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02-21-2002, 10:05 AM | #51 | ||||||
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Tercel:
In your post of Feb 18, 6:18 PM , you suggested that I was misunderstanding you. You say that you never meant to claim that the fact that an alleged clear violation of natural laws had occurred in a “religious context” made the claim more plausible, or made it more likely to be true, but meant only that it was possible that the event in question was a “miracle” since a miracle by definition requires a religious context. Thus by your definition even the most clear-cut, massive violation of natural laws would not qualify as a “miracle” unless it occurred in a “religious context”. Before proceeding let’s get rid of a couple of red herrings. First, requiring a religious context is not necessary to eliminate “laboratory experiment[s] discovering that something didn't conform to currently recognized laws[/i]”. Your own criterion of “unrepeatability” is quite sufficient to rule such things out. If an event turns out to be a manifestation of a hitherto unknown natural law or phenomenon, it is obviously not an unambiguous violation of natural laws. Second, I did not call your definition of a miracle “completely wrongheaded”. I was not even aware of your idiosyncratic definition until now. Now let’s move on to the main point. I agree that you can define “miracle” to mean whatever you like. But I have a couple of comments about this particular case. (1) It would have been nice if you had told us a little earlier that this is what you mean by “miracle”. Using nonstandard definitions is fine, but if you’re interested in communicating with people you really ought to tell them that you’re using a nonstandard definition of a term the first time you use it. (2) This definition seems to be less useful than the standard one (in which the proviso about a “religious context” is omitted) because it leaves us without a term for a clear-cut violation of natural laws that did not (or did not necessarily) occur in a religious context. However, to facilitate the discussion I’m willing to go along with your definition of “miracle” from this point on. Just remember that up to now I’ve been using the term to mean any clear-cut violation of natural laws, regardless of any possible religious context. But it seems to me that you’ve been making exactly the kind of argument that my post of February 16 was devoted to refuting. So it seems that we are not merely dealing with a misunderstanding resulting from our different definitions of “miracle”, but with a substantive disagreement. For example, in your post of February 14 you said: Quote:
Similarly, in your reply to HRG on Feb. 18, you said: Quote:
And in the very post where you (finally) explain what you supposedly mean by a “miracle”, we find this: Quote:
If you are going to make this kind of argument, you’re going to have to deal with my counter-arguments; you can’t just evade them by pointing out that we were using the term “miracle” to mean different things. For example, when I gave the example of a holy man who was alleged to have levitated and asked “Does the fact that this alleged miracle occurred in a ‘religious context’ make it more or less likely that it actually occurred?”, you replied: Quote:
While we’re still on the subject of the relationship between the plausibility of miracles and “religious context” I want to comment briefly on your final statement: Quote:
Finally, you argue that the sheer number of miracle claims should be enough to establish at least a prima facie case that some miracles may well have occurred: Quote:
Anyway, there must be something wrong with this argument, because the very same type of argument can be used to “show” that all sorts of things are far more plausible than they really are. For example, since there have been innumerable reports of witchcraft from reputable sources, should we take seriously the possibility that witches really exist? Since lots of people have claimed to be psychics, should we take seriously the possibility that there really are psychics? Since lots of people have claimed to have been abducted by aliens, should we take seriously the possibility of alien abduction? Since lots of people have claimed to have witnessed cases of demonic possession, should we take seriously the possibility of demonic possession? Since lots of people have claimed that astrology really “works”, should we take seriously the possibility that our lives are influenced by the stars? The list could be extended indefinitely. But all this is really beside the point. It may or may not be true that even one actual violation of natural laws proves the existence of something outside this universe (though I can’t for the life of me think of a single serious argument to support this claim). But even if we knew that at least some of the myriad miracle claims are true, that wouldn’t give us a hint as to which ones, and it therefore wouldn’t tell us anything about what the “something” is that exists outside our universe. To draw any useful conclusions we would still need convincing evidence (i.e., good enough evidence to justify rational belief) that certain specific miracle claims are true. So this argument, even if sound, would still get you nowhere in terms of demonstrating anything interesting. |
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02-21-2002, 10:19 AM | #52 |
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Even if Miracles were routine that would only prove the existence of Miracles not God.
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02-21-2002, 07:18 PM | #53 | |||||||||||||
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Bd-from-kg,
I don't have much time to respond right now, hopefully I'll have some time on Monday. Your first post (February 20, 2002 04:30 PM) is, as you note, rather large so it will take me some time to cover your points. So I'll cover what I feel are the important disagreements in your second post now. Quote:
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Also, if you read the passage of mine that you quoted, you’ll see I’m talking about claims which upon being investigated have been found to have “reasonable quality evidence”. It is not the number of claims which amazes me – humans are good at ascribing anything and everything to God. It is the number of claims of what I perceive to be a reasonable quality. Quote:
Again it is not simply the number of claims. It is the number of reasonable quality claims. If I see a reasonable level of evidence for witchcraft I’d be happy to believe it. But I don’t so I don’t. Quote:
Frankly as far as the existence of aliens goes: I couldn’t care less. My belief or disbelief is not going to change anything. As for psychics I have yet to see any reasonable quality evidence. Much less the amount of quality evidence I’ve seen for Christian Miracles. Quote:
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Tercel |
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02-22-2002, 12:12 AM | #54 | |
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Just one remark, and one request:
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BTW, could you please support your stance that as soon as the words "religious context" are uttered, the Bayesian P(A) suddenly shoots straight up - and why this is not compensated by the corresponding decrease of probability that the event has been correctly reported ? Regards, HRG. |
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02-22-2002, 01:34 PM | #55 | |||||||||||||||
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Tercel:
Another long post, this time necessitated by the fact that your last post of Feb. 18 was highly misleading in its insistence that “what we seem to be discussing here is the definition of the word ‘miracle’”. As it turns out, this has nothing to do with our disagreement; our real disagreement was exactly what I thought it was in the first place. Now I have to go over the same ground again. You say that you have “already responded to what I felt were the important points in your post [of Feb. 16]”. But after examining your reply to this post I find that it has almost nothing to say in reply to these points beyond the fact that you define a “miracle” in such a way that a “religious context” is required for an event to qualify. Let’s review what you actually had to say. Here’s my first example and your reply: Quote:
Needless to say, this reply did not refute my point very effectively; in fact it supported it. The best you could come up with by way of an answer was: Quote:
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Now let’s see how you dealt with my second example: Quote:
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I’ll leave aside for now the one and only, very short, argument, defending your position that a “religious context” makes a miracle claim far more plausible, that you made in response to the Feb. 16 post; I’ll deal with it in a following post. First I want to deal briefly with the points you made in your latest post. You argued: Quote:
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You continued: Quote:
My second argument was: Quote:
In some cases you simply deny that there have been such reports. Since I don’t want to get into a long-winded discussion of such nonsense as psychic phenomena, alien abductions, witchcraft and demonic possession, I can only suggest that you research the relevant literature. The existence of psychic phenomena, for example, besides being the subject of innumerable reports from reputable eyewitnesses over the centuries, has been “proven” by scientific studies every bit as rigorous and convincing as the ones you cited “proving” the efficacy of prayer. But I was particularly fascinated by the diametrically different answers that you gave regarding witchcraft on the one hand and demonic possession on the other. On the one hand you dismissed the extremely well-documented phenomenon of witchcraft with the comment: Quote:
In the first place, the reports of direct, clear-cut Divine intervention in human affairs are also limited to a specific period of time. Does that also suggest that such reports were a “fashion” of the time rather than truth? In fact, come to think of it, this is true of practically all miraculous and marvelous phenomena: reports of them tend to be limited to (or at least concentrated in) certain periods and regions. Oddly enough, these periods and regions tend to be the very ones in which belief in these phenomena is or was widespread. Coincidence? You be the judge. Second, contrary to the premise of this argument, the belief in witchcraft, sadly enough, is still very much with us. According to the Encyclopedia Britannica “belief in witchcraft is almost universal in nonliterate societies.” And “moreover, reports of witchcraft practices and beliefs in the traditional sense still occur today in Western societies.” Third, the Bible itself vouches for the reality of witchcraft: "You shall not permit a sorceress to live" (Ex. 22:18). Since this verse was largely responsible for the widespread practice in Christian countries of executing alleged witches, it is difficult to reconcile the idea that the Bible was divinely inspired with a disbelief in witches. You then pointed out again: Quote:
Yet on the other hand, your response to the question of whether we should take the possibility of demonic possession seriously was: Quote:
But isn’t your willingness to take the possibility of demonic possession seriously inconsistent with your unwillingness to take this same attitude toward witchcraft? After all, if we live in a demon-haunted world, it is difficult to see any reason for disbelieving in witches. The idea that some people can, by entering an alliance with the forces of darkness, work evil that would otherwise be beyond human abilities, would seem to be an obvious corollary of the existence of demons that interact in intimate ways with humans. So if demonic possession is a real phenomenon, what possible reason could there be to doubt the reality of witchcraft in the face of such massive evidence? Finally, my last point was: Quote:
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Oddly enough, Muslims come to the very same conclusion, except that all of the miracles for which they find the evidence to be “of a sufficiently reasonable standard” happen to lie within the Islamic tradition. Anyway, your response basically concedes the point of my argument. You originally gave no indication that you thought that nearly all miracle claims for which there was reasonably good evidence were concentrated almost entirely within the “Christian tradition” (a convenient way to lump together things like the Jansenist and Catholic miracle claims, by the way, which I pointed out before is illegitimate). My point was that it wouldn’t be enough to have lots of “plausible” miracle claims; only claims that occurred in the same “religious context” can be lumped together in this way if we are to be able to draw any useful conclusions. And of course, although you dismiss them (without having bothered to examine the evidence for them seriously, I suspect), the existence of “pretty good” evidence for Islamic miracles, for Hindu miracles, and for that matter for pagan miracles in the ancient Roman empire, has to count against the Christian miracle claims, not for them. The claims of the various religions tend to negate one another rather than provide a cumulative case for the existence of the supernatural. As Robert Ingersoll once said, each of the hundred religions in the world is 99% true, in that each one claims that the other 99 are false. [ February 22, 2002: Message edited by: bd-from-kg ]</p> |
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02-22-2002, 05:40 PM | #56 | |
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HRG,
I choose not to discuss your analogy because in my experience such discussions have a tendency to degenerate into: “false analogy”, “is not”, “is too”, “is not”… etc. None of which is particularly helpful. But if you really want to argue it... Quote:
The analogy key is as follows: PHI field of a specific type = a specific religious context DEI = a supernatural being or some sort of specific deity M = a “miraculously” unusual result N = the “normal” result Analogy: Theist: “I claim that a certain DEI exists. My DEI’s existence can be rationally deduced by empirical observation because in a PHI field relating to my religion, DEI will sometimes cause M to happen instead of N. Atheist: “I performed a test to evaluate this hypothesis. I performed an certain experiment thousands and thousands of times and always got N. Therefore the hypothesis is falsified and DEI does not exist.” Theist: “You forgot to have a PHI field! I’m making the claim that DEI will cause M only in a PHI field. Since you had no PHI field your results are completely and utterly irrelevant.” Atheist: “So what if I had no PHI field in my experiments? It doesn’t matter. It still disproves your theory.” Theist: “ No it doesn’t. My claim required the presence of a PHI field to test it. I *know* N happens without a PHI field, that is not being argued!” Tercel |
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02-22-2002, 06:57 PM | #57 | |
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Given the tremendous problems that mankind has faced and is still facing without any hint so far of Divine intervention, I don't think there is too much percentage in holding our breaths waiting for a miracle to come. You'd think that if the Prince of Peace had really made itself manifest in the Middle east, we wouldn't have such an intractible conflict there... HW |
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02-23-2002, 12:50 AM | #58 | |
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Assume that 999,999,999 reported data lie on a straight line, while one doesn't. What is the more plausible explanation, IYO: 1. The PHI-field was switched on during this one time. 2. The data point was misreported. I submit that preferring 1. (in the presence of various scenarios for misreporting) means that all statistical error analysis is thrown out of the window. For any outlier we could postulate a PHI-, CHI-, XI- etc. field. Maybe the CHI-field was on when Romulus ascended to heaven to become the god Quirinus, as reported in Livius' Ab Urbe Condita ? The religous context of the alleged event cannot be denied. IOW, in the absence of an independent criterion *) for the on/off- state of the postulated PHI-field, I think that 2. should be preferred as an explanation. Regards, HRG. *) I.e., the following is not an independent criterion: "When the PHI-field is on, things are different and miracles can happen; thus experiences when it is off do not count" "How do I tell that the PHI-field is on?" "Easy. Watch for claims of miracles" [ February 25, 2002: Message edited by: HRG ]</p> |
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02-23-2002, 05:49 PM | #59 | |||||||
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Tercel:
In this post I want to confront head on the idea that a “religious context” makes it more likely that a violation of natural laws occurred. Here are several arguments against this idea. 1. An elementary misunderstanding of probability theory. This notion violates a fundamental principle of probability. For any two hypotheses A and B, P(A&B) is always less than or equal to the smaller of P(A) and P(B). So if A is the hypothesis that a specified violation of natural laws occurred and C is the hypothesis that a certain state of affairs obtains in the supernatural realm which makes the occurrence of A more probable, then P(A&C) cannot be greater than P(A), and will almost always be less. That is, the addition of a supposed supernatural explanation (aka “religious context” must produce a hypothesis that is, at best, no more likely to be true than the original one. We can look at this in another way. For an appropriate C, no doubt P(A|C) > P(A). But the maneuver that you are attempting here is to propose such a C (say, Christianity) and suggest that P(A) should be replaced by P(A|C) in the Bayesian formula (with B representing some actual evidence for A). There’s nothing wrong with this idea formally. As I pointed out earlier, P(A) has no fixed meaning in the Bayes formula; it’s just the estimated likelihood of A prior to factoring in the evidence represented by B. And if we knew that C was true, this move would be completely appropriate. But we don’t. And in that case the correct move (if we want to consider only the possibility that A occurred in the “context” of C) is to replace P(A), not with P(A|C), but with P(A|C) * P(C). And since P(A|C) * P(C) is never greater than P(A), this move, if it has any effect at all, can only reduce the value of P(A|B) yielded by the Bayesian formula. Most of the plausibility of your claim that the existence of a “religious context” makes it more likely that a violation of natural laws occurred is result of certain built-in, systematic biases in thinking about probability that produces certain predictable patterns of errors in our probability estimates. Many such biases are explained very nicely at <a href="http://www.csr.city.ac.uk/people/norman.fenton/bbns/Details/subjective_prob.html#Introduction" target="_blank">this page</a>. The one most relevant to the “religious context” issue is called the conjunction fallacy. The page just cited gives the following example: Quote:
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2. The universality of religious contexts. You say that in the absence of a “religious context” Hume’s argument serves to rule out violations of natural law. But the problem with this is that there are no events that do not occur in a religious context. In every society one or more religions are fairly widespread, and even everyday, mundane events are routinely interpreted in terms of them. Any event that’s at all out of the ordinary is very likely to be interpreted by many in religious terms, and an event that appears to be inexplicable in naturalistic terms is certain to be. In fact, for any such an event there will typically be an embarrassment of riches in terms of “religious contexts”. More to the point, what do we find in cases of false reports of violations of natural laws? Why, in every case it turns out that there is a “religious context”. Charlatans and con men have long since figured out that, if they want such reports to be believed, they had better invent religious contexts for them. And finally, what about reports of violations of natural laws that are actually legends that developed well after the (alleged) events in question? Once again, such reports are invariably accompanied by a “religious context” – in other words, the reports are of miracles in your sense. This, of course, is exactly what anyone who has any knowledge of human nature would expect. After all, legends naturally develop in ways that make them meaningful to those who are involved (in some cases unwittingly) in creating them. The interpretation of the events – their religious significance – is the whole point from the start. So where does this leave us? It’s very simple. Virtually all reports of violations of natural laws are accompanied by a “religious context” – in fact, sometimes by competing religious contexts. Let’s analyze this once again in Bayesian terms. Let A be the hypothesis that a specified violation of natural law occurred, let B be the evidence for it, and let C be the “religious context”. As I noted earlier, the “religious context” argument is really a proposal to replace P(A) with P(A|C) in the Bayesian formula for P(A|B). IN other words, the idea is to use the formula P(A|B) = P(B|A) * P(A|C) / P(B) in place of the “standard” one. (As I commented earlier, this is a legitimate maneuver in appropriate circumstances.) Let’s put aside from the fact that, as I pointed out earlier the correct procedure here not to substitute, P(A|C), but to substitute P(A|C) * P(C), and see what this would buy us. We have: P(A|C) = P(C|A) * P(A) / P(C) P(~A|C) = P(C|~A) * P(~A) / P(C). But as we have seen, both P(C|A) and P(C|~A) are essentially 1 – that is, it is virtually certain that there will be a “religious context” whether A really occurred or not. And of course this means that P(C) will also essentially be 1. So we obtain: P(A|C) = P(A) , and of course P(~A|C) = P(~A) In other words (as one would expect intuitively) since a “religious context” invariably accompanies reports of violations of natural laws, the existence of such a context has no effect whatsoever on the likelihood that the event really occurred. 3. The irrelevance of an “explanation” The basic idea behind the notion that a claim of a violation of natural laws is more plausible if there is a “religious context” is that otherwise the event is inexplicable, and therefore implausible. As you put it: Quote:
The only thing that would constitute evidence against the alleged event would be a demonstration that no supernatural explanation is possible – i.e., that no conceivable supernatural agent would intervene in that particular way. But of course, no such demonstration is possible in principle. 4. Can common sense be applied to miracle claims? In two different places you argue that it is inappropriate to apply ordinary, common-sense, empirical reasoning to miracle claims. At one point you said: Quote:
And elsewhere you made essentially the same point a little differently: Quote:
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02-24-2002, 06:03 PM | #60 | |||||||||||||||
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Bg-from-kg,
Your February 23, 2002 06:49 PM post -as promised- first. Have I ever mentioned btw, how much I hate long posts? Quote:
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Part 2 proceeds pretty much a posteriori, though not quite a perfect example of such, and really acts as a “Not to mention…” and Hume proceeds to outline why personal testimony is hardly ever up to scratch at any rate, and why what evidence we have isn’t particularly good. However, in the occasion of the Jansenist miracle claims Hume can find nothing wrong with the evidence he can throw doubt on so he simply notes that since his logic in part 1 of his argument was so good (~choke~) he doesn’t need to throw doubt on the evidence before disbelieving it. Quote:
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A relevant passage, though he restates it several times throughout the argument is as follows. Quote:
Now frankly it sounds quite dumb when spelled out like this, but as I see it this is exactly what is being suggested here if we are to use the same ideas Hume is using to destroy the testimony of miracles. The only way I can construct the premises to make Hume's argument valid is to add the assumption that things must be uniform, which amounts to materialistic presuppostion and hence begs the question. Quote:
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Of course the Jansenist’s were using the miracles to suggest that they were in the right, everyone does. However, we do not need to listen to them. Indeed the Scripture says "Not everyone who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only he who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. Many will say to me on that day, 'Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and in your name drive out demons and perform many miracles?' Then I will tell them plainly, 'I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers!'” (Matthew 7:21-23) Quote:
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Catholicism might be a corrupt version of Christianity, but that doesn’t mean it’s followers are all corrupt or less Christian! Indeed, especially with regard to the girl who had the vision, many of them probably aren’t learned enough in theology to appreciate what the differences are between the Catholic Church and other Christian groups. Certainly I doubt your averagely ignorant Protestant could outline more than a couple of the disagreements between the two groups. Tercel [ February 24, 2002: Message edited by: Tercel ]</p> |
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