragmatism" of the secular materialists, I'm not sure how there is any materialist case for the care of the weak, since they must deny making value judgments (as I already pointed out in the early pages of this thread, and in the abortion thread)With regard to your comment on evidence, I'll quote myself from page 2 of this thread...
12/11/2013 5:02:41 PM
12/11/2013 10:59:48 PM
12/11/2013 11:59:22 PM
12/12/2013 8:29:23 AM
I give the labels so that we can talk the same language, address the same lines of thought. You're right, it's not good to pigeonhole people. They're certainly more complex than a philosophical label. At the same time, we are all products of our culture. And our ideas about life, meaning, etc. do not exist in a vacuum. They originate from these philosophies and world views (along with our experiences and other influences) whether we are aware of it or not.
12/12/2013 10:13:04 AM
You didn't really respond to anything I said....
12/12/2013 10:40:30 AM
i'm still waiting for some half-way reasonable argument in favor of god and christianity
12/12/2013 10:49:30 AM
I would also like him to answer:
12/12/2013 11:07:48 AM
^^Do you have a specific question?
12/12/2013 11:27:59 AM
12/12/2013 11:38:47 AM