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02-10-2005, 02:54 PM | #11 | |
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02-11-2005, 02:57 AM | #12 | |
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J.P. Holding and like-minded apologists would likely respond to Diogenes the Cynic by charging that he has "materialistic presuppositions" that keep him from considering rising from the dead as plausible as crossing a river. However, it is not for nothing that rising from the dead is generally considered a miracle and crossing a river is generally not. How many people in well-documented circumstances rise from the dead? And would Jesus Christ's alleged resurrection be as great a selling point if rising from the dead was as plausible as crossing a river?
And though Exile's comments may seem rather bitter, he does hit the nail on the head about many Xian apologists' double standard of rejecting every religion's miracles but theirs. Like every religion's divine impregnations but theirs, every religion's divine interventions but theirs, every religion's miraculous healings but theirs, every religion's revelations but theirs, etc. As to Andrew Criddle and Steven Carr on scholarship standards, some Greco-Roman historians do show some skepticism about stories they consider farfetched; Kooks and Quacks of the Roman Empire, Richard Carrier notes: Quote:
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