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Old 03-20-2001, 10:30 PM   #31
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So you agree that the resurrection of Jesus would not have left any geological evidence? That is the point of this thread isn't it? What kind of evidence we would expect such an amazing miracle to have left?
 
Old 03-20-2001, 11:35 PM   #32
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Quote:
<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by isa457:
a_theistnotatheist,

You still haven't answered my questions in the other post. Was it "Traffic Laws from God?"

The argument you give above can be used as a template for all other religions as follows:

That church down the road is a fingerprint that (the Buddha) (reached Nirvana). Whether or not these ripples prove the event, they are evidence of some stone being throne in the pond.

That church down the road is a fingerprint that (Mohammed)(was God's Profit. Whether or not these ripples prove the event, they are evidence of some stone being throne in the pond.

That church down the road is a fingerprint that (David Koresh) rose from the dead. Whether or not these ripples prove the event, they are evidence of some stone being throne in the pond.

That church down the road is a fingerprint that (the Jehova's Witnesses are right). Whether or not these ripples prove the event, they are evidence of some stone being throne in the pond.

In other words, RIDICULOUS!!!
</font>
You attack my weakest point, which I never claimed was a strong one- only a by-product of the resurrection truth. These other "ripples" due suggest a likelihood that the above individuals had something to say and changed the world in some way. And they did. If the original events mentioned were true, mosques, Buddhist temples, etc. would be resulting from (the prophethood of Mohammed, the "enlightened" state of Gautama) them. I would suggest that there is some reasonableness in thinking that a "world" religion might be true, considering how it has at least survived centuries as an ideology without losing it's base. It is quite probable that Christianity would not exist today if Jesus had not risen from the dead; the disciples would not have had the motivation to spread their faith. Consider how "Koreshism" and the Heaven's Gate cult have ceased. There have been numerous others who were thought to be the Messiah throughout history; they have been only a glimmer in the eye of religious history compared to Christianity. Those failed Messiahs for the most part have passed by the wayside; if Jesus' actions had truly ceased on the cross, there would be no churches today. The office of Messiah is a far greater one than the office of a prophet or teacher; therefore the demands put upon Messiah are greater.

 
Old 03-21-2001, 02:57 AM   #33
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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Not true. If the question being asked is "did these miracles and magic actually happen" then only an idiot would start off by assuming they didn't.

Patently false. If someone told you that green men in a silver flying saucer landed last night, you are NOT going to give them the benefit of the doubt. You're going to think they're kooky, or on drugs. </font>
Tell me, are you an idiot, or have you just missed my point? My point was this: If you are trying to find the correct answer to a question, the one thing you do NOT do is assume the answer. If I'm not sure whether you're telling the truth and I'm trying to discover whether there are aliens with a flying saucer it would be stupid of me to rule out the possibility before I start.

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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Testable in that you can set up a test, one that is falsifiable, and observe the results.</font>
This is a historical event, how do you propose to perform a falsifiable test???

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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Strong in the sense that the particular proofs are independent and have stood the test of rigorous investigation over time.</font>
Hahaha, funny.

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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Do you have a specific complaint about c14 dating?
If so, bring it forth.</font>
No, just a lot of general complaints. It's inaccuracy for starters. I am skeptical of its accuracy beyond 2000 years or so and have completely no confidence in it beyond 4000 years. I'm not really prepared to argue this point, believe in it if you like...

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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">However, c14 dating has been independently verified by over 100,000 separate tests in the last 50-60 years. So it had better be good.</font>
Do you mean that it has been used over 100,000 times giving a date? Or do you mean it gave a provably accurate date those 100,000 times. If so, please give an example as to how its accuracy might be 'proved' and approximately how far back in time its accuracy has been proven to. (I know the answers to these, I'm just wondering if you do)

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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">The age of the earth? Do you mean we have evidence that the earth has an age?

Yep.</font>
I think you missed the sarcasm here. What are you actually trying to say by "we have tremendous proof for... the age of the earth"? We obviously know that it has an age. I have tremendous proof that the earth is older than I am. Knowing the age of the earth is all about accuracy. We don't truly know the age of the earth we just approximate. (And give our approximation a far smaller margin of error than it really has) So do you mean that we have a reasonable approximation of the age of the earth?

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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">The speed of light in a vacuum? As far I'm aware a complete vacuum has never been achieved.

Just curious: how old are you?</font>
Old enough, how is my age relevent here? That's the sort of question which gets asked when the other person thinks I'm completely wrong. Don't worry, I know what I'm talking about when it comes to science, especially physics.
I know what you mean by your point, I was just nit-picking: Without achieving an absolute vacuum we cannot be absolutely sure about what happens in one. The assumption that the speed of light in an absolute vacuum is almost the same/the same as the speed of light in a near vacuum is almost certainly warrented. Remember however that it is an assumption, it may not necessarily be true.

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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">And again, another person who misunderstands the scientific method.</font>
Really? I've never been accused of that before... It's always been me accusing others... well turn and turn about I suppose.

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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">The repeatability requirement of the scientific method only applies to the repeatability of the results from your experiement. The event you are studying does not have to be repeatable. If that were the case, then we could not use the scientific method to study the Revolutionary War.</font>
To use the scientific method you must have a physical object you can study repeatedly. History can't be studied repeatedly as it happens once, therefore it isn't a science. Archeology is a science because we find relics which can be studied repeatedly. Geology (for anyone's information) is an interesting mixture of both science and history, almost like archeology and history under one name. The scientific method applies to the scientifically testable part of Geology but not to the historical part. Geology is regarded as a science because it has a scientific part.

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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">No. The experiment is not repeatable. It isn't Science. Don't compare it with Science because it isn't. It's History. Compare it with History if you wish. Clear?

See the above
</font>
I have. I've also seen other replies to you in this thread. You don't seem to understand the relationship between science and history. History is NOT a science. Demanding science type/level evidence for history is idiotic. They are different things.
 
Old 03-21-2001, 05:19 AM   #34
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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by Layman:
I never denied there were many ancient reports of miracles. But you offered no discussion of the criteria I did. Embarrassment, dissimilarity, mutliple attestation, coherence, etc. </font>
Hogswallow. Multiple attestation was handled by the huge Taoist canon of 1,500 texts (for the past) and video/eyewitnesses for Sai Baba (present). Embarassment is obvious in the recording of failure and counterclaims in the Taoist and Sai Baba record. dissimilarity and coherence are subjective, in the latter case, you admitted that was so. If you don't think so, read the record.

Meier's criteria are garbage. You should quietly retire them and get some better ones.

Michael
 
Old 03-21-2001, 05:53 AM   #35
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Tell me, are you an idiot, or have you just missed my point? My point was this: If you are trying to find the correct answer to a question, the one thing you do NOT do is assume the answer. If I'm not sure whether you're telling the truth and I'm trying to discover whether there are aliens with a flying saucer it would be stupid of me to rule out the possibility before I start.

I think a person who believes another human walked on water and rose from the dead is really in no position to be calling others "idiots." Just drop the "idiot" label.

It is an axiom of scholarly and scientific investigation (outside of religions studies) that miracles do not occur. I suppose that makes all scholars "idiots."
  • They violate the assumption, proven by the fact of evolution and other long-term processes we know of, that the laws of nature hold for the past as well as the present.
  • Since they have no specifiable properties, they cannot be rigorously investigated (once you assume their possiblity). No methodology can discover whether they are true. In fact, no current methodolgy can determine whether a miracle is a product of god(s) and thus a genuine suspension of natural law, or the work of highly advanced aliens.
  • They render scholarship nonsensical. Once you assume the possibility of miracles, when do you stop? Was the victory of the Allies a naturalistic event explainable by mundane, if complex causes, or was it a miracle of good over evil? Several times in Africa I came under fire by snipers. I was never hit. Was that a miracle? Mamenchisaurus had a neck fifteen meters long, and no one can yet figure out how it breathed. Was its life sustained by the direct intervention of god? You see the problem. Once you allow for miracles, you cannot prove that anything was NOT a miracle. You may as well give up the whole program of explanation and investigation, since anything could be a miracle, even something apparently mundane.

Further, all of Jesus' miracles are mundane and common to many miracle workers in history. Many people, even today (see Sai Baba) are claimed to have raised the dead, or come back from the dead. Healing the sick is a very ordinary miracle; just flip on your TV and watch preachers doing it. Jesus left us no interesting miracles. Imagine if he had left us a floating pyramid of plastic, moved Jerusalem to a place just outside of Chicago Illinois, or actually brought world peace. Since miracles similar to those of Jesus investigated today have turned out to be invention, fraud, error or misunderstanding, we can confidently assume that past miracles fall into that category as well.

Your analogy is wrong. If you investigate "miracles," you are justified in eliminating them from the start. But if you investigate flying saucers, you are not justified in eliminating the actual possibility of alien visits. Aliens could be visiting us; their presence here would not violate known natural laws. All extraordinary claims are not extraordinary in the same way, Tercel.

Michael
 
Old 03-21-2001, 06:28 AM   #36
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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by a_theistnotatheist:
It is quite probable that Christianity would not exist today if Jesus had not risen from the dead; the disciples would not have had the motivation to spread their faith. Consider how "Koreshism" and the Heaven's Gate cult have ceased. </font>

It is quite "possible" that this is true, but the majority of the worlds other religions make it less than "probable".

The fact is, those who choose to follow a certain individual, DO have the motivation to spread their faith as can be seen by (insert your religion here). Most religions have had a "someone" whether they call him prophet, enlightened, etc.

Besides, it would be hard for any cult to take hold in the world today with the overwhelming saturation of media and instant world communication.
 
Old 03-21-2001, 08:45 AM   #37
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[a_theistnotatheist:]
I would suggest that there is some reasonableness in thinking that a "world" religion might be true, considering how it has at least survived centuries as an ideology without losing it's base. It is quite probable that Christianity would not exist today if Jesus had not risen from the dead; the disciples would not have had the motivation to spread their faith. Consider how "Koreshism" and the Heaven's Gate cult have ceased. There have been numerous others who were thought to be the Messiah throughout history; they have been only a glimmer in the eye of religious history compared to Christianity. Those failed Messiahs for the most part have passed by the wayside; if Jesus' actions had truly ceased on the cross, there would be no churches today. The office of Messiah is a far greater one than the office of a prophet or teacher; therefore the demands put upon Messiah are greater.

[LP:]
That is totally specious. Does the continued existence of Islam mean that Mohammed must still be at work after his death?

So when is a_theistnotatheist going on a pilgrimage to Mecca?
 
Old 03-21-2001, 11:33 AM   #38
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If there had been a bodily resurrection of Jesus after he died, there would have been a massive amount of energy transferred, what would be required to put molecules that had started to decay back together. This should have made an impact somewhere, like a bomb going off.

I would also have expected to see an enemy of Jesus note his physical return. Friends and supporters seeing him can be explained away as delusional or wishful thinking or outright fraud. But Jesus did not even show himself physically to Paul. Since Paul was instrumental in the success of the early church, I think that this negates the idea that a miraculous resurrection is required to explain the success of Christianity.
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Old 03-21-2001, 03:31 PM   #39
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Quote:
<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
So you agree that the resurrection of Jesus would not have left any geological evidence? That is the point of this thread isn't it? What kind of evidence we would expect such an amazing miracle to have left?
</font>

The question on the table has been asked of you 3 times now (lpetrich's question):

Quote:
<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
Some theological apologists seem to think that there can be no such thing as a science of historical events, because such events are universally unique. However, there is much mainstream science that is *exactly* that; has anyone ever used that argument to try to demonstrate that geology cannot be a science?
</font>

And he further clarified it, when you pretended to miss the point earlier:

Quote:
<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
I mention geology because it is the study of a single entity: Earth. And all of the Earth's history represents a succession of one-time events.
Does that mean that geology is not a real science?

</font>



[This message has been edited by Omnedon1 (edited March 21, 2001).]
 
Old 03-21-2001, 04:06 PM   #40
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Quote:
<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
Tell me, are you an idiot, or have you just missed my point? My point was this: If you are trying to find the correct answer to a question, the one thing you do NOT do is assume the answer. If I'm not sure whether you're telling the truth and I'm trying to discover whether there are aliens with a flying saucer it would be stupid of me to rule out the possibility before I start.
</font>
No, it wouldn't. Turtonm already addressed this quite adequately.

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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
This is a historical event, how do you propose to perform a falsifiable test???
</font>
No, it is an alleged historical event. The first step is to prove that any such event is even possible in the first place.

Are the historical claims consistent with known science?


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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
Strong in the sense that the particular proofs are independent and have stood the test of rigorous investigation over time.


Hahaha, funny.
</font>
Hahaha all you want, but I'm correct. As evidence by your lack of answer.

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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
Do you have a specific complaint about c14 dating?
If so, bring it forth.


No, just a lot of general complaints. It's inaccuracy for starters.

I am skeptical of its accuracy beyond 2000 years or so and have completely no confidence in it beyond 4000 years. I'm not really prepared to argue this point, believe in it if you like...
</font>
Evidently you don't understand c14 and are not prepared to debate it. Smart move.


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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
However, c14 dating has been independently verified by over 100,000 separate tests in the last 50-60 years. So it had better be good.

Do you mean that it has been used over 100,000 times giving a date? Or do you mean it gave a provably accurate date those 100,000 times. If so, please give an example as to how its accuracy might be 'proved' and approximately how far back in time its accuracy has been proven to. (I know the answers to these, I'm just wondering if you do)
</font>

http://www.britannica.com/bcom/eb/ar...arbon%20dating

Also check this page out:
http://search.britannica.com/frm_red...on/carbon.html


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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
We don't truly know the age of the earth we just approximate. (And give our approximation a far smaller margin of error than it really has) So do you mean that we have a reasonable approximation of the age of the earth?
</font>
To be clear: we have established a minimum age for the earth. Geologists will usually state this as "the earth is known to be AT LEAST 4.55 billion years old", or some similiar language.


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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
I know what you mean by your point, I was just nit-picking: Without achieving an absolute vacuum we cannot be absolutely sure about what happens in one. The assumption that the speed of light in an absolute vacuum is almost the same/the same as the speed of light in a near vacuum is almost certainly warrented. Remember however that it is an assumption, it may not necessarily be true.
</font>
Unless you have good reason to suspect that there is a problem here, then correct: you are nitpicking, without any proper reason.

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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
The repeatability requirement of the scientific method only applies to the repeatability of the results from your experiement. The event you are studying does not have to be repeatable. If that were the case, then we could not use the scientific method to study the Revolutionary War.

To use the scientific method you must have a physical object you can study repeatedly. History can't be studied repeatedly as it happens once, therefore it isn't a science.
</font>
I repeat:

The non-repeatability of a historical event does not stop us from scientifically investigating it (if it ever happened at all). We can still study that event by testing the claims of the event, as well as any artifiacts associated with it.


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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
Archeology is a science because we find relics which can be studied repeatedly.
</font>
However, archaelogical events (such as the fall of Babylon) are one-time events. Are you saying that we cannot apply scientific method to the claims surrounding that event?


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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
Geology (for anyone's information) is an interesting mixture of both science and history, almost like archeology and history under one name. T
</font>
No, not really. Geology is a hard science. And since archaeology is specifically the study of ancient human civilizations and remains, there is no connection to geology (study of the non-living, non-human earth).


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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
scientific method applies to the scientifically testable part of Geology but not to the historical part.
</font>
It does apply to the historical part.

Geology studies the events, even the unique events, in the earth's long history by applying the scientific method to the available evidence. The fact that geology uses the S.M. on such things as the NgoroNgoro crater, the Xicxulub compaction zone, or the eruption of Mt. Aetna, demonstrates that the scientific method is useful even on one time events.


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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
Geology is regarded as a science because it has a scientific part.
</font>
Your distinction is bogus.


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<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">
I have. I've also seen other replies to you in this thread. You don't seem to understand the relationship between science and history. History is NOT a science. Demanding science type/level evidence for history is idiotic. They are different things.
</font>
I fully understand the difference. However, no historical conclusions are valid, if those conclusions contradict science. In other words, scientific facts supersede historical conclusions, whether you like it or not.
 
 

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