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Old 07-05-2006, 08:15 AM   #451
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Default The Ten Plagues and the Exodus

Quote:
Originally Posted by Julian
You are making the claim and the burden of proof is yours.
Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
What would be "proof" to you?
If you mean reasonable proof that the plagues occurred as decribed in the Bible, and that they were the reason that pharaoh let Moses and his people go, if you will agree that we judge the story of the ten plagues based upon its own merits without claiming that the story should be trusted because some other parts of the Bible should be trusted, there is not any evidence that you would be able to provide that would convince me, nor would you defend a similar claim from another religious book based soley upon the claim's merit.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
One of the biggest fallacies that is constantly perpetuated in these forums is the criticism of something without the defense of the understood alternative. If a particular part of the Bible (or anything else) is criticized, it is done with a presupposition that something else happened.
Do you not presuppose that something else DID NOT happen? Don't the followers of all religions feel the same way?

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
If that weren't the case, no criticism could possibly exist. You cannot leave a void. If you're not going to fill the void, you have no grounds for the criticism. This renders your burden of proof statement incorrect. Everyone bears the burden of proof in whatever they believe, if they are going to convince someone else of that belief.
Committed Christians and committed skeptics seldom change their minds. I do not expect to change your mind about anything, and you should not expect to change my mind about anything. Just like in presidential elections, both sides here at the Secular Web are mostly trying to influence the undecided crowd. It is my position that the vast majority of the undecided crowd, who have little or any predisposition one way or the other, will not become more likely to become Christians after reading your arguments in this thread. What have you said so far that you believe is likely to convince some people who are undecided?
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Old 07-05-2006, 08:29 AM   #452
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Default response to post #426

Quote:
Originally Posted by Gullwind
It was a dodge. Rather than answer my question and show the evidence you claim you have, you simply disagreed with me and reversed the question, asking me what I consider evidence.
any evidence i may have is not necessarily applicable to you. that's why i asked what would be proof to you. it wasn't a dodge.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Gullwind
So now, after seventeen pages and over four hundred posts, you decide to establish a standard? Better late than never, I guess.
i am asking you about yours. why did it take you several hundred posts before you began to discuss them?



Quote:
Originally Posted by Gullwind
These have been addressed many times before. Simply because you don't think this evidence should reasonably be found is not good enough for me.
and just making that statement isn't good enough for me. can you show how my points are incorrect instead of just dismissing them? why would anyone be convinced by your mere dismissal?



Quote:
Originally Posted by Gullwind
Nubians, Phoenicians, Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, etc. You know, the cultures that the Egyptians dealt with?
why are we expecting them to have made such documentation? i realize it was done in some cases, but it wasn't in all cases.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Gullwind
Not exactly. You have asserted that certain information is difficult or impossible to find. Its not quite the same thing.
i'm not following you here. if you set out to find a skyhook and you don't find one, how can you call your mission a failure?



Quote:
Originally Posted by Gullwind
How is finding a text that corroborates the plagues or finding a massive campsite an unreasonable goal? Campsites of just a few people have been found, why is that of a few million too high a standard? Perhaps your standards are too low?
we haven't established that someone else should have recorded the plagues. we certainly shouldn't expect it from the egyptians. and i have addressed the campsite issue multiple times.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Gullwind
Gee, thousands of people marching in, knocking over cities, taking over whole regions all within a few decades. The evidence that this would (not might, but WOULD) leave will all be found in the essentially the same level at multiple sites. If it happened over hundreds of years, the evidence would appear at different levels. That's how.
i was asking what you meant by "very rapid". obviously you feel like several decades is very rapid. what makes you think that didn't happen?



Quote:
Originally Posted by Gullwind
Not everyone looks at it in terms of "the bible must be true". As for the time frame, are you referring to how long the conquest took or when it took place? How long seems to be fifty years at most. As for when, it depends on how literally you take the bible, but I don't think it really happened at all.
the point i was making is that not all people think the evidence shows gradual change over a few hundred years.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Gullwind
But are they more plausible than simply a fictional account written to give the exiled Jews a sense of nationality to prevent them from being assimilated into Babylonian culture?
since that theory is almost impossible to prove, i don't think it's very reasonable at all at this point. it sounds like sour grapes because it's not based on any scholarship at all. it takes no thought whatsoever to blithely dismiss an account based on an argument from silence especially when the objection can't refute information that corroborates the events and can't erase plausible explanations for the events.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Gullwind
They have given their reasons why your responses do not satisfy them.
no, they haven't. spin said "sad fact, they had no useful content". that's not a reason. that's crap. you spoke of low standards. well there you have it. why would you think that such a response is convincing at all?



Quote:
Originally Posted by Gullwind
Rather than try to elaborate, you simply repeat that you have already addressed them.
because i have addressed the points and i am reminding people that i have. i can cite the posts. if anyone disagrees, all they have to do is post a response that actually has some substance to it, not just a bunch of personal insults.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Gullwind
The scholarship that has found Jericho to have been uninhabited at the time of the conquest. The scholarship that has not found a trace of millions of people living for nearly forty years in one spot, for which we have a pretty good idea of the location (its a pretty big target to miss).
why would you bring up subjects i have addressed at length? why not address my responses instead of repeating the original assertion?



Quote:
Originally Posted by Gullwind
The scholarship that cannot find a trace of culture-changing events as described in the bible. The scholarship that has found a gradual (taking hundreds of years) expansion of Hebrew culture throughout Canaan,
there is no such "scholarship". there are some people who have that opinion based on the available information, but their opinions are debatable. it's not fact. if you disagree, prove your point.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Gullwind
while not finding the expected Egyptain influences that a group living in captivity for hundreds of years would accumulate.
if you were held captive and allegedly brutalized by someone, wouldn't you want to divest yourself of every thing that reminded you of that person? the answer is an obvious yes.
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Old 07-05-2006, 09:42 AM   #453
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Default The Ten Plagues and the Exodus

Message to bfniii: Please reply to my posts #448 and #451.
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Old 07-05-2006, 10:38 AM   #454
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Johnny Skeptic
Message to bfniii: Please reply to my posts #448 and #451.
Hey, Johnny, these reminders don't change anything. bnfiiiiiiiiii handles one post after the other, and he's still about 25 posts behind. As soon as he has reached this one, he will already have answered posts #448 and #451. He won't read it before these two, so you could as well just delete your post.
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Old 07-05-2006, 06:49 PM   #455
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
any evidence i may have is not necessarily applicable to you. that's why i asked what would be proof to you. it wasn't a dodge.
Why wouldn’t evidence apply to me? The evidence either exists or it doesn’t. It’s not subjective, although the interpretation might be.

Besides which, it was still a dodge. I asked you a question and you didn’t answer it. You still haven’t, by the way.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
i am asking you about yours. why did it take you several hundred posts before you began to discuss them?
Because you asked. Also, I wasn’t involved in the discussion from the beginning. I also notice you haven't stated yours.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
and just making that statement isn't good enough for me. can you show how my points are incorrect instead of just dismissing them? why would anyone be convinced by your mere dismissal?
I’m not the one trying to convince anyone of anything. I said it wasn’t good enough for me. I didn’t say it was or wasn’t good enough for anyone else.

However, let’s go through your points from post #92.

Quote:
the first reason why it would/is imminently difficult to find their path is because we don't know what path they took. the names of the places they stopped at were associated with events, not places.
As I understand it, Kadesh Barnae is a place name. Three million people makes for a pretty big camp, which makes a big target to miss.

Quote:
another reason is because they were wandering, as opposed to being established. this should be pretty obvious. finding and excavating sites that had cities for hundreds of years is not nearly as difficult as trying to find places where the hebrews stopped for mere days.
They were at Kadesh Barnae for thirty-eight years, remember? Hardly mere days.

Quote:
another reason is because there is no guarantee that the hebrews were not fastidious with their belongings. stating that there should be articles to discover assumes they left articles behind to be discovered.
Right. For forty years, not a single dish wore out, not a single piece of pottery was broken. No cart wheels broke or jewelry was dropped. Is that in the bible or is it just an ad hoc explanation for why we haven’t found anything?

Quote:
another reason why there is no guarantee of articles to be discovered is in knowing that there were other nomadic peoples in the sinai area who may have scavenged whatever the hebrews may have left behind.
And of course, they would have taken all that loot right to the nearest pawn shop, rather than using themselves and discarding it, to be found later. It's all still there, but no one's thought to look.

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another reason is that the sinai area is not small.
It’s not that big, either. It’s less than half the size of Louisiana. How long do you think three million people could hide in that area?

Quote:
fwiw, the sinai area was not all desert at the time, as you state. many areas are rugged. i would imagine this makes accessing possible sites problematic at best.
This just reduces the possible areas where such a huge camp could be found. It doesn’t help your case.

Okay, there are responses to each of your assertions that the evidence would be hard to find. Happy now?

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
why are we expecting them to have made such documentation? i realize it was done in some cases, but it wasn't in all cases.
Why don’t we find this in those cases? You’re shifting the goalposts, from "who would have" to "not everyone did."

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
i'm not following you here. if you set out to find a skyhook and you don't find one, how can you call your mission a failure?
If you set out to find something specific, and you don’t find it, how can you call it anything but a failure?

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
we haven't established that someone else should have recorded the plagues. we certainly shouldn't expect it from the egyptians. and i have addressed the campsite issue multiple times.
You certainly haven’t established that no one would have mentioned a major defeat of a powerful neighbor, not to mention the huge numbers of livestock that Egypt would suddenly be trying to acquire. And why shouldn’t we expect any records from the Egyptians? It is my understanding that the Amarna letters describe a number of defeats. See above for the campsite issue.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
i was asking what you meant by "very rapid". obviously you feel like several decades is very rapid. what makes you think that didn't happen?
Archaeologically speaking, it is very rapid. What makes me think that it didn’t happen is that we don’t find a record of it happening.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
the point i was making is that not all people think the evidence shows gradual change over a few hundred years.
I wouldn’t expect there to be 100% agreement. That doesn’t mean that the dissenters are right. I haven’t read about any who don’t agree who don’t base that position on their religious beliefs, though.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
since that theory is almost impossible to prove, i don't think it's very reasonable at all at this point. it sounds like sour grapes because it's not based on any scholarship at all. it takes no thought whatsoever to blithely dismiss an account based on an argument from silence especially when the objection can't refute information that corroborates the events and can't erase plausible explanations for the events.
Occam’s Razor. Which is more likely: Angels of death swooping around, seas parting, moving pillars of fire, OR someone writing a story?

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
no, they haven't. spin said "sad fact, they had no useful content". that's not a reason. that's crap. you spoke of low standards. well there you have it. why would you think that such a response is convincing at all?
That’s his opinion. He’s entitled to it. He's also not the only one who has addressed these points.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
because i have addressed the points and i am reminding people that i have. i can cite the posts. if anyone disagrees, all they have to do is post a response that actually has some substance to it, not just a bunch of personal insults.
So you are the only one who gets to judge whether a post has substance or not? This seems highly ironic, for some reason.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
why would you bring up subjects i have addressed at length? why not address my responses instead of repeating the original assertion?
I just did.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
there is no such "scholarship". there are some people who have that opinion based on the available information, but their opinions are debatable. it's not fact. if you disagree, prove your point.
Now you are defining what is and is not “scholarship.” I also doubt I could prove to you that the sky was blue, if you didn’t want to accept it.

I do disagree, but I don’t see why I have to prove anything to you. You certainly don’t seem to feel you have to prove anything to anyone else. Double standard?

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
if you were held captive and allegedly brutalized by someone, wouldn't you want to divest yourself of every thing that reminded you of that person? the answer is an obvious yes.
So you’re saying that after four hundred years, there wasn’t a single Egyptian technique or practice that the Hebrews hadn’t picked up? Not a different way of making pottery or anything? Seems hard to believe. I’m sure you can prove it, right?
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Old 07-06-2006, 03:21 AM   #456
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
these statements outline how we are to take them at their word and their word on the subject will never be countermanded or superceded.
Poppycock. You may so interpret them. It is not a reasonable interpretation.
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