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03-13-2010, 04:37 AM | #31 | |
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If your reasoning lets you down, pray to Mighty Thor for guidance. |
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03-13-2010, 05:00 AM | #32 | ||||||||
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It's your bet (about the way the Universe is) against ours, that's all. Quote:
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The most I might grant you is that SOME bits may have been inspired, or the work of genius. But that's no different from what happens in ordinary life. Great scientists, artists, musicians, etc., are "God inspired" in the same way, some things they do are divine, and speak to us of the "numinous", in a poetic sort of way. Again, even if I did believe in God, I would still have to test whether any given example of purported-God-text in the world really is "from God" in any meaningful way. The existence of "everything this book says is true" in a book is simply not a guarantee of the authenticity of God-communication in that book. There is no logical necessity there whatsoever, it's just a punt you (and other Jews and Christians) have made. Rationalists and freethinkers haven't made that bet, because that kind of all-or-nothing betting on the truth based on trust is alien to the rationalist worldview. Quote:
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03-13-2010, 06:51 AM | #33 | ||
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"Loaded" language.
That means the use of "colorful" terms and emotionally charged labels/adjectives describing the evidence or how a critic has interpreted it. Example: Stephen C Carlson's use of the term "forger's tremor" to describe irregularities in the writing of Greek letters in the "Clement fragment" published by Morton Smith. It may be evidence of a tremor, but not all writer's tremors are "forger's tremors" (a modern technical term used in handwriting analysis when trying to determine whether signatures on legal or financial documents and sometimes suicide notes etc are genuine). Other terms are "merely" "speculative" "unimportant" or "obviously" "surely" and the like to describe evidence. At one time I went as far as to remove them from my spell check dictionary to force me to re-write things where I inadvertantly used them. When these terms are used to describe things they are injecting value judgements into them. If somebody proposes, say, a cultic meaning for the countless small stone rings found in excavations of ancient archeological sites, the crtitics who have reason to oppose such an interpretation may say "Those are merely spindle whorles." That was a term invented to explain their use although no one really knew how they would serve the purpose of spinning or pottery making etc. Describing them that way denigrates any suggestion that they had a religious purpose instead. Remember, there are "bare" facts, and there are interpretations or explanations for facts, but they are not the same thing. DCH Quote:
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03-13-2010, 02:14 PM | #34 |
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We're not. But we already know what Christians believe and why they believe it. You have nothing to tell us that we don't already know. If we're going to learning anything new, it has to come from elsewhere.
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03-13-2010, 02:18 PM | #35 |
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03-13-2010, 02:21 PM | #36 |
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The OP was by someone who used to be a Christian. Many of us here are also former Christians. We need no instruction in the faith. It's reasonable for us to suppose that the OP needs none, either.
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03-13-2010, 02:25 PM | #37 |
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03-13-2010, 03:01 PM | #38 |
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Not only that but the infallibility has been canonized by a historical process which is described infallibly by Eusebius and the canonical christian regime which inherited, preserved and deified this imperially canonized seal.
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03-14-2010, 09:07 AM | #39 | |
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Do you have any specific issues with these translations ? Andrew Criddle |
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03-14-2010, 10:14 AM | #40 | |
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