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10-06-2002, 07:37 PM | #1 |
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gold fillings
Does anybody know where I can find stuff that debunks that whole miraculous gold filling stuff that is taking pace in christian churches (or similar miracles)?
Thanks, Kevin |
10-07-2002, 06:01 AM | #2 |
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Oddly enough, though I’m sure I’ve read stuff online about it, I can’t spot anything substantial now. Sorry!
However, there’s a simple way to think about it. I follow Nicholas Humphrey’s line in Soul Searching: such hypotheses are over-designed, having too much design of the wrong kind. The explanatory hypothesis raises more questions than it answers, and requires ad hoc hypotheses to explain those. Often too there are unanticipated limitations on the power used to explain the phenomenon. If Uri Geller’s powers, for instance, were really mind over matter rather than muscle over metal, he should be able to bend not just spoons but also pound coins; he should not be limited to the sorts of tricks stage magicians can also do. This approach lets us reject a hypothesis as not fitting the evidence, even if it leaves us with a ‘don’t know’ in its place. We don’t have to have a replacement answer to see than the offered one doesn’t work. Here, the hypothesis is that god can do miracles, he can do whatever he likes. What might we plausibly, reasonably expect such an entity to do, if it involved dentistry? Would it turn amalgam into gold? No, it would simply replace the filling with fresh dentine and enamel. This is typical of many ‘miracles’, such as the Lourdes ‘healing’ of young Delizia Cirolli’s leg... that left her with a limp which required several subsequent surgeries to correct. God, IOW, does a half-arsed job of it... which is not in keeping with the powers usually claimed for him. Dental alchemy isn’t just improbable per se (and AFAIK, it’s very far from being a properly documented genuine phenomenon even); it is, from the point of view of an omnipotent deity, just plain weird. Whatever the explanation of this (alleged) phenomenon, god ain’t it. Cheers, Oolon |
10-07-2002, 01:23 PM | #3 |
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Why doesn't God just give them new teeth? Surely that would be more useful than changing the material that one's fillings are made of.
BTW, this "phenomenon" first appeared in less developed countries where people didn't have access to adequate dental care. The fact that it's been imported here, where it makes no sense whatsoever, just goes to show how these things are culturally driven. Kind of like how the type of UFO you see depends on where you're from. theyeti |
10-07-2002, 01:32 PM | #4 |
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I found a ton of stuff online about it, and there has been at least on ethread on the subject (Search thread titles for "gold miracle" or something similar)
If you pop "Gold filling miracles" into Google you'll find a bunch...much of it debunking by OTHER xians. This is part of the Toronto Miracle Movement (Rodney Brown the laughing preacher). Most other xian denoms feel these are hoaxes or even demonic manifestations. Secularists have found that mny people simply lied...dental records indicate gold fillings well before the supposed miracles. You may want to research the "gold dust" miracles as well...the people start having gold dust fall out of their hair....lab tests show it is plastic glitter, but many still claim a miracle! |
10-07-2002, 02:11 PM | #5 | |
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Yeah, I've found the same thing. Long story short, there's just no evidence that anyone has had their fillings changed to gold, at least not by any supernatural process. There have been some evangelists who have vigorously promoted such claims who later have had to appologize for, well, lying. From <a href="http://www.gospelcom.net/apologeticsindex/d04.html#fading" target="_blank">this site</a>:
Quote:
A similar phenomenon of "gold dust" leaking from believers' heads was likewise debunked when someone took the dust in for analysis, and found that it was plastic glitter. The Lord works in mysterious ways... I think it's telling that most of the sites debunking this nonsense are Christian sites. They find it opens their faith to ridicule, and it cheapens their idea of God. I suspect that most skeptics organizations find it too silly to bother with. theyeti [ October 07, 2002: Message edited by: theyeti ]</p> |
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10-08-2002, 07:55 AM | #6 | |
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