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05-03-2001, 02:27 PM | #41 | |
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The other sense I have heard it expressed is more like 'trust'. This, I guess, presupposes 100% knowledge of the existence of Jesus (and his divinity), and a subsequent trust that he will look after you and do the riht things. But maybe it is a combination of these things? fG |
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05-03-2001, 02:27 PM | #42 | |
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<G> |
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05-03-2001, 02:32 PM | #43 | |
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I guess we have to agree to disagree on this, then. fG |
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05-03-2001, 02:53 PM | #44 | ||
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Originally posted by Valar1:
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Peace, Polycarp P.S. I have no idea why it says I edited your last message. Maybe you accidentally copied that when replying to my previous post. |
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05-03-2001, 03:32 PM | #45 | ||||
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Does my wife love me? I can examine all of the evidence and conclude that there is a 99% chance (or better) that she does indeed love me, but I can’t prove it to a scientific certainty. I “trust” or “rely on faith” for the remaining 1% or less. So as you said, “there is at least a finite, theoretical chance” that my wife does not love me, and in the same way there is a chance that I’m wrong about Jesus’ existence. I don’t think trust “presupposes 100% knowledge of the existence of Jesus”. Do I trust my brother not to steal from me? Yes. Am I 100% certain that he won’t steal from me? No. 100% certainty isn’t necessary for trust. We’re getting into an area I’m a little uncomfortable discussing because it will begin to sound like I’m preaching and I don’t want to subject you to that sort of thing. To briefly address your last point, I don’t think god looks after us and makes sure we’ll do the right things. He gave everyone the freedom to not do the right things and I don’t think god should be faulted for the times we do the wrong things. Sorry if that doesn’t exactly answer your question. Quote:
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Now what’s even more important to this discussion is the perceived “benefit” of a decision. The benefit has absolutely nothing to do with the probability that the plan will succeed. If a plan has a 55% chance of succeeding, then it will probably succeed. Therefore, we should believe that the plan will probably succeed. The payoff does not change the chance of success. In addition, your analogy is much different because the choices are not mutually exclusive in the sense that they’re combined probabilities can total more than 100%. We could have 10 different plans all having a probability of greater than 50%. In my analogy (and the three examples given at the beginning of this thread) there are only two choices whose combined probability totals 100%. There can’t be a 90% chance Jesus existed and also a 90% chance that he did NOT exist. If there was a 90% chance of existence, then there would have to be a 10% chance of non-existence. Your analogy is in an entirely separate class because we’re dealing with a different sort of probability problem. Namely, that our choices can total more than 100%. Peace, Polycarp |
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05-03-2001, 03:44 PM | #46 | |||
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Nomad P.S. And yes, the percentages came out of thin air. |
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05-03-2001, 04:41 PM | #47 | |
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05-03-2001, 06:01 PM | #48 |
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I don't think probability numbers really tell the tale of how much we believe historical things. They are simply too easy to make up.
Its far more telling to me to see how much a person is willing to risk personally on some historic claim. What historical claim would you rest your life on? What historical claim would you bet a million dollars on? (Assuming your not filthy rich and don't care.) I'd bet a million dollars that Julius Ceasar existed. Even though I believe Jesus did exist, I'd be hard pressed to bet more than a couple hundred thousand or so on it. |
05-05-2001, 12:04 PM | #49 | |
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