Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
11-04-2005, 01:11 PM | #41 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: In the dark places of the world
Posts: 8,093
|
Quote:
2. The critics are not presenting a case; they are shooting holes in YOUR case - as such, your asking them to present a "case" makes no sense; 3. There is no burden of proof on the critic, seeing as no claims are being made Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
You made a claim, yet you don't want to shake off your intellectual laziness and do the hard work necessary to prove your position. Instead, you pretend that both sides have a claim here, and try to shift your workload onto someone else's back. If you want to retract your claim, feel free to do so. We can settle this here and now by summarizing that bfniii does not take the affirmative position that the Tyre prophecy was fulfilled. Quote:
Quote:
2. You have not shown that the appeal to probability is a fallacy. Nor am I going to simply let you assume it into evidence. Would you care to try again? Quote:
1. Evidence of tampering comes from the internal clues - types of words, turns of phrase, mismatched styles of writing, verses being strangely out of place; 2. We don't have the original manuscripts for ANY books of the bible. Yet we know that edits occurred in other books, in spite of that fact. Ergo, you should have concluded that there must be some way to spot edits in the text, even if you don't have the originals laying around. Quote:
Comment #1 - there is plenty of reason to expect that we can, since we've detected such editions in other books. If you think that we can't detect it in Ezekiel, then you're going to have to explain why we could detect it in other books of the bible. You need to make an argument why Ezekiel is different from these other books, where we successfully detected tampering; Comment #2 - this is just a restatement of your original whine, and is shot down with my same response as before: we have reason to test for the possibility of editing and tampering, because other such texts have likewise been altered. Quote:
2. You have not shown any "appeal to probability" of being fallacious. Since the question at hand of the proper date for the Tyre prophecy is critical, then you need to prove Ezekiel is free of such tampering if you want to use the texts as part of your body of evidence. Quote:
It's like dealing with counterfeit money. If 30% of the currency in a particular country is counterfeit, then I'm not going to sell you my car until you prove to me that your money is authentic. I don't need a specific reason to be suspicious of your money. Given the situation in the country, there's simply too much counterfeit money floating around for me to take a chance. The same principle holds here. Quote:
2. What conclusion I reach from the test will depend upon the results. When you have those results, let me know and I'll give you my conclusion. Quote:
Quote:
2. This isn't a friendly difference of opinion, nor is it a question of whose point of view are we going to use. These are the rules of debate. If you make a claim, you need to prove it. And he who claims first, has first burden of proof. 3. You don't get to walk away from the need to support your claim, just because it's a lot of work and you don't feel up to the job. This attempt to re-write the rules of debate just to coddle your intellectual laziness is neither new, nor is it particularly convincing. Quote:
What they can prove is all that matters. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
What you have shown, however, is that when you run out of arguments, you are unwilling to step up to the next level: actual research to support your argument. Quote:
All that matters is what can be proven. In this case, the skeptics are not impressed with the case put forward by bible proponents on the Tyre question. Quote:
Quote:
People don't make statements like "I dont' believe X" out of the clear blue sky. There must have been something that happened previously, to make them think about X - they read something, they heard something, someone mentioned X to them in a passing conversation. When someone says "I don't believe X", it is because X was already being discussed or had come into their mind in some previous context, or by some previous method. In like fashion, when a skeptic says "I don't believe in bible claim X", it's because someone earlier -- in person, on TV, radio, the internet, whatever -- had made a claim in favor of bible claim X being true. So the initial claim is still being made by the bible proponent. By saying "I don't believe in bible claim X", the skeptics are not making a claim -- they are reacting to someone else's previous claim. Claim is followed by skeptic response. But skeptic response is not a claim in and of itself. Quote:
Quote:
2. My behavior is amazingly consistent: I insist that those who put forth claims must also support them. The higher quality bible proponents actually put forth an effort. The rest of them, like yourself, look for ways to get out of the work. Quote:
2. You are -- or at least, you *were* at one point -- making the affirmative case for divine inspiration. It is up to you to prove your case; it is not up to me to disprove it; Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
The fact that the evidence cannot be secured does not make the request (criterion 4) faulty. the inability to satisfy it shows that the prophecy isn't up to the necessary standards. But the request is fine; the failure is on the prophecy. As usual, you don't seem to understand the subtle points of hte argument: I didn't say that this criterion #4 can NEVER be satisfied for ANY prophecy. I said it couldn't be done for this particular Tyre prophecy in Ezekiel. And because of that inability, the Tyre prophecy cannot be considered as a good example of a divinely inspired prophecy.One would think that you would catch such an obvious mistake of logic on your part. My request is the same as saying: "All candidates for supreme court must be able to show a history of clean financial dealings. We are only looking for good candidates that are examples of financially upright judges." "But what about Judge Jones? He made $100,000 on a stock deal in 2001." "Can we show that it was entirely legal?" "No, the paper trail is incomplete. But we believe it was entirely legal." "That wasn't what I asked you -- are you able to SHOW that it was legal?" "No, I'm afraid we can't do that. We just don't have the paperwork we need to prove it." "Then Judge Jones doesn't satisfy the stated requirement, does he?" "No, I guess not." Judge Jones and the Tyre prophecy fail for the same reason: they cannot meet the criteria established. But the fault is not with the criteria; it is with the candidates that were put forth. Quote:
2. Your "second" above is the same as your first objection - but since that first objection failed, your second is dead as well Quote:
2. What I request is not unreasonable at all, and you have not presented any evidence to back up that assertion -- and on the contrary, I've shown why the request is very reasonable; 3. You cannot prove that the Tyre prophecy is divinely inspired, if you cannot satisfy criterion #4: Likelihood: The prophecy can’t be just a good guess. Quote:
2. "all the others in the bible" - if those other prophecies cannot satisfy these five criteria, then likewise they cannot be considered divinely inspired, or good examples of fulfilled prophecy; 3. Attempts to shift the burden of proof are still not working. The bible and its proponents - such as yourself - are taking the affirmative position that the prophecies are fulfilled. The bible does not get a default judgement of "True - Fulfilled." You need to prove that. Given all that, you need to present an affirmative case without holes in it. So far, you haven't even come close to that. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
2. I have seen no evidence of divine inspiration - and likewise, ancient texts do not get a default "inspired" rating just because you say they do. You will also need to prove this. 3. Until you do so, you have failed to make your affirmative case. I am merely pointing out your failure. Quote:
2. You have presented no evidence - historical, archaeological, etc. - to support your claims; Quote:
2. You have not shown that any "appeal to probability" is wrong, and in fact, I have given several analogies as to why verifying the integrity of the texts is necessary; 3. So something to think about -- perhaps if you had actually formed a coherent argument with evidence, we might have had more to discuss. As it is, however, I am forced to return time and time again to the rules of the debate; Quote:
1. The critique is targeted at whatever fragile claims that the bible proponent brings forth and tries to defend. So if that textual scenario is misrepresented, then the fault is with the bible proponent, not the skeptic that is tearing the claim apart; 2. For those other critiques that are actually aimed at the texts themselves, you have yet to show that the skeptic misunderstands the claim as it is written in the text -- or that the skeptic has the wrong historical events; Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Similar to what you are trying to do. Having seen that for years, I'm merely pointing out that it doesn't work that way. If you have a claim, you had better be prepared to back it up because nobody gets a default evaluation of "true" stamped on their forehead around here. Quote:
And as for supporting my claims: you're obviously new around here, or you dont' read very much. Anyone who has read the monster thread on Tyre or the corresponding one on Babylon knows that if I make a claim, I am prepared to support it with barrels of sources and evidence. Unlike you. And in fact, I can only think of one source you've ever given for your many claims; the Wikipedia link to Ezekiel. Seems to me that in any head-to-head comparison of who provides (a) more sources, and (b) better quality sources, you don't even rate a comparison. Quote:
2. Since you took the affirmative position, the burden of proof is on you to prove your case -- it is not on me to disprove it. 3. You have likewise not shown any flaws in the so-called 'appeal to probability.' Quote:
Secondly, shooting holes in your claim is not making a claim. Quote:
If you try to prove that an alien stole your peanut butter sandwich, I'm not going to believe you. That doesn't mean that I have an alternate theory about where the sandwich went. In truth, I might not know the answer. But if your alien argument is bullshit, then I can point out the flaws in your argument without necessarily having a better idea where the sandwich went. Quote:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
11-04-2005, 10:25 PM | #42 | |||||||||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: baton rouge
Posts: 1,126
|
Quote:
Quote:
i find that what you are asking for is ridiculous. you want impartial sources. who made them the authority on these matters? well, no one. it's a fallacy to claim their conclusions aren't tainted because they don't have a bias. it's impossible not to have a bias. it's impossible for a person's conclusions to not be filtered by their worldview. their conclusions could be just as wrong as anyone else's despite their alleged impartiality. you criticize christian sources as if they don't, or are incapable of, reading the very same textbooks or peer-reviewed magazines anyone else reads. it's a sign of insecurity for you to care what source is cited because if you have the winning hand, which i'm sure you believe you do, why would you care what the source is? your hand can trump any other. but you don't take that approach. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
|||||||||||
11-04-2005, 11:41 PM | #43 | ||||||||||||||||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: baton rouge
Posts: 1,126
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
BTW, this is not the first time you have contradicted yourself. you might want to start proofing your posts more carefully. Quote:
Quote:
another contradiction. Quote:
these are clear assertions by you that you believe there is evidence that the passage was altered after the event in question. are you doing this on purpose to waste my time or do you really not see that you are contradicting yourself? i think i'm being sent on a wild goose chase. if so, i tip my hat to you. it worked. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
||||||||||||||||||
11-04-2005, 11:47 PM | #44 | |||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: baton rouge
Posts: 1,126
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
|||
11-04-2005, 11:51 PM | #45 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: baton rouge
Posts: 1,126
|
Quote:
|
|
11-05-2005, 07:47 AM | #46 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: In the dark places of the world
Posts: 8,093
|
Quote:
Of course, if you think otherwise, feel free to point out the precise post where you think you dealt with these objections. |
|
11-05-2005, 07:51 AM | #47 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: In the dark places of the world
Posts: 8,093
|
Quote:
http://www.iidb.org/vbb/showthread.p...57#post2364957 http://www.iidb.org/vbb/showthread.p...27#post2366327 But of course, there are so *many* mistakes in this prophetic text, that it's practically a pig's breakfast of errors. |
|
11-05-2005, 08:33 AM | #48 | ||||||||||||||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: In the dark places of the world
Posts: 8,093
|
Quote:
1. Wikipedia is not a source - it is an online blog with no formal peer review of the information - so quoting it is the equivalent of quoting someone's homemade webpage; 2. The article cites obviously biased evangelical books; 3. The claim you need to support is about the dating of Ezekiel. But you haven't yet proven that the tainted sources were even *used* to establish the date in the Wiki article. As I said earlier: In point of fact, you don't even know what these books from evangelical publishing houses have to say about the dating of Ezekiel. The way the Wikipedia page is set up, it does not give annotations for the specific datings. That means that the Wikipedia author(s) may not have used these evangelical books for that part of the article. The Wiki may have used the books for details about the life of Ezekiel, but gotten the dating info from some other source. Or they may have simply made it up. 4. It does not list any methodology for setting the date, other than to simply read the text of Ezekiel, which is circular; Quote:
* a link to a wiki page (i.e., group blog); * with no formal review for accuracy; * not even an attribution in the Wiki article of the proposed date to any of the cited biased sources; and * no methodology for the date, other than to accept the text at face-value. If this qualifies as a "source", then roadkill qualifies as pepperoni pizza. Quote:
Quote:
And more to the point, why should anyone who desires to make a convincing argument to the audience, and support their position -- why would that peson even *want* to use such biased sources? Knowing that their bias renders them suspicious, it seems to me that you would run away from such sources as fast as you can, and only use sources of the highest quality. Oh, but that would require actual work on your part - and we all know that ain't gonna happen, right? Quote:
Quote:
You might not be able to have 100% honest govt; but that doesn't excuse political corruption, just because you can't be perfect. You might not ever be able to have a 100% efficient corporation; but that doesn't mean that you start wasting money left and right just because perfection is not attainable. The same principle exists here. Quote:
In the second place, trying to claim "the traditional position "is just another way of saying "many people think". As I told you before: "many people think" there is a Loch Ness monster; I am not impressed. All I care about is what you can prove. If you are still claiming this was written before the event, then it should be child's play to prove it. Quote:
Note - from your admission above, it appears you now understand what a "circular argument" means. A little late, but progress nonetheless. Quote:
2. Because mentioning a date does not equate to proving the text was written before that date. In the year 2005 -- right now -- I can write a book about the Revolutionary War. I will probably mention 1776 in that book. But the fact that I mentioned 1776 does not prove that my book was written before 1776. Quote:
However, in this thread we are discussing your affirmative claims for the dating of the Tyre prophecy, and the accuracy of that prophecy in general. Your case is being criticized, as well as the claims of the bible. One of the underpinnings of your argument is the fidelity of the texts. But in the context of the OT, we know that several of the books have been tampered with. Because of that, you need to prove your particular book is free of such tampering. I don't need a specific reason to be suspicious of Ezekiel (although such specific reasons do exist). The fact that the OT texts have been tampered with on multiple occasions is all the evidence I need to insist you prove Ezekiel is untainted. Quote:
I do not have to invalidate this account, you must VALIDATE it. You haven't proven the account valid in the first place; it does not get a default rating of "true" just because you want it to be that way. Quote:
2. In this post, http://www.iidb.org/vbb/showthread.p...15#post2830715 you tried to cite the Wiki article as proof of the dating. But the article fails to list the methodology for the dating, other than to simply read the text and accept it at face-value. And if you recall, Johnny Skeptic's request included information about the methodology behind any such dating of the prophecy. That was your mistake. You made the same mistake earlier, in the main thread with Johnny Skeptic. 3. So in this post, I told you again about the errors of a circular argument: http://www.iidb.org/vbb/showthread.p...50#post2830850 Quote:
2. The only conclusion I have reached in this thread is that you have failed to prove your affirmative case. I reach that conclusion based upon the fact that you have presented no evidence to support your position. (Actually, I have a sub-conclusion: that you dislike research and are unwilling to do it. But that's another matter). Quote:
I don't have to show that the prophecy is false.You must show that it is TRUE. Quote:
Edited to add: I was hasty. Apparently you still do not understand a circular argument. You think it applies to explicit year-dates, but for some reason you think it doesn't apply if *events* are mentioned instead of actual years. Quote:
Invalid assumption - and another example of bad logic on your part. If I criticize, it does not imply any such thing as "supporting a different set of circumstances". Criticism merely says your argument is weak, and your claim has not been proven. If you try to prove that an alien stole your peanut butter sandwich, I'm not going to believe you. That doesn't mean that I have an alternate theory about where the sandwich went. In truth, I might not know the answer. But if your alien argument is bullshit, then I can point out the flaws in your argument without necessarily having a better idea where the sandwich went. |
||||||||||||||||
11-05-2005, 01:17 PM | #49 |
Banned
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: tampa,florida
Posts: 342
|
if its so simple, why isnt it so simple? (thats why I'm tired)
|
11-05-2005, 03:53 PM | #50 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: In the dark places of the world
Posts: 8,093
|
Quote:
Then afterwards, a person must apply this information in a logically coherent way to sift the information. It is a LOT of WORK. |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|