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05-03-2001, 09:16 PM | #61 |
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Part 3 of 3.
NOMAD: From Webster's.com: Main Entry: fal·la·cious Function: adjective 1 : embodying a fallacy 2 : tending to deceive or mislead You did this in spades Earl. So the next time, before you try to bore us with semantics, make sure you are on solid ground. Your argument embraced a fallacy. It might even have been intended to deceive or mislead. Your accusation that Christians do something simply because I did something certainly qualifies under that banner. So, don't go digging any more holes for yourself to crawl out of Earl. EARL: What hole? You don't understand the meaning of the word "fallacious," Nomad. You've shown that beyond a doubt now. The second point of the definition you gave points to the word's root, "fallere," or "deceive." This shows the difference between any old error and a fallacy. The two terms are NOT equivalent. And you've been kind enough to give me more evidence that shows that you don't understand this point. Nomad says (my emphasis) "It MIGHT even have been intended to deceive or mislead." Oops. By definition (the root word), the thrust of the word "fallacy" is that for a falsehood to be one it MUST be caused by defective/misleading/deceptive reasoning. Yet Nomad thinks my "fallacy" just MIGHT be caused by deception. Nomad simply doesn't understand the difference between a factual error and an error caused by deceptive reason, a fallacy. Worse yet, Nomad seems to think that the deception involved in the use of a fallacy is "intended." There's nothing whatsoever necessarily intentionally deceptive about the use of a fallacy. The deceptiveness involved in fallacious arguments is not in the proponent's intention, but in the twisted and misleading proof offered. The proponent herself is usually "deceived" or misled by this defective reasoning, which is why she puts forward the fallacy in the first place. And of course, I've already cleared up Nomad's mountain made out of a mole hill. Contrary to Nomad's typical misrepresentation, I never stated that because Nomad did something therefore all Christians do it. What I did was to fail to state fully my reason for generalizing about Christians, namely my debates with some other Christians. In any case--and this is so obvious that I'm embarrassed now to have to say it--this molehill of mine had absolutely nothing to do with the statements of mine Nomad said were fallacious. Perhaps the deception involved in my molehill was magically transferred to my "fallacies" made elsewhere in the post, thus fulfilling the second part of Webster's definition according to Nomad's deeply impoverished understanding of this definition. Similarly it might help Nomad's case that I lied to my mother years ago about stealing a cookie from the cookie jar. All we have to do is transfer that deception to some of the statements I made in this thread, and presto: a "fallacy" is constructed. Here's the recipe, then, of the Nomadian use of "fallacy: one part unrelated deception or one part intentional deception, and one part mere factual error. Here, though, for those interested is the recipe for "fallacy" as understood by logicians: one part falsehood with the necessary additional ingredient of a defective/misleading/ "deceptive" reasoning procedure, or proof. NOMAD: Oh, and when ya'll go for your dictionaries: Main Entry: fal·la·cy Function: noun 1 a obsolete {snip} 2 a : a false or mistaken idea <popular fallacies> b : erroneous character : ERRONEOUSNESS 3 : an often plausible argument using false or invalid inference I'm guessing you replied before thinking Earl. Otherwise you would not have been so hasty to accuse me of something without understanding that I had, in fact, labled you correctly. [SNIP] EARL: Yes, Nomad, a fallacy involves the quality of erroneousness. But that doesn't make the word equivalent to "error," as if any single kind of error can properly be called a fallacy. Look at the root of the word to determine its thrust: "fallere" or "deceive." This refers to the way certain defective (non-truth preserving) reasoning practices can beguile and mislead us. A fallacy is an error that has the deceptive appearance of being correct, because of the twisted proof offered in support of the false idea. A fallacy is not just any old false idea but one supported by defective reasoning. These defective procedures go by the names given to the informal fallacies, such as "special pleading." My statement that scientists are not emotionally attached to the theory of evolution, for example, is an empirical question of fact, and if wrong would NOT be fallacious. Likewise, were someone to mistype your phone number into her record or misremember your address and go to the wrong house, the person would NOT be guilty of fallacious reasoning. Such counter-examples show unmistakably that, contrary to Nomad, the word "fallacy" is not equivalent to the word "error." A fallacy is an error of a specific kind, namely one supported by twisted logic. You are getting free lessons in logic and semantics here, Nomad. I hope you learn from this and in the future research terms before you use them. I would like nothing better than for Christians and everyone else to study logic and the fallacies. Much needless debate could then probably be avoided. NOMAD: See how you are still committing this fallacy? How do non-Christian scholars have a stake in the existence or non-existence of Jesus? EARL: They don't, which is why I (1) didn't over-generalize and talk about all bible scholars, and (2) didn't commit the genetic fallacy and claim that the Christian scholars are biased and that therefore Jesus did not exist. All I did was point out that Christian scholars have an EXTRA stake in believing that Jesus existed which evolutionists lack, because Christians usually claim explicitly to have some personal, emotional connection to and trust in Jesus. Evolutionists lack this connection to the natural forces that select certain species under certain conditions. As I said, I was careful to stop short of saying that the Christian scholar's faith impedes her rational judgment and that therefore we should doubt that Jesus existed. My point in this thread was only to refute Layman's comparison not to defend mythicism itself. I had no intention of arguing that Jesus didn't exist. All I argued is that Creationists and mythicists are significantly dissimilar because their opponents are so. Evolutionists lack faith in evolution whereas Christian bible scholars, who I contend form most of the consensus in favour of Jesus' existence (this is an empirical question and not even potentially a fallacy), do possess faith in and strong feelings for Jesus. That's simply a very stubborn difference in the way evolutionists and bible scholars treat their opposition. For Christian bible scholars, the matter is personal. NOMAD: How can you claim that they have a motive that is not tied to the honest pursuit of historical truth? EARL: I never claimed this. This is your misrepresentation that seems to imply that I've committed the genetic fallacy. I've explained in detail why I haven't committed that fallacy. I said the Christian scholars have an EXTRA incentive BESIDES their critical faculties for believing that Jesus existed. I didn't speculate as to how much the former might impede the latter. I didn't discuss the matter and therefore did not commit the genetic fallacy. NOMAD: Further, how can you know that Christian scholars are not actually interested in the honest answer to this question, and will pursue it with integrity? Then tell us how you came to know this. EARL: Again, I never claimed to know this. You have demonstrably misrepresented my position. I was talking about the difference between evolutionists and the majority of bible scholars (who I claim are likely Christian), not the truth of mythicism. I have not defended mythicism anywhere in this thread. I have, rather, attacked Layman's comparison between mythicism and Creationism. The failure of this comparison could, of course, be used to support mythicism but only in a very general sense. The conclusion would be that mythicism is not as bad as Creationism. That would hardly make mythicism true. EARL: Since I stopped short of using this as evidence of something's truth or falsity, I did NOT commit the genetic fallacy. NOMAD: You made a truth statement that is false. You claimed that Christian scholars are affected by their Christianity in pursuing this question. You cannot prove this, and further, you have failed to demonstrate at all that they reached their conclusions in any manner that is different from the non-Christian scholars. EARL: And here Nomad simply gives the game away and makes my job as easy as can be. Nomad unmistakably, right before our very eyes equates "fallacy" and making a "false" statement, as if any old error or falsehood can be called a fallacy. Nomad unbelievably makes this error even though he quoted the root of the word "fallacy." Does Nomad think that every time someone makes "a truth statement that is false" the person has engaged in "deception," the root meaning of "fallacy"? If not, then Nomad should know that "fallacy" and "false statement" cannot be equated. NOMAD: Don't do it again. EARL: Yes sir. Heil Hitler. NOMAD (initially quoting a scholar I cited regarding the nature of the genetic fallacy): "But if reasons for belief are USED AS THOUGH (emphasis in original) they are reasons for truth, this has been recognized for most of the history of logic as an informal fallacy, the "genetic fallacy," in which the origin or the cause of a proposition is taken to have some bearing on its truth. It doesn't." Not wanting to get too deep into semantic quibbles here Earl, but you really didn't see yourself do this did you? How sad. You BELIEVE that Christian scholars are impaired from pursuing the historical Jesus because they believe that He is God. You cannot prove this, and since the conclusions drawn by Christian scholars is identical to those drawn by non-Christian scholars on the essentials of this question (i.e. Jesus lived, taught, died) your claim fails completely. In other words, what you believe to be the truth is not the truth, but you still believe that it is the truth. EARL: Here Nomad makes such a startling mistake that I'm loathe to admit I feel genuine pity for him. Nomad has badly failed to understand the scholar's comment he and I provide. Why did the scholar (Kelley Ross) highlight the words "used as though"? Evidently for Nomad the reason is connected to why Nomad highlighted "believe" in his charge against me that I "believe" that Christian scholars are impaired and can't form a neutral judgment regarding Jesus' existence. I've already pointed out Nomad's misrepresentation on this point, but now I want to demonstrate once again using this new, astounding evidence that Nomad utterly and completely fails to understand the meaning of the term "genetic fallacy." In a nutshell, Nomad apparently thinks the fallacy is committed when someone uses the mere existence of her own belief as evidence of the truth or falsity of something. This is at least the only way I can think of to explain why Nomad highlighted "believe" in his charge against me, without showing at all how I specifically committed the genetic fallacy. The nature of the genetic fallacy is easy enough to understand. The fallacy consists of the confusion between a proposition's cause and its justification. The source of a proposition is logically irrelevant to its justification or truth status. The source is, rather, just an irrelevant circumstance (at least in most contexts). So, for example, if I was brought up to believe that 2 + 2 = 100, the source of my belief in this equation's truth could not be used as evidence of the equation's truth or its falsity for that matter. The cause of my belief in the equation is logically independent of the equation's truth status. This is what Kelley Ross meant when he (or she?) said, "There is a difference between a reason why something is believed (ratio credentis, an explanation) and a reason why something is true (ratio veritatis, a justification)….But if reasons for belief are used as though they are reasons for truth, this has been recognized for most of the history of logic as an informal fallacy, the "genetic fallacy."" Ross is talking about the difference between the contingent circumstances, such as someone's place of birth, that cause someone to form a belief, and the belief's logical justification or truth status. A "reason" or cause of a belief is not the same as a reason for the truth of something. A belief's source is different from its justification. So in order for me to have committed the genetic fallacy I would had to have argued that the cause of the Christian scholar's belief in Jesus' existence, being entirely or at least infected by her religious faith and perceived personal relationship with Jesus (neither of which I claimed, Nomad's misrepresentation notwithstanding), is itself evidence of the falsity of the belief in Jesus' existence. I nowhere made this claim. Not once. Neither did I make the much stranger claim that the cause (or as Nomad seems to put it, the mere existence) of MY belief that Christian scholars are biased is itself some sort of justification for accepting mythicism. And yet amazingly, shockingly, outrageously Nomad appears--someone please correct me if I'm wrong--to believe that my genetic fallacy consists of the use of the mere existence of my (false) "belief" that Christian scholars are biased "as though" this belief were itself a reason for its truth and the truth of mythicism. Although this is a disastrous misunderstanding of the genetic fallacy, I can see no more charitable interpretation of Nomad's claim that one of my statements satisfied Ross' definition of the genetic fallacy ("if reasons for belief are USED AS THOUGH they are reasons for truth," this is the genetic fallacy), together with Nomad's bizarre highlighting of "believe" in his charge against me that "You [Earl] BELIEVE that Christian scholars are impaired from pursuing the historical Jesus because they believe that He is God." What on Earth as it is in heaven does my "BELIEF" regarding the bias of Christian scholars (assuming I said these scholars are biased, which I did not) have to do with the genetic fallacy, which is about the confusion between the CAUSE or SOURCE of a belief as though it were the belief's logical justification? If I've so blatantly committed the genetic fallacy, Nomad should easily be able to state how I've made this confusion. Yes even though Nomad has apparently and very strangely asserted that my genetic fallacy is in regard to MY OWN belief rather than that of the Christian bible scholars, Nomad hasn't said anything about the SOURCE of my belief being used as its justification. He seems to think that the mere holding of this false belief of mine in spite of the existence of non-Christian bible scholars who accept Jesus' existence as historical amounts to the genetic fallacy. Thus Nomad ignores the all-important clause in Ross' definition regarding the confusion between the belief's cause or source and its rational proof or the reason for the belief's truth. To finish up, Nomad offers a very feeble explanation as to how I've committed the genetic fallacy, revealing once again Nomad's confusion between an error and a fallacy. Nomad says "In other words, what you believe to be the truth is not the truth, but you still believe that it is the truth." Yet this is merely a definition of the act of holding a false belief. Since not all false beliefs are held fallaciously, the thrust of the word "fallacy" involving "deception" or misleading reasoning procedures, Nomad's definition here CANNOT be one of "fallacy." In summary, Nomad has given us more evidence of his ignorance of logical, skeptical terminology perhaps than even we would have wanted to possess. NOMAD: Try not to do these semantic quibbles with me again please. EARL: Do you know what the word "quibble" means, Nomad? A quibble is a shifting of focus onto an irrelevant matter in order to avoid dealing with the main issue. So to determine if my explanation of the meaning of the term "genetic fallacy" was a quibble, all we have to do is backtrack a little and see who brought up what and when. In Nomad's first reply to my reply to Layman, Nomad accused me of making a "fallacious claim" (Nomad's words: "The second reason Earl's argument fails is that he makes the fallacious claim that people believe Jesus existed largely because their religion requires them to do this, namely Christianity.") So Nomad was the first to bring up the question of fallacies. I then replied to this accusation by explaining that I did not at least commit the genetic fallacy. This was the only fallacy I could think of that my opponent could accuse me of. After all, Nomad was not kind enough actually to state how my reasoning was defective. Instead he pointed out that my claim is merely false, as if "falsehood" were equivalent to "fallacy." And now Nomad calls my explanation of the term "genetic fallacy" a "semantic quibble." Nomad apparently doesn't understand the meaning of the term "quibble" either. I haven't made any distraction away from an important issue. I've simply replied to your accusation that I committed a fallacy. EARL: What percentage of bible scholars would Nomad say is non-Christian? The majority? I should think not. NOMAD: Who knows Earl. Your fallacy is not rooted in numbers. It is rooted in an uprovable (and unfallisfiable) assertion that Christian scholars cannot pursue the historical Jesus with the same level of objectivity as the non-Christian scholar. Try this... the concensus amongst historians that have studied the question of Jesus' historicity have reached a consensus because the evidence is convincing, and convincing to the point that it is accepted as an historical fact. That would account for the consensus far better than your speculations on the question. EARL: My "fallacy" is rooted only in Nomad's imagination. And here we go again. Nomad tries to sound skeptical by using the term "unfalsifiable." Has he used the term correctly? Aside from the fact that Nomad has once again resorted to misrepresentation (I never discussed in this thread whether the Christian bible scholar's perceived emotional relationship with Jesus interferes with her study of the evidence for Jesus' existence, nor did I try to "account for the consensus," but said only that the faith-based relationship amounts to an ADDED incentive for the Christian bible scholar to reject mythicism out of hand, an incentive lacking on the part of evolutionists), this claim that Nomad imputes to me is hardly in principle untestable. One way to falsify it would be to test the heart rate and other physiological signs of Christian and non-Christian bible scholars as they are presented with mythicist theories or negative pictures of Jesus to see if there is a difference in the intensity of their reaction. Another way would be to see how willing and for how long the two sets of bible scholars would entertain the notion that Jesus did not exist. How important is the belief in Jesus' existence to the sets of scholars? Equally important? How much does the religious faith of the one set cloud these scholars' judgment? How about setting up a device that reads the minds of the Christian scholars to determine how often they have pious thoughts as they purport to be writing a neutral history of Jesus? NOMAD: While I don't doubt that you actually believe this, I would suggest that you open your eyes Earl. Human beings have a powerful vested interest in their opinions, and scholars in a particular area of expertise are especially prone to this. If you don't think that scientists are emotionally committed to evolution (and rightly so in my opinion) put them in a debate with a committed YECer, and watch what happens. It is not a pretty sight. EARL: Ok, so why do evolutionists sometimes get emotional when refuting Creationists? Is the only possible answer that the evolutionists are emotionally connected to the theory of evolution itself? Hardly. First off, I note Nomad's (and Layman's too) strawman attack, as if I ever said scientists never get emotional when defending evolution or that scientists are like the unemotional Vulcans from Star Trek. I said only that they have no emotional attachment to evolution, not that scientists have no emotions or that they show no emotions when refuting Creationism. There is an obvious difference between these two propositions. Here is a short list of alternative reasons why scientists might get emotional when refuting Creationists. (1) Scientists are likely emotionally attached to the scientific method and the practical advantages this has given us through technology. Since the Creationists pretend to be scientific but in fact misuse scientific principles, Creationists give science a bad name and damage the reputation of science in popular "postmodern" opinion. A scientist's anger at this could come out in a debate with a Creationist. (2) Scientists are likely offended by the influence Creationists have in making social policy, the harmful laws they want passed, such as the right to teach Creationism to young people as though Creationism were science. (3) Scientists are likely offended by the Creationists' indoctrination of the children to whom they have access, depriving the future scientific enterprise of much needed working scientists. And here's the important point. None of these emotional connections (or others I could think of) serve as a parallel to the perceived emotional connection Christian bible scholars admittedly have with Jesus. An emotional reaction from a scientist need not be explained in terms of an emotional attachment to evolution itself, whereas Christian scholars explicitly claim to have an emotional reaction to the very object of their study, Jesus. They affirm their faith in Jesus' continuing existence, his divinity, his all-important personal and loving impact on their lives. None of this is present in scientists' attitude towards evolution. Indeed, it would be senseless to speak of such a thing. Surely this makes for a major difference between Christian bible scholars and scientists, and therefore between Creationism and mythicism, according to Layman's points of comparison. NOMAD: This is a clever bit of word play as well, and I just wanted to draw attention to it. Scientists are not emotionally attached to natural forces. They are, however, emotionally attached to the theory called Evolution. The difference is crucial, and I am surprised that Earl didn't realize it... until now. EARL: Wordplay? What's the parallel to the object of the Christian scholars' emotional reaction, the theory of evolution or that which justifies the theory, evolution itself? Do Christian scholars have feelings for the theory that Jesus existed or for Jesus himself? The answer is the latter. They are emotionally attached to the person of Jesus, not to their books about Jesus. They have faith not in the theory that Jesus existed but in the person of Jesus himself, that which causes their theories about Jesus to be true, namely Jesus' actual existence. Likewise, if there were to be a parallel scientists would have to be emotionally attached not to the theory of evolution but to that which causes evolution, the set of natural forces that justifies the theory. NOMAD: Thanks Earl, but next time, please try not to be both excessively verbose, and excessively wrong in the same post. Replying to this kind of stuff takes a long time, and if you could sum up your arguments in briefer points, we could save a lot of time. EARL: My obligation is not to save your time. It's to refute your arguments to the best of my ability, and in this case to expose the emptiness of your strategy to sound like a skeptic by using skeptical terminology, such as your references to evolution and the fallacies. This I have done. |
05-03-2001, 11:25 PM | #62 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Here we go again. Earl is going to bury us in a mountain of bullshit, then accuse me of making mountains out of molehills. The irony really is rich.
At the same time, I am not going to inflict as much damage on the braincells of the viewers of this thread as you do Earl. I guess you think that nothing that can be said in 20 words shouldn’t be said in 2000, then live by the rule, but the howls of protest you proclaim don’t really need quite so much verbage in response. So, three posts in one, let’s get started: PART 1: Quote:
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See how well I have learned how you mind works Earl? You didn’t say anything, and covered your ass. This is cool. I just wanted to make sure anyone reading this noticed it too. Alright, next point. Quote:
Don’t be so dense Earl (and not you Doherty, I apologize that this will look confusing because of the two Earls now here). In any event, enough of Earl’s pathetic rants. I apologize that I had to subject everyone to this. I should have known that he was going to respond in so much depth, and say nothing at all through it all. I suppose we could boil Earl’s argument down to “it isn’t special pleading when I or those I am quoting do it, so don’t accuse me of doing this.” Tough Earl. I still call spades spades. Quote:
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Now, don’t accuse me of misrepresenting you or sceptics every time I hold up the mirror and show you how they actually look. Once you see how unconvincing they really are it is no doubt hard to accept, but that will not stop me from holding up that mirror. With luck, some here will also see it, even if you refuse to do so. Quote:
I have also already TOLD you that an extraordinary amount of evidence is available to demonstrate the soundness of the theory, so it meets the required threshold. The Law of Gravity is not extraordinary for most of us. The Theory of Relativity is. So is the Theory of Evolution. And if it helps, you don’t need faith in science to believe in gravity. You do need to have faith in science to believe in Evolution. PART 2 Quote:
What I will say here is that for the layman like me, there is nothing about Evolution that makes simple basic, ordinary sense. Lots of scientific theories fall into this category, and to me, that makes it very extra-ordinary. I guess that means Earl thinks I am just plain dumb. So be it. All I know is that I am force to rely on the expertise of those who know about far more about the hard sciences than I do, and I am content to do this. BTW, whatever made you think that a claim can only be extraordinary if it is metaphysical in nature? And further, do you know a scientist alive that thinks that the Theory of Evolution does not make metaphysical claims? To hear the laymen like you use it, I have seen many of you treat it like a weapon to attack the theist, and that makes it a metaphysical claim, and a very extraordinary one. At the same time, like I said, it has extraordinary evidence to support it, and the Church has not found any reason to reject it. Quote:
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You do not think we should believe anything about history, and that is interesting. Quote:
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Now, I defined “fallacy”. It is called an “error”. In fact, the dictionary definition said exactly that. So Earl launches himself into yet another holy lather to protest that I do not understand what a fallacy is. I guess we just have to let the readers decide for themselves again. Quote:
I suppose the best thing to do would be to ask you to tone down your rhetoric and think about your post more before you do this again. Scholars do not mock the mythers, they ignore them, and thus far, the reason that they do this is because we do not have a single scholar that is a true myther. It that ever happens, then perhaps you will hear the mockery. Until that fateful day, you will have to content yourselves with the likes of me, JP and Meta. Quote:
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Can you do that please? (I know you can’t but that only proves my point really) PART 3: Quote:
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Look up Earl. See the title of the thread? It is called “How Many Myth Founders Where There?”. Now, NONE of your past few posts have ANYTHING to do with the topic of the thread. Instead, you have tried to quibble with me about semantics, demonstrating only that you do not even see how you commit each of the errors I have leveled against you. You have attempted (wittingly or not) to drag this thread so far off topic, and bury it under so much bullshit that everyone will forget the topic of discussion. While we are at it, how many myth founders were there? You have not addressed this question at all on this thread. If you want to do so, then do it. If not, what are you doing here? Quote:
My apologies to Layman for having to respond to this on his thread. With luck, now that I have taken care of all of Earl’s nonsense, the thread can get back to the real topic. Good night, Nomad [This message has been edited by Nomad (edited May 04, 2001).] |
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05-04-2001, 11:15 AM | #63 |
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I can't resist responding to just a few of Nomad's last statements. I am surprised that he hasn't admitted any of his mistakes after I went to so much trouble to explain them to him. He still thinks metaphysical extraordinariness (the kind relevant to a discussion of the burden of proof) is the same as vastness of scope or "complexity," that raising a minority interpretation is a fallacy of inconsistency, specifically special pleading, and that errors in general are all "fallacies."
Nomad says again flat-out "You still think that there is nothing extraordinary about the theory of evolution. I am telling you that there is, and that no one alive understands all of its complexity…. PhysicsGuy told us on these very boards that the acceptance of the theory requires years of technical training, and is not even close to intuitive, nor something we can or even should accept in an ordinary fashion." He says this after I showed in some detail that the type of extraordinariness in question is not the same as complexity or vastness in scope. A claim can be simple and yet extraordinary enough to require extraordinary evidence. Indeed, most miracle claims are simple in this sense and yet require extraordinary evidence. So evolution's complexity, how much training is needed to master the subject, or the fact that no one comprehends all the data regarding the theory, are all totally irrelevant. As for evolution's intuitiveness, Nomad said earlier that if it were intuitive ancient thinkers would have come up with the idea. I showed indeed that the Presocratics had come up with the underlying ideas, which shows that these ideas (algorithmic adaptation, biological change resulting entirely from materialistic forces) are not counter-intuitive. The broad ideas and forces, essentially materialism, behind evolution are not counter-intuitive nor are they unfamiliar in human experience. We experience them every day, although we don't directly perceive their long-term effects. The theory of evolution should indeed not be accepted in an "ordinary fashion," but that's because it's so vast in scope and complex, not metaphysically extraordinary. The theory doesn't require extraordinary evidence, because it's naturalistic and familiar. Take a species from its initial habitat and remove it to an isolated one. It will adapt or die, and the genes of any survivors will be passed on to its descendents. In time the species will be physically transformed to best match its new setting. What's extraordinary about this algorithmic process? What the theory has is A LOT of ordinary proof, not any piece of metaphysically extraordinary proof. Belief in evolution is not faith, since it's warranted purely by the evidence. **** Nomad says now that Doherty makes a fallaciously special plea by telling us "that we must be sceptical of the interpretations of the Greek offered by all scholars except himself, but trusting of his own interpretations. We must doubt the validity of the testimony from other scholars regarding such interpretations (like what you see from the Biblical Scholarly community), but not the testimony for me, Doherty." Yet this is exactly what anyone does when merely offering a minority opinion on a subject. A person in such a minority position would say 'I disagree with the majority opinion and therefore claim that their view is wrong whereas mine is right. I am offering a minority opinion, which by definition disagrees with the consensus, yes even the opinions of most scholars on the subject.' That is just offering a minority interpretation, Nomad, not the fallacy of special pleading. We know for a fact that offering a minority opinion isn't fallacious, since it wouldn't be a truth-preserving rule to disregard automatically every new, and thus not commonly held interpretation as fallaciously "special pleas." Once again, the fallacy is to be INCONSISTENT, not to be merely in the MINORITY. That is Nomad's confusion. Nomad must show that Doherty is inconsistent in applying certain standards to other scholars and then breaking those very standards himself, demanding special attention to his own interpretation whereas he himself does not give that attention to other scholars' interpretation. That would be inconsistent and therefore fallacious. Nomad only shows that Doherty is in the minority, which is not fallacious. Doherty does indeed appreciate and deal with the interpretation of opposing scholars. He shows no inconsistency. **** And Nomad continues to equate "error" and "fallacy," even though I explained the difference in detail and gave counter-examples of errors that are plainly not fallacies, such as misreporting, misjudging or misremembering something. Yet Nomad says outright "Now, I defined "fallacy". It is called an "error." In fact, the dictionary definition said exactly that." And worse yet Nomad says, "Gee Earl. I only showed you that a fallacy is an error (erroneous). I don't know how much clearer I can make this for you so that you can actually understand this truism. If you are in error, you embrace a fallacy. In embracing a fallacy, you make a fallacious argument. In fact, the dictionary definition said exactly that." The dictionary also gives the root word and thus the context in which errors can be considered fallacious. When a computer misreports someone's name as "Stann" instead of "Stan," that is a factual error but not a fallacy. No one would say that the computer had committed a fallacy. When I misperceive your shoes as brown instead of black, that is a factual mistake but not a fallacy. Empirically based misjudgments, misrememberings, and misreportings are all kinds of errors but not fallacies. Therefore the word "fallacy" CANNOT mean just "error." A fallacy is an error supported by "deceptive" (misleading and non-truth-preserving) logic or reasoning procedures, such as "strawman," "special pleading," and so forth. I had said that Christian bible scholars have an extra incentive to believe that Jesus exists, namely because they have what they perceive to be a personal relationship with and feelings for the person in question, Jesus. I did not say, contrary to Nomad's misrepresentation, that this incentive necessarily renders the scholars incapable of forming a neutral judgment regarding Jesus' existence. It may or it may not. But I didn't get into that question, because it made no difference to my objective, which was to refute Layman's comparison between Creationism and mythicism. I just wanted to show that those two positions are very different, not that one is true. But even taking the claim Nomad falsely attributes to me, we can see that if it were wrong it would be a factual error, an empirically based misjudgment and not a fallacy or a false idea based on twisted logic. Is it fallacious to think that some scholars' faith or emotions can get in the way of their objectivity? Has this never once happened? It's an empirical question, as I see it, not a matter of defective logic. Therefore it's at best factually wrong not fallacious, the two not being equal. **** As for a scholar who doesn't believe Jesus exists (Nomad means a scholar above Doherty's caliber, even though Doherty's works are scholarly--are they submitted for peer review or just not reviewed?), Robert Price would be an example. He thinks we should be agnostic regarding Jesus' existence. See his book "Deconstructing Jesus." **** Well, that's enough for me in this thread. Yes, my replies to Nomad were not directly on topic for this thread, although my reply to Layman and my defense of that reply to Nomad was. My posts on skeptical terminology were meant, though, to impeach Nomad's credibility in general, and therefore indirectly the posts are relevant. Showing that your opponent misuses his terms in general is not quibbling over details. I replied not only to these terminological issues that Nomad himself raised by falsely using the terms, but also to his substantive points against my reply to Layman, which was directly on topic. Nomad is the one who took me off-topic by consistently misusing his terms. Moreover, several of these points about terminology are in defense of Doherty, and are therefore not irrelevant in this thread about mythicism. My posts on terminology also demonstrate that when Nomad runs out of good arguments he tends to get more abusive. Everyone should watch for this tendency in the Doherty debate. With Doherty, however, Nomad will be in his element discussing Christian terminology. He should stick to that terminology and stay away from skeptical terms, such as evolution and logic, until he has better researched these areas which I'm sure he is capable of doing. [This message has been edited by Earl (edited May 04, 2001).] |
05-05-2001, 12:00 AM | #64 | |
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I know that Nomad does not understand what a null hypothesis is, but I have no illusions that I could convince him of it. I know that anyone with a statistics background reading this will know that Nomad is slinging terms around that he doesn't understand. |
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05-05-2001, 04:35 AM | #65 | |||||||||||||||||
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But, umm, I thought that this thread was about myths? I take some of Genesis as a sort of parable because of its symbolism [I don't know what a literal 'tree of the fruit of good and evil' would be save a symbol... :], but not "myth" exactly, due to the connotations of that word. I guess I don't see how you're getting on about this when its so offtopic? I rather like the real debate here better :] I guess that below is the divider between the pointless part and the real arguement? Quote:
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In short, this is absurd. You -have- to support your position such that we should *prefer* the minority oppinion to the majority. It is evidence, not numbers, that decide which is right. This sounds horribly like a reverse ad populum... It is -not- ad populum to refer to the *reasoning* of a group of experts to support the notion that a conclusion is sound given the evidence. As it has been said--"be open minded, but not so open mindend that your brain falls out." Quote:
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[QUOTE] Everyone should watch for this tendency in the Doherty debate. With Doherty, however, Nomad will be in his element discussing Christian terminology. He should stick to that terminology and stay away from skeptical terms, such as evolution and logic, until he has better researched these areas which I'm sure he is capable of doing. [QUOTE] I don't think that skeptics have a monopoly on logic, but I do think that you should avoid a waste of time on evolution. I don't find that very relevant to this issue, so I have included it only in response to it being raised here. I don't think that the language of historo-critical schorlarship is "Christian" either, even though certain terms would be used to describe certain passages & events. But this is neither here nor there, so I hope I can go back the the spectators' seats now :] I guess that I cannot just let ad logicam stand; I hope it has ended. |
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05-05-2001, 04:56 AM | #66 | |
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A conspiracy, no matter what you might think, is *not* a null hypothesis nor can it be ... it, in facts, asserts an awful lot, so you cannot "default" to it the way you seem to want to. It simply is not logical. As such, whoever said that the null hypothesis is that Jesus didn't exist is simply wrong. We know that either He existed, or there was a conspiracy. Saying that an ordinary man existed is not extraordinary; saying that a conspiracy was invented around someone who didn't exist most certainly *is* extraordinary. Now then, that does *not* mean that you cannot prove that it really was a conspiracy--you just need to have good evidence for the conspiracy. IMHO, it's wanting, but that is what debate is meant to expose... |
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05-05-2001, 05:17 AM | #67 | |
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I'm sorry, Earl. You would appear to be nit-picking anything you can to try to impeach Nomad's credibility [to which I reference your own statment claiming to have done that]. I think that you're taking some of the statements wrong [to which I give the evidence of the debate over the meaning of error and fallacy], since that's the best way for you to support a charge of fallacy. I find your charges weak enough that I am would charge you with fallacy, ad logicam for the lot of it. Worse, I don't think you see why. I know that I am capable of it too, but I watch myself for this, as you also should. Yet still, you can easily take someone's words the wrong way to find them in error. Please watch for this--it is insidious. That is why I had that long mention of how I was deliberately taking you the right way in my reading, but probably *not* what you meant, just to make the point of how it's done that you might see it. I can only hope that you will take note of this that you not waste your time over what amounts only to a mismatched idea of what a word or phrase meanas. The fallacies of ambiguity are some of the worst... :[ |
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05-05-2001, 08:20 AM | #68 |
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Hello Earl (number 1 I suppose)
I knew you could not resist trying to get in the last word. In any event, thank you to Photocrat for trying to help Earl see the error of his ways. Perhaps you will have had more luck than I have. He is a stubborn sort though. For me, closing points: 1) I asked for a scholar that asserts that Jesus is a 100% mythological construct. You gave me one (Robert Price) that takes the null position, namely that we do not have sufficient evidence to make a claim one way or the other. That means that he is as far from Doherty's position as he is from those that accept that Jesus did exist. Try again if you wish, but I suppose my point is sufficiently made. There is not a scholar alive that believes that Jesus is a mythological construct, and this will be an important point when the discussion begins (especially as we explore the idea of conspiracy theories and fallacious reasoning). 2) Your effort to impeach my credibility was clearly your main point Earl. Again, I suppose that is to be expected here. After all, attacking the credibility of sources is another of the common sceptic tactics on these boards, and you are merely playing to the crowd. On the other hand, I am going to stick with having Doherty demonstrate and prove his points with evidence and supports. Assertions and special pleading just won't do. 3) Remember that when we are talking about positive assertions (even ones like Jesus never existed, meaning he was a mythological construct) do require proof. Now, if ya'll are quite finished here, I hope someone will return to the topic of the thread. Again, my thanks to Photocrat. Be well, Brian (Nomad) P.S. If you have done anything Earl, you have reminded me to keep an eye out for the common sceptical tactic of well poisoning. Thank you for that. I don't expect Doherty to do it in the debate, but if you (or others) do this again with me or Christian scholars on the side threads, then I will have to point it out to you. [This message has been edited by Brian Trafford (edited May 05, 2001).] |
05-05-2001, 10:22 AM | #69 |
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Photocrat,
I'm just going to address some of your statements. I've explained my position more than enough in my three-part post. And once again, although these points about terminology aren't directly relevant to this thread, they are relevant to mythicism and Doherty since they're in response to terms Nomad uses against Doherty, especially "special pleading." I'll note here as well that given Nomad's confusions in terminology, my reply to Layman's comparison between mythicism and Creationism stands unscathed. (My three-part post more than covers Layman's reply.) **** First of all, regarding the fallacy of special pleading you make exactly the same error as Nomad when you say "It *is* a special plea to say all the world but me is wrong." Here are several definitions of the fallacy taken from logic sites on the internet. (1) From http://www.nizkor.org/features/falla...-pleading.html : "Special Pleading is a fallacy in which a person applies standards, principles, rules, etc. to others while taking herself (or those she has a special interest in) to be exempt, without providing adequate justification for the exemption." (2) From http://www.dissension.com/logic/specialplead.html : "Special Pleading, logically, is self-exemption from an argument…. "Definition: The speaker makes an all-encompassing statement and then exempts himself or herself from it. "This argument is a fallacy because a speaker who says that "All people..." and has a predicate must mean himself as well within all people, or be logically contradicting himself." "Examples: (a) Hitler: People shouldn't kill, except German people. (b) Andrew: We should be more caring of our fellow man. Danny: Yeah! Andrew: Except me, I should go eat some candy." (3) From http://www.aros.net/~wenglund/logic101a.htm#pleading : "Special pleading (double standards) and self-undermining reasoning: refusing to apply the same principles to oneself that one applies to others." So what have we learned, Photocrat? "Special pleading" is a synonym for "double-standard" or "self-exemption." Yet you and Nomad say "It *is* a special plea to say all the world but me is wrong." What you leave out in your definition is the part about inconsistency, which alone makes special pleading illogical. Doherty must not merely be in the minority to commit the fallacy of special pleading. He must also logically contradict himself by violating the same standards or claims he applies to everyone else. The reason it's not necessarily a special plea just to be in the small minority is because of the difference between new reasons (which Doherty offers) and inconsistent reasons to hold a belief. It's possible to argue that everyone else is wrong because of a new set of arguments offered by those in the small minority, without fallaciously exempting oneself from the criticism the minority applies to the majority. The two are logically separate (newness and inconsistency) and therefore your definition of "special pleading" is insufficient. Some of your points show either that you didn't read what I wrote or else didn't follow the whole discussion. For example, in reply to my point about the difference between inconsistency and minority you say "Whoah! The burden of proof is on the other back! *They* need to give us reason to *prefer* their interpretation to the scholarly one, without begging the question. Even if I come up with a consistant construct, I should have to show you a reason to prefer it over the existing one, that's just basic reasoning..." So when did I ever say Doherty could get away without offering new but not inconsistent reasons in support of his position? Of course Doherty has to give reasons to believe Jesus didn't exist. But these reasons can be new, contrary to common consensus and yet not inconsistent (or special pleas). You and Nomad wrongly equate "newness and minority" with "inconsistency," as if everyone who offered new arguments that subsequently became the majority position were at first guilty of inconsistency or special pleading. Was Copernicus, for example, guilty of inconsistency when he challenged common opinion about the position of the sun? He offered NEW arguments and evidence not inconsistent ones. An argument can challenge the majority position without contradicting itself simply by being new. **** Likewise in reply to my statement that "Nomad continues to equate "error" and "fallacy," even though I explained the difference in detail and gave counter-examples of errors that are plainly not fallacies, such as misreporting, misjudging or misremembering something" you say "Mmmm, I'm finding legitimate fallacy here... All error is not fallacy, but all fallacy is an error in reasoning." Your confused statement here agrees with mine and disagrees with Nomad's. Some groups are part of other groups but not the other way around. All dogs are animals, but not all animals are dogs. Dogs are a sub group within animals. This is truly elementary. Likewise, all fallacies are errors but not all errors are fallacies. Fallacies are a type of error. Nomad, however, says that all errors are fallacies. He says "Now, I defined "fallacy". It is called an "error."" But that is not a sufficient definition of fallacy, of course, because "fallacy" isn't equivalent to "error." A definition of "fallacy" rather than "error" must show how the two words are different by giving the sufficient conditions that distinguish them. We know for certain that not all errors are fallacies, so Nomad's "definition" that a fallacy "is called an error" is insufficient. It's like defining a dog by saying "a dog is an object." Well, yes, a dog is an object, but much more besides. A dog is alive, an animal, a canine, and so on. Likewise, a fallacy is more than just an error; it's an error by way of deception or defective reasoning, which rules out the empirical statement I made that Nomad called "fallacious." In case you have any doubts, Nomad goes so far as to say outright "If you are in error, you embrace a fallacy." This is exactly like saying "If you are an animal you are a dog" or "If you are a human you are Socrates." Nomad gives a one-way account of fallacy that goes the wrong way! The correct way is to say that "If you commit a fallacy you commit an error," whereas Nomad reverses this to read "If you are in error you commit a fallacy." Nomad reverses the truth and fails to distinguish between "error" and "fallacy," whereas dictionaries commonly distinguish the two words by supplying the special root word of "fallacy" which is "deceive." Not all errors are types of deception, whereas properly speaking all fallacies are. You say (my emphasis) "A fallacy is an error IN REASONING." This is correct. Unfortunately, Nomad said "I defined "fallacy". It is called an 'error,'" "I only showed you that a fallacy is an error," and worst of all "If you are in error, you embrace a fallacy." All of these oversimplifications fail to distinguish between different kinds of errors, namely those which are fallacies and those which are not. The fact that he has failed to admit this is telling. Talk about stubbornness. **** And it appears I can add Photocrat to the number of Christians who like to sound skeptical without being so. Photocrat says that I've come close to "poisoning the well." In fact, as I pointed out in my earlier post, an opponent can say that I came close to committing the genetic fallacy, which differs from "poisoning the well." (I did NOT commit the genetic fallacy, however, as I showed in abundance.) "Poisoning the well" is a way of discrediting with negative information about an opponent ANYTHING the opponent might say in the future. At best, however, the statement that Nomad falsely attributes to me about Christian scholars' faith tries to discredit SOLELY these scholars' belief in Jesus' existence. Since Nomad has just come out in favour of Photocrat's confusion between "poisoning the well" and the genetic fallacy, by saying "If you have done anything Earl, you have reminded me to keep an eye out for the common sceptical tactic of well poisoning," I can add this term to the list of skeptical terms that Nomad abuses. (Logic and evolution are only skeptical terms, however, because skeptics like to learn about and emphasize them, not because Christians are somehow barred from doing so.) **** As for Nomad's last post, I'll keep my word and give him the last word. Mind you I already did keep my word, since I said that after my three-part post I wouldn't reply again to Nomad "point by point," which I didn't do. |
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