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10-27-2005, 12:32 PM | #21 | |||||
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the above is the part of hume's logic that he got right. it is a fallacy to say that the burden ONLY lies with anyone affirming because to negate is to also make a positive statement that some other situation exists. this is further support that the burden lies with anyone choosing to believe either side. Quote:
another problem with this statement is that you are asking for proof of a negative, which is a fallacy. furthermore, this is another case of the fallacy from the prior point. claiming that bible proponents defending the bible's authenticity is an affirmation, is no different than the opposite position being affirmative. the denial implicitly claims the opposite or something different. if such a claim is made, support is required. Quote:
another problem with this statement is that there is no way to prove divine inspiration, or lack thereof. a miraculous event such as this is beyond the pervue of science. therefore, the request is illogical. this is another case of the burden of proof resting with the individual. any person can believe the point as is, not believe or dismiss altogether (maybe because they feel not enough information is available). the bible proponent is merely responsible for accurately representing what the bible claims. Quote:
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10-27-2005, 01:11 PM | #22 | |||||
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10-27-2005, 07:45 PM | #23 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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the more pertinent issue is what reasons you have for not believing what the bible records. Quote:
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10-27-2005, 08:05 PM | #24 | ||||||
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this is called the ad hominem fallacy: they are incorrect. how do we know? they are apologists. in other words, it doesn't matter who said what. what matters is the veracity of what was said. Quote:
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10-27-2005, 10:05 PM | #25 | |
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This makes a real letter by King Areus mentioning Hyrcanus unlikely, as the closest Spartan King named Areus was from the period 50 or so years before the Tobiads. The letter is supposedly written to Onias III. To add to your points That someone(especially petty tyrants) might name their city Tyre, to agrandize their feeble copy is pretty unremarkable, happens all the time, just look at how many places are named Jerusalem, Paris, London, Bethlehem ... . I don't think even the letter writer (pseudo-Areus) considers Hyrcanus's Tyre, "The Tyre". he just mentions what it was called by Hyrcanus himself, and in giving it's location, clues us into the fact that it is not "The Tyre", why would someone need to tell Onias were such a famous city was located? only if they are not talking about that Tyre. Also, obviously everyone knows that Tyre was not founded in the second century B.C., which is what this letter would imply if one took it to be "The Tyre". |
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10-27-2005, 11:40 PM | #26 | |||||||||||||||||||
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A simple invalidation of the Tyre prophecy
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I did not claim that the prophecy did not predate the events, but you claimed that the prophecy did predate the events. I am willing to agree that we do not know the correct answer beyond a reasonable doubt one way or the other. Are you? Quote:
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[quote=Johnny Skeptic] The prophecy was made before Nebuchadnezzar’s invasion of the mainland settlement. The prophecy was made 100 years after Nebuchadnezzar’s invasion of the mainland settlement. What evidence would distinguish the first possibility from the second possibility? As any competent historian will tell you, nothing at all. Quote:
Why don't we let some historians at leading universities settle the issue of the dating of the Tyre prophecy? I will contact some historians at Yale, Brown, Cornell, and Stanford universities, and you can contact some historians at four universities of your own choosing, Christian universities if you wish. How about it? |
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10-28-2005, 09:43 AM | #27 | |||||||||||||||||
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you may contact anyone you wish. bring back whatever you find out. |
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10-28-2005, 07:37 PM | #28 | ||||||||||||||
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2. I am not asking for proof of a negative here; I am only asking for the customary tests to be run against this "sample" to see if any obvious signs of contamination exist. This is a reasonable and prudent request, considering that other "samples" have been tainted in the past. 3. And considering the extraordinary and unbelievable claims you plan to try and attach to this text, you need to take extra steps and efforts to validate that your foundation doesn't have any cracks in it. The house you plan to build is very large; make sure you can support it. Quote:
The bible does not get a default judgement of "true"; it must earn that rating, based upon the quality of the evidence that its proponents offer. The opposite position is merely that the bible proponents have failed in their quest to make a solid affirmative argument. Some people will argue that a particular act (such as the invasion of Babylon) did not happen as the bible said. But such a statement of disbelief isn't made in a vacuum; people dont' go around saying "I don't believe something" at random. In all such cases, that statement is made in response to an earlier affirmative claim. Sometimes that earlier claim was in the form of a christian making a statement. Other times it may have come from reading the claims in the bible itself. Regardless, such "I dont' believe it" responses are merely re-stating that the affirmative bible claimants have a weak argument, for Reasons X, Y or Z. So even in such cases as this, the burden of proof remains upon the affirmative claimant. Quote:
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1. Clarity: The prophecy must not be ambiguous. 2. Prior Announcement: The prediction must clearly be made before the fulfillment. 3. Independence: The prophet must not be able to cause the prophecy to occur. 4. Likelihood: The prophecy can’t be just a good guess. 5. No Manipulation: The one fulfilling the prophecy cannot be manipulating the circumstances. You need to show that the information could not have been arrived at by Ezekiel through more ordinary means. If you can't -- and believe me, this has been tried hundreds of times and you absolutely cannot do so -- then the prophecy fails criteria 4, in bold. Which means that it cannot be considered as a good example of a divinely inspired prophecy. Quote:
2. In point of fact, the way that science works is not to prove things right, so much as to prove things wrong. Science disproves, rather than proves. So you may not be able to prove that something is divinely inspired, but you could certainly prove that something was not inspired. One way of doing that would be to show that the information was acquired through non-divine means, or was highly likely to be publically known to everyone at the time. There is nothing "divinely inspired" about a prediction that oil prices will rise this winter in the USA. Same thing here with Ezekiel and the invasion of Tyre (or of Babylon). Quote:
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You've done nothing to prove your case here; all you've done is toss a few misunderstood terms in the air and wave your hands. But you did indeed affirm the dating and divine inspiration -- when do you plan to provide proof for those claims? Quote:
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10-28-2005, 07:56 PM | #29 | |||||||
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2. 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. 3. Lastly, the request was also for the methodology of the dating. Taking the prophecy at face value is not a methodology for verifying anything, since the self-same prophecy is the thing needing to be verified. Quote:
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The question is whether you have proven your affirmative case. You have not -- and you never will, if you don't get a better understanding of what constitutes a circular argument. Quote:
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I really can't believe that you don't see the circularity here. The Quran says it was written before the time of Ezekiel, before Moses, even before Adam and the Garden of Eden. Therefore by your logic, it really was written that early - after all, it *says* it was. If it works for this prophecy in Ezekiel, then it works for the Quran, too. Quote:
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10-28-2005, 08:00 PM | #30 | |||
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