FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 06-03-2004, 07:19 PM   #121
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Canada
Posts: 3,751
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by RobertLW
blt to go,

Thank you, Thank you, Thank you......FINALLY, someone willing to get to the ultimate and make a reasoned argument.... Everyone else, thanks for your replies and trying to discuss this with me. However, please take note, the only person that was willing to get to the ultimate was a Theist......
Oh, for pete's sake.

I liked bit to go's post a lot, but it was plainly a (lucid and forceful) extension of the same points Vinnie and others have made all along. (As were my posts, I should say.)

By this silly attempt to turn your own unresponsiveness to those points into some shared theistic virtue, you embarrass yourself badly. Very shoddy stuff indeed.
Clutch is offline  
Old 06-04-2004, 12:16 PM   #122
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: michigan
Posts: 513
Default

Clutch is absolutely correct, my previous post was a reiteration of the "special pleading" argument he has been making.

And the other points were brought up, if not explicitly, then certainly tacitly by others.

Frankly, the biggest reason I finally responded (even though I was following the thread) is that I could not possibly see how RobertLW's three questions further his position. Or why he would keep asking them. (And I had to correct that use of the word "presumption." )

I'll try it again. You see, RobertLW, if I claim the "ultimate authority" is logic, reason and rationale, the more you debate, the more you validate that position!
blt to go is offline  
Old 06-04-2004, 06:04 PM   #123
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Kansas
Posts: 220
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
RobertLW: A point, a couple of responses, and a few questions for you.

First, presumptions ARE a starting point and subject to change. I originally was going to let this go, and assume you meant some other word other than "presumptions," but as pointed out by others, you continue to
make the claim that your "presumptions are your arguments."

RobertLW, even you believe that presumptions will change. I note that in your first rebuttal to Vinnie in the actual debate, you use the language, "innocent until proven guilty." Actually, the entire phrase is that "An accused, in a criminal trial, is PRESUMED innocent until proven guilty." Do I need to go further? Note that if a "presumption is an argument," then all the defendant is arguing is repeatedly stating, "the accused is innocent, the accused is innocent?" No advancement of proof, no furthering of evidence, no providing argument. More to the point, if, the accused is presumed innocent, and such a presumption "cannot be changed midstream?" than there would never be need of trials. That presumption will set them free.
Let me explain as I see that you do not understand me correctly. Presuppositions as the above "innocent until proven guilty" are defeasible. They are subject to change based on the evidence at hand. However an ultimate presupposition "or standard of truth" does not change in the face of evidence because it is the standard by which the evidence is evaluated. Why can two people look at the same evidence and come away with two different conclusions? It is because they have different presuppositions guiding their evaluation of that evidence. Thus, to say "my presumption is my argument" is to say, "if you start with my ultimate authority (or standard of truth) you will come to this conclusion". The only recourse left to someone who would like to challenge those conclusions would be to attack my ultimate authority. Something nobody has been able to figure out. To attack a "surface anomaly" is useless because the standard by which I evaluate the evidence will lead me to a different conclusion than the attacker. Likewise, I would not bring up evidence like the testimony of history, the historicity of the resurrection, or the reliability of the text of scripture because I know that someone who has "Human knowledge" as their ultimate authority would interpret the evidence differently and come to a different conclusion. Consequently, the realm of argumentation should be reserved for debating these ultimate questions. To do otherwise is to just play games.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
(I understand it is bad form to quote what a user says in one thread against them in another thread, but this IS still the peanut gallery on the debate, so I fell somewhat at liberty to use your statements in the debate within this thread.).

I stand behind everything I say and will change it if proven wrong so feel free to use any of my statements from my debate.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
Do you wish to retract the statement that presumptions cannot be changed, or do you assume that the entire American Judicial System is significantly flawed, as it continually changes this presumption and finds presumed innocent persons to be the exact opposite of innocent, i.e.--guilty? Or perhaps you mean a different concept than presumption, and if so, please explain.

I believe that I have sufficiently explained the difference between defeasible and non-defeasible presuppositions above.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
Second, you have asked three questions. I do not think these questions help you position. Although I am not an atheist, if I was, I would respond as follows:

1. What is your ultimate authority? ? Human knowledge, with the caveat that it is limited (in that we know more than we did ten years ago, less than we will in ten years, and most likely will never have complete knowledge), is flawed (in that human perceptions will affect observations), is all-encompassing (in that it includes logic, reason, philosophy, biology, chemistry, and all the other little ?ology family, but not to the exclusion of other knowledge), and no one person can be fully knowledgeable (in that in some areas we must rely upon the expertise of others.)

Ok, let's use your pretend atheists ultimate authority as our case study.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
2. Why is it your ultimate authority? Because it is the best I have to work with, and in life, it is how I practically function. I do not know medicine, but if I am sick, I go to a doctor and rely upon what s/he has been taught. I do not know finances, I go to a stockbroker and rely upon that person. I do know law, and others (who do not) come to me to rely upon what I have been taught.
You have given a circular argument. You (if you were an atheist) have used human knowledge to support your belief in human knowledge. I do not fault you for that; on the contrary you must say that because when you get to this level ALL reasoning is circular. If someone's ultimate authority were "reason" the only way to prove that would be to use reason, if it were empirical data the only way to prove that would be through appealing to empirical data. And if your ultimate standard of truth is the revealed Word of God, you appeal to it to prove it. For example, you hear people say after they have exhausted their reasoning abilities, "well, it just seems reasonable to me!" or, "don't tell me that I saw it with my own eye's!" or, "well, the bible says so!" They have all appealed to their ultimate authority and cannot go beyond it. It is that presupposition by which all other propositions are evaluated. The question then becomes, "Whose ultimate authority provides all of the necessary justification for the rest of knowledge?" It is my contention that only the Christian one does.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
3. Using your ultimate authority, why are my presumptions incorrect? Because logic and reason would dictate that the Bible is errant. Note, the Chicago Statement (as I quoted above) notes these difficulties, and that the ONLY way to resolve them is to "rely upon God" (i.e. have faith) that they are not errors. In other words, the Statement knows there are errors, and responds, with no logical or rationale rebuttal. I would also include the entire debate as to why your "presumptions" are incorrect.

Here your pretended ultimate authority would refute your conclusion. Because it is ever changing you cannot trust it to establish any fact, you cannot "know" anything. You can only be a pragmatist and do what works without knowing any true knowledge, because tomorrow it might change. By adding your caveat "it is limited" to your ultimate authority you destroyed the possibility of truly knowing and are reduced to skepticism about everything. If I had a broken clock on my wall and it said 3:30 all the time and you asked me at precisely 3:30 "what time is it" would you accredit me with true knowledge because I said 3:30 or would you say "well he was right but he had no justification for that knowledge"? With your ever-changing "human knowledge" how can you ever accredit anybody with true knowledge? Thus, you cannot speak against someone else's propositions. You are almost correct about what the Chicago Statement says but this is another way of saying that we remain true to our ultimate authority. The authors of the Chicago Statement knew there are certain difficulties, not errors, and are honest with themselves and others by clearly stating that they will remain true to their ultimate authority.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
(Please Note, I am NOT stating this would be the response for ALL atheists, just what one person would respond.)

I am sure of that, but we will use this as our case study.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
Why do these questions not help you? Don't answer out loud, but practically, RobertLW, how do you live your life? When you are sick, do you pray and move on? Or do you go to a doctor? Did you ever put money in a bank? Why? Shouldn't you rely upon your "ultimate authority" to care for your financial needs? Do you take your car to the mechanic?

You see, many Christians (myself included) PRACTICALLY live our life as if God does not exist. We rely upon others expertise, others knowledge, and our own logic and reason. Once in a great while, we come across a religious experience, question, or debate and for some reason we compartmentalize, disassociate and even completely remove reason, logic, etc.

I disagree. I think everybody lives PRACTICALLY as if God DID exist yet all the while wishing that He didn't. We rely on logic and other universals, which could only be accounted for if God did exist. In a universe where everything is "matter in motion, sound and fury signifying nothing," (Bahnsen) we would not have universals like logic. In using those universals we betray our belief that God exists. People can say they don't believe in God but they can't live that way, they can't be consistent with their own beliefs. They are like a person who climbs onto a house using a ladder then throwing it away and claiming that no ladder exists and they got up there on their own. Their criticisms are like the little boy who smacks his father in the face; he can only do so because the father holds him up. (Van Til) Are the laws of logic matter? Are morals matter? These are universals that we use everyday that cannot be accounted for if everything is matter, i.e. materialism. To "put money in a bank" would be betraying your belief that God exists because you would be relying on logic to tell you that that is a good move to put your money in a safe place.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
Oh, I understand the concept of faith very well, and its tenacious hold within religion, but what I can't seem to figure out why I do NOT use faith everywhere else, and ONLY use faith when it comes to religion? What makes religion so special? (This is the point Clutch was making above in referring to special pleading, only I am applying it to "special living," if you will.)

Again, I must respectfully disagree. You use faith in everything you do. Faith is only trust in secondhand knowledge. (Ala Augustine) I have faith in the fact that my name is Robert because my mother told me so. I think she is pretty reliable. As a matter of fact almost everything we "know" is based on this faith. Someone else has told us what we know and we trust them, we have faith in their trustworthiness. We know very little from direct observation when compared with that which we know secondhand. Now, because I place trust in what someone else has told me about God (the Bible) that is somehow a different "faith"? I don't see it that way. I believe the Bible to be more trustworthy than the skeptic who refuses to acknowledge the obvious. This is not "special pleading". I apply the same rule here as anywhere.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
The second reason that these questions do not help you, is that you are attempting to use logic, reason, and rationale to explain your authority. The exact same "ultimate authority" you decry is the same, practical authority you use in your debate.

I can use logic and reason because my ultimate authority justifies them. An atheist has no justification for logic and therefore must borrow from my worldview to use them. Once again, materialism cannot account for logic because it is a transcendent universal and does not fit in a world of matter only. To be sure, atheists do use logic but only because they cannot remain consistent to their own worldview and must borrow from ours. The atheist says, "there is no God or any afterlife, there is only matter in motion. However, I want a couple of exceptions, I want logic, morals, universals, and so forth. Then there's nothing but matter." Well, I am not entertaining exceptions. No justification, no universals.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
Frankly, if God is your ultimate authority, then I would assume your responses to every position posited to you would be, "Because God says so. Because God says so." I understand this does not make much of a debate, but it makes no sense to me that you would laugh (figuratively) at logic and reason being the ultimate authority, and then go on to state, "let me show you logically, and reasonably why your ultimate authority is wrong."

On an ultimate level, you are right and I would say because "God says so". I would then proceed to show how my ultimate authority justifies my use of logic and morals and any other authority does not.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
After reading your statements herein (and discussing this with BGic) I am left with the inescapable conclusion, that the ONLY choice I have to believe in the inspiration of the Bible is blind, oblivious faith. (Of Course, this does not provide any light on the discussion of inerrancy.)

Fideism is not a good choice for anyone. I place my trust in the Biblical God because to do any other would be to deny the possibility of morals, logic, and all universals. Inerrancy logically follows my presuppositions.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
So, let's discussion inerrancy. You have stated repeatedly, "I assume the verity of the Biblical authors," without explaining the why.

Nobody had asked me the "why" question. I believe I have answered it above. I am only confused as to why people cannot understand that presupposing the verity of the authors leads you to inerrancy. Look at my debate with Vinnie for example. How many times did I make that statement? Vinnie's response was that I could not "simply assume that". How many times have I stated that in this forum? I even gave people the tools required to refute my claim. I have invited anyone to refute me, given them the tools to do so and only you asked me "why" properly. What I mean by "properly" is that you went to the ultimate and showed that you would not remain arbitrary. This is the difference. I will not play on an arbitrary playing field because my arguments are not arbitrary.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
You seem upset that the opposing side in your debate would NOT assume the verity of the Biblical authors.

I don't expect them to assume the verity of the biblical authors. I only expect them to live with the consequences of their belief and they can't.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
Then we shall talk about three other books?The Book of Mormon (Human author--Joseph Smith), Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures (Human author--Mary Baker Eddy) and the Qur'an (Human author?Mohammed).

All three books claim, internally, to be inspired?just like the Bible. Two of the three (Mormon and Qur'an) claim that the authors met God face to face on a mountain to obtain the words. (Similar to Moses). All claim the words themselves were written by human authors but "inspired" by God.

All three books have
Quote:
|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| Originally Posted by RobertLW |
| millions upon millions of people uneducated in comparative analysis who have read the it and |
| found faith through reading the Inerrant Word of God. |
|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|


(Note I made one change in bold)

To the uninitiated, all four books (including the Bible) make the same
claims.

Now to the pointed questions:
1. Do you assume the verity of Mr. Smith, Ms. Eddy and Mr. Mohammed?

I do.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
2. If yes, what do you do about the vast incongruities between these four, inspired Word(s) of God?

The fallacy here is that not only does every one of those authors claim to have been inspired by God, but they also claim that the Bible is true as well. To show that they contradict the Biblical teachings that they themselves have claimed as authoritative is an easy thing to do.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
3. If no, by what criteria do you NOT assume the verity of Smith, Eddy and Mohammed, Inc.?

(Be very careful, Question 3 is a trick question! If you use "God," note that all claim to be of God by the same criteria, internally. If you use logic, reason or rationale, you will need to address your own "ultimate authority." If you use "faith," then the debate stops here, as this position is unassailable from a practical standpoint. Plus you would have to address the "wrongness" of the others faith.)

I do assume their verity. I use the logic that my worldview justifies and they are shown to be internally contradictory. I use the same logic against the Bible and it passes the test. This is why; it only claims authority for itself, where the others claim authority for themselves and the Bible. To show that they contradict is an easy thing. It would be another matter if they did not claim that the Bible is authoritative.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
4. Using the exact same criteria in question 3, apply to the Bible and explain why you arrive at a different answer.

See above answer.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
5. Shouldn't the millions of people who assume the verity of the respective Smith, Eddy and Mohammed, Inc. be just as upset at you for NOT assuming that verity?

Yes, if I didn't, but I do presume their verity.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
This is the point of "special pleading." Why, in every other situation, including other books claimed to be inspired by God, do you apply one standard, but in the case of the Bible a different standard is applied?

I hope by now you can see that I do not apply a different standard. I apply the same standard to all. No other worldview can account for logic, morals, and universals, only the Christian worldview. And so I believe it. By having Gods word as my ultimate standard for truth I have logic, morals, and universals at my disposal, and they are JUSTIFIED. That's the point.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
Finally, I would state that as a Theist, I hate to join in the "gang" against another theist. Sven, Clutch and wiploc are a handful enough. I am looking for some rationale, logical reasoning for your position, that perhaps I would adopt as my own.

The Bible says in Christ are hidden "all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge". Atheists don't have that knowledge. Their reasoning is "darkened" according to the scriptures. You on the other hand, as a Christian, have justification for your knowledge and so it can rightly be called knowledge. They have no such justification and cannot be said to "know" anything. It might be objected that they do "know" things but that's because they cannot be true to their ultimate authority and have to borrow ours. This whole debate is like 2 people debating whether or not air exists and the entire time they are debating, they are breathing air. (Van Til) In order to debate, the atheist has to assume the validity of the laws of logic but cannot justify them, so they" breath our air".



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
But for now, in order to be intellectually honest with myself, the only way to logically conclude the Bible is inspired, is to Abandon Logic, and blindly, obliviously have faith that it is inspired. (And yes, if your Irony meter went off, it was tuned correctly. If not, time for a 10,000 word check-up.)

To abandon inspiration is to abandon logic and not the other way around. To be intellectually honest you would have to conclude that reason itself can only "be" if the Biblical God exists, because only by presupposing Him can we justify reason.

Also, our faith is not blind. As proof of our faith not being blind; without the Christian worldview you cannot prove anything. Logic itself is not justified by any other worldview but the Christian worldview.


Thanks,

Robert


P.S.

Clutch, Bark at me all you wish. I want to discuss inerrancy but I do not want to do so arbitrarily. I repeatedly asked three simple questions. Blt was the only one to answer my questions. I simply pointed out that out of all the people posting, the theist among you answered my questions. Only the theist among you is willing to get to the ultimate. Am I embarrassed? Not at all, I am willing to get to the ultimate. Are you?
RobertLW is offline  
Old 06-04-2004, 08:03 PM   #124
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Waterbury, Ct, Usa
Posts: 6,523
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Clutch
Oh, for pete's sake.

I liked bit to go's post a lot, but it was plainly a (lucid and forceful) extension of the same points Vinnie and others have made all along. (As were my posts, I should say.)

By this silly attempt to turn your own unresponsiveness to those points into some shared theistic virtue, you embarrass yourself badly. Very shoddy stuff indeed.
I've given up. I've answered his "verity argument" a ton of tons of times. I asked where they (the authors) claim to be writting the inerrant word of God (which is what Robert's verity argument defense for inerrancy requires). Robert is a no show here despite my CONSTANT request for this information. I don't know what to make of Robert's incessant failure to address this issue. I am close to outright calling him a liar and intellectually dishonest.

Re: verity: it is also asked why a person who claims to be writing God's word is given the benefit of the doubt? Private revelation is intellectually paralyzed by all the mutually exclusive religious claims that were supposedly ordained or dictated or inspried by God. Why these claims rather than those claims? Why these theologians rather than those theologians? WHy this holy book rather then those other holy books?

Canonical dimension was supposed to be argued for and my surface anomaly argument was SUPPOSED to be addressed. Robert continues to reiterate nonsense I plainly refuted and asks totally irrelevant questions about ultimate authority. Red herring alert!

This thread is becoming useless. I suggest turning the lights off and going home.

Vinnie
Vinnie is offline  
Old 06-04-2004, 09:05 PM   #125
doubtingthomas
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by RobertLW
...

You're confusing the issue here. The debate is about scriptural errancy. It is these scriptures that are your only means of knowing the Christian God, which is your ultimate authority. You can not use the thing the scriptures are trying to prove in order to prove the scriptures.
 
Old 06-05-2004, 06:04 AM   #126
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Canada
Posts: 3,751
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by RobertLW
Clutch, Bark at me all you wish. I want to discuss inerrancy but I do not want to do so arbitrarily. I repeatedly asked three simple questions. Blt was the only one to answer my questions. I simply pointed out that out of all the people posting, the theist among you answered my questions. Only the theist among you is willing to get to the ultimate. Am I embarrassed? Not at all, I am willing to get to the ultimate. Are you?
1) If you think that was barking, you've never been barked at. I simply pointed out the extremely shoddy nature of both your evasion and your mischaracterization of your interlocutors' points. I assure you, my voice never rose above pleasantly modulated tones.

2) "get to the ultimate" is not even grammatically coherent. It would be nice if you at least phrased your evasion intelligibly.

3) If you think nobody has answered your questions, you have not understood much that's been said to you, even though it has been rather clearly expressed. Notice that sometimes an answer amounts to pointing out that the question was ill-formed. "Do you still beat your dog?" "Your question is based on a false presupposition." -- That counts as an answer; the same general kind of answer that you have been given several times on this thread alone. Your determination not to reply to these answers does not affect their existence.

4) Maybe you were eating lunch as you typed, but I think the acronym for "bit to go" would be "btg". A blt is a sandwich.

5) There's no telling who will feel embarrassment and under what conditions. Certainly I did not mean to suggest that you would feel embarrassed; in a sense my point was quite the opposite. To that extent your point is well-taken. I grant that you do not feel embarrassed.
Clutch is offline  
Old 06-05-2004, 07:26 AM   #127
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Carlsbad, CA
Posts: 1,881
Post If you would kindly take your focus off of RobertLW-centered minutia for a moment ...

Recall that I wrote this:
Quote:
Originally Posted by BGic
The familiar experience of seeing 'spotted', 'wrinkled', and 'holey' apples correlates, indisputably, to an 'appearance of flaws'. The (relatively) newly introduced, abstract notion of 'surface anomalies' in a text (or group of texts) does not necessarily correlate to 'an appearance of flaws' since one need not equate 'anomalies' with 'flaws'.
To which you responded:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Clutch
Nor did I. The parallel, which you conflated right at the end, was with the appearance of flaws.
1. Nor did you what?
2. How is it that you say I conflate the parallel?

You imply here and here that the phrase 'surface anomalies' corresponds to the phrase 'an appearance of flaws'. Since the 'surface' of something s is what yields the appearance of something s to an observer o, 'surface' corresponds plainly enough to 'an appearance of' while leaving the seminal terms 'anomalies' and 'flaws' to supposedly correspond to one another. As mentioned previously, I'd like to know why you, or anyone else for that matter, believe that 'anomalies' corresponds to 'flaws'. More to the point, here, I originally asked:
Quote:
Originally Posted by BGic
The presence of surface anomalies in x would warrant a default position with regards to x if the existence of such meets the criterion for having a default position. Does the existence of surface anomalies meet the criterion for having a default position?
To which you answered with an analogy from apples. Do you, or another, have a direct answer to the emboldened question? If not, no worries. I truly do not wish to be overly combative. I only wish to know why people believe the things they do, which obliges your participation here in no way whatsoever.

Regards,
BGic
Cross Examiner is offline  
Old 06-05-2004, 11:36 AM   #128
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Canada
Posts: 3,751
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Billy Graham is cool
1. Nor did you what?
Well, crikey, it's just grammar. "One need not X." "Nor did I".

It's a construction that means, I didn't.


Quote:
2. How is it that you say I conflate the parallel?
I did not recognize that you were taking "surface" to correspond to "appearance of"; so it seemed you were correlating "anomalies" with "appearances of flaws". I accept that you did not mean it this way; thanks for the clarification.


Quote:
As mentioned previously, I'd like to know why you, or anyone else for that matter, believe that 'anomalies' corresponds to 'flaws'. More to the point, here, I originally asked:

To which you answered with an analogy from apples. Do you, or another, have a direct answer to the emboldened question? If not, no worries. I truly do not wish to be overly combative. I only wish to know why people believe the things they do, which obliges your participation here in no way whatsoever.
Hang on with the "direct answer" stuff -- or see the "minutiae" to Robert, to see why this is not always a coherent request.

I'm explicating what I took Vinnie to be saying; and he's using "anomaly" as a term of art. I've rephrased what I took his point to be, in my own terms. My own terms are pretty clear, I think; the interesting thing to me is whether you have any well-founded complaint with the way I've put the matter, and not whether you accept that my argument is actually a restatement of Vinnie's -- ie, whether "anomaly" divides evenly by "prima facie error" or leaves a remainder.

As for your bolded question, I've already explained my preference for other terminology altogether over talk of "default positions". I take this to have answered your question (defeasibly!), though not, I grant, in a simple Yes or No. So be it; I'm aiming for clarity over simplicity.
Clutch is offline  
Old 06-05-2004, 04:34 PM   #129
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: michigan
Posts: 513
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Vinnie
I've given up. I've answered his "verity argument" a ton of tons of times. I asked where they (the authors) claim to be writting the inerrant word of God (which is what Robert's verity argument defense for inerrancy requires).
Me, too. I am abandoning this train wreck.

RobertLW, out of politeness, I will explain. Once you said:
Quote:
Originally Posted by RobertLW
Presuppositions as the above "innocent until proven guilty" are defeasible. They are subject to change based on the evidence at hand. However an ultimate presupposition "or standard of truth" does not change in the face of evidence because it is the standard by which the evidence is evaluated.
I was done.

Sven said it best, so I will not be accused of creating a new argument, when his will suffice:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven
OK, very slowly: *A* *p r e s u m p t i o n* *i s* *n o* *a r g u m e n t* An argument is something which follows from presumptions, and these presumptions have to be justififed first.
This idea that an "ultimate presupposition" (referred to in the common man's tongue as "fact") does not change in the "face of evidence" is troubling to me.

It is fine that you assume the Biblical authors were being truthful. What is NOT fine is that you see to fail to support this position with any evidence, except to keep repeating that they were being truthful.

See, I keep seeing your argument like the tale of why a lawyer never calls the mother of the accused as a witness in the criminal trial. The question/answer (although not compeletly accurate) goes like this:

Q: Why do you think your son did not do the crime?
A: Because I know my son, and there is no way he could have committed the crime.

Q: But what about his confession to the police?
A: Since I Know that there is no way that my son could ever do this crime, the confession must be false, and the police must have beat it out of him.

Q: But what about the eyewitnesses?
A: Since I know there is no way that my son committed this crime, they must have been wrong.

Q: Don't you care about how the eyewitnesses viewed the scene, how far away they were, the lighting?
A: No, it is not like there was videotape.

Q: Funny you should say that, here IS the videotape which alleges your son committed the crime.
A: Since I know there is no way my son committed the crime, that tape must be false. Why, my 12-year old put my face on Dolly Parton's body and Damn, if it didn't look real. If they can do that, anything can be shown.

Q: What about the fingerprints on the weapon?
A: I know that there is no way that my son could do this, so the weapon must be planted.

I can go on virtually forever.
See, the woman in my story, while holding on to the "ultimate presupposition" actually never presents any facts to support this position. RobertLW, you are correct that based upon our own personal bias, we will ALWAYS review evidence. But that does not make our own personal bias the "ultimate presupposition."

I would note that in your first rebuttal reply, you freely indicated a full bias to the inerrancy and inspiration of scripture. Hence, your argument is no better than the mother of our defendant.

RobertLW - very good at saying both "yes" and "no" to the assumption of the truthfullness of the authors of the three other books I mentioned. Very good at not explaining why they are not inerrant or inspired but the Bible is. Again, Vinnie is correct--time to abandon this train wreck.

Cluth, my moniker is actually (in capitals) "BLT TO GO" so RobertLW was (somewhat) correct in calling me by the abbreviation of "BLT." "BTG" is also correct. Frankly, on Friday I was called a "slimy little fuck" by my opponent, so pretty much regardless WHAT you call me, it is an improvement over real life. So, give him credit. He got one thing correct.
blt to go is offline  
Old 06-05-2004, 04:41 PM   #130
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: michigan
Posts: 513
Default

O.K., BGic, Vinnie, and any others.

I freely apologize for my ignorance, but I apparently view "errors" in Scripture in a different light. BGic and Clutch raised an issue, that while I am done with other areas touched upon, I DO have a question.

What is a "Surface Anamoly?"
What is a "Inconsistency?" (Chicago Statement)
What is an "Error?"
What is a "Contradiction?"
Are they Different? (perhaps some are interchangeable?)

If you can explain the differences and give an example of each, that would be helpful in my reviewing the posts made.

If you hate me for continuing this post, I will live just fine with that.
blt to go is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 05:23 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.