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We can be certain of NO resurrection - A Response
#91
RE: We can be certain of NO resurrection - A Response
(October 1, 2015 at 8:57 am)Randy Carson Wrote:
(October 1, 2015 at 8:29 am)Cato Wrote: Translation: Randy's a carbon based blob of confirmation bias.

How does that concept apply here at AF where you all accept and believe everything that a fellow atheist posts while automatically dismissing anything posted by a theist?

Doesn't this forum exist (in part) as a support group for non-believers?

This is demonstrably false; easily so. Atheists here disagree on any number of things daily.
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#92
RE: We can be certain of NO resurrection - A Response
(September 28, 2015 at 8:01 pm)Randy Carson Wrote:

Hi Randy,

I know you're addressing the blog directly but for me it's far more simple: no-one survives total brain death. Never, in recorded medical history, has there been a verifiable case of 'someone coming back from the dead'. In fact, we can demonstrate that the closer a person is to total brain death (i.e. the longer the amount of time spent with no brain activity before resuscitation), the greater the damage done to the brain and the greater the chance of physical & mental handicap when revived. There's no reason to accept the proposition that someone was 'resurrected'.

But let's, for a moment, follow your assumption that Jesus was resurrected. What does that tell us, in the context of the bible as the only 'record' of the event. Well, I like what Chris Hitchens had to say about it:

Christopher Hitchens Wrote:Nor, if I was to see him executed one day and see him walking the streets the next, would that show that his father was God or his mother was a virgin or that his teachings were true, especially given the commonplace nature of resurrection at that time and place. After all, Lazarus was raised, never said a word about it. The daughter of Jairus was raised, didn’t say a thing about what she’d been through. And the Gospels tell us that at the time of the crucifixion all the graves in Jerusalem opened and their occupants wandered around the streets to greet people. So it seems resurrection was something of a banality at the time. Not all of those people clearly were divinely conceived. So I’ll give you all the miracles and you’ll still be left exactly where you are now, holding an empty sack.
Sum ergo sum
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#93
RE: We can be certain of NO resurrection - A Response
Randy wrote (quotes from two posts):

Oh, there IS evidence, alright...lots of it. But not coercive evidence that FORCES you to believe.

and:

Heh...funny how archaeology keeps finding stuff that proves rather than disproves the Bible, isn't it? If they find Arimathea (like they have found Sodom and Gomorrah), what will your excuse be then?

With regard to the first quote, would "adequate", "convincing", "undeniable", sufficient", or "confirmed" serve as synonyms for "coercive" evidence? If not, why not? Are you really still beating the God respects our freedom too much to provide compelling evidence for the more outlandish things we are supposed to believe in the Christian scheme drum? You know that dog won't hunt.

As for the second quote, why speak of excuses? If archaeologists ever do locate Arimathea, what of it? Has anyone ever said that there is no contact whatsoever between Biblical narratives and history? Why would the discovery of Arimathea make the Gospel accounts more compelling? So a place may someday be found to have existed and some guy is said to have come from there. Big deal. It wouldn't suggest anything about the truth or falsehood of the resurrection stories in the Gospels. And isn't the resurrection the point of this thread?
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#94
RE: We can be certain of NO resurrection - A Response
(October 1, 2015 at 9:23 am)Cato Wrote:
(October 1, 2015 at 8:57 am)Randy Carson Wrote: How does that concept apply here at AF where you all accept and believe everything that a fellow atheist posts while automatically dismissing anything posted by a theist?

Doesn't this forum exist (in part) as a support group for non-believers?

This is demonstrably false; easily so. Atheists here disagree on any number of things daily.

This just goes to show Randy hasn't bothered to look any further than a few posts and subforums. Of course all atheists are going to agree that Christianity is unconvincing, by definition. I've suggested to him and others that they actually try and engage with us by stepping out of the preaching circle and into the rest of the forum, but no interest has been shown. He's only here to preach at us.
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#95
RE: We can be certain of NO resurrection - A Response
Considering your picture I would of thought you would be concerning yourself more with the potential extinction of the honey bee and how that would set off a chain reaction that would be devastating to the eco system and could even collapse it entirely but you know...
I guess fictional zombies are cool too... a little last year but whatever.
"That is not dead which can eternal lie and with strange aeons even death may die." 
- Abdul Alhazred.
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#96
RE: We can be certain of NO resurrection - A Response
(October 1, 2015 at 10:24 am)RaphielDrake Wrote: Considering your picture I would of thought you would be concerning yourself more with the potential extinction of the honey bee and how that would set off a chain reaction that would be devastating to the eco system and could even collapse it entirely but you know...
I guess fictional zombies are cool too... a little last year but whatever.

It's the Georgia Tech mascot. I almost went to college there on scholarship, before I decided on USAFA.
A Christian told me: if you were saved you cant lose your salvation. you're sealed with the Holy Ghost

I replied: Can I refuse? Because I find the entire concept of vicarious blood sacrifice atonement to be morally abhorrent, the concept of holding flawed creatures permanently accountable for social misbehaviors and thought crimes to be morally abhorrent, and the concept of calling something "free" when it comes with the strings of subjugation and obedience perhaps the most morally abhorrent of all... and that's without even going into the history of justifying genocide, slavery, rape, misogyny, religious intolerance, and suppression of free speech which has been attributed by your own scriptures to your deity. I want a refund. I would burn happily rather than serve the monster you profess to love.

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#97
RE: We can be certain of NO resurrection - A Response
(October 1, 2015 at 7:42 am)Randy Carson Wrote: [...]As for the rest, I'm spending my time discussing something that I believe in. You, however, are spending YOUR time discussing something that you apparently don't believe in.

Which one of us is "wasting" his life?

I'm discussing something that I know - that religious people of different creeds have mutually exclusive claims and no evidence for any of them. 

You're wasting your time trying to rationalize your particular brand of magical thinking and putting on a pretense of academic diligence, by cherry-picking from what other emotionally invested apologists happened to have published on the internet. It's a futile task - and strictly unnecessary one, since even the vast majority of believers admit that the idea is to believe without evidence - or indeed despite copious evidence to the contrary.

(October 1, 2015 at 8:21 am)Randy Carson Wrote: But I don't actually believe there is an absence of evidence. I simply state that for YOUR benefit since YOU believe there is no evidence.

Oh, there IS evidence, alright...lots of it. But not coercive credible evidence that FORCES you to believe convinces anyone who's not already emotionally invested in the belief.

There - I corrected that statement for you...
"The fact that a believer is happier than a skeptic is no more to the point than the fact that a drunken man is happier than a sober one." - George Bernard Shaw
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#98
RE: We can be certain of NO resurrection - A Response
Poor Randy...still falling hook, line and sinker for the xtian forgery mill.  Well, you have the brain power of a carp so I guess it is fitting in your case.
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#99
RE: We can be certain of NO resurrection - A Response
(October 1, 2015 at 7:08 am)Randy Carson Wrote: Esq-

This is fair. We will ultimately have to decide what to do with the accounts of magic.

Consequently, I think it is reasonable to establish several other things first:

1. Jesus existed.

I'm a bit shaky on this one, but willing to grant it for the sake of argument. I think the lack of contemporary references to Jesus is strange, given his supposed importance at the time, but it also doesn't matter to me, because the existence of a guy and the accuracy of the claims made about him are different questions.

Quote:2. The gospels were written early enough to have been authored by eyewitnesses.

I guess, though we do need to keep in mind the time difference between the purported events and the time they were written about too.

Quote:3. The gospels WERE written by eyewitnesses or people who had access to them.

And now you've lost me, because the gospels are anonymous.

Quote:4. The gospels are reliable in the minor details that can be verified through internal evidence, external corroboration, archaeological support, etc.

This is an irrelevant point, because a book can make ten true mundane claims and then make an eleventh false extraordinary one. Prior true claims do not make additional claims within the same reference true, and each claim needs to be examined on its own merits. Reliability does not equal infallibility.

Quote:IOW, at some point, one's opinion of the gospels crosses over from incredible to credible. Once you can honestly say, "You know, I think these guys may have been telling the truth", then faith is not far away.

Except that there's still a big difference in how one should approach mundane claims versus extraordinary ones, and that influences how one interacts with the bible. Mundane claims can be supported by textual accounts, so for basic archaeological or historical claims I'm willing to run alongside that train for a bit without issue. But extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, and no amount of textual reference can cover for that, mainly for the reason that, if I were to lower my standards of evidence for supernatural claims to "it was written about in an otherwise reliable book," then I'd be forced to also accept numerous other claims that aren't sufficiently supported. Hell, I could easily write a book that's ninety nine percent accurate account, and one percent completely fabricated supernatural account, and under your standards, where mundane reliability is sufficient to establish supernatural events, that book would be entirely believable.

When someone can knowingly write a false story and still trip your conditions for a true account, there's something wrong with your standards.

Quote:But I don't actually believe there is an absence of evidence. I simply state that for YOUR benefit since YOU believe there is no evidence.

Sure, that's fine. But the "absence of evidence..." deal is still flawed for the reasons I explained, meaning that if you're saying it for my benefit, it doesn't really benefit anyone.

Quote:Oh, there IS evidence, alright...lots of it. But not coercive evidence that FORCES you to believe.

Coercive evidence is not a thing; you're failing to take into account human stubbornness. There is no amount of evidence that could "force" anyone to believe anything, because human beings are remarkably creative when it comes to finding ad hoc workarounds for their untrue beliefs. We can literally go into space and see that the Earth is round, but we still have the flat earth society. We've been to the moon, but there are still folks who seriously think that it's a demonic hologram and not in the sky at all. Airports definitely exist, yet I can show you youtube videos of guys insistent that all aircraft are actually demons in disguise and carry no passengers.

Evidence does not force belief. No matter how strong what you present is, you'll always find people willing to re-route to retain what they already believe. All evidence can do is induce rational people to change position based on their pre-existing belief that it is best to rationally consider evidence and the variables surrounding it and alter their beliefs accordingly. This idea that a certain amount of evidence- that I would simply call "sufficient evidence"- would somehow make it impossible to disbelieve is simply wrong, and it's weird to see so many christians saying otherwise when you can find an equal number of christians asserting that if the bible says that 2+2 equalled five, they would believe that over the blindingly obvious evidence that it is otherwise.
"YOU take the hard look in the mirror. You are everything that is wrong with this world. The only thing important to you, is you." - ronedee

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RE: We can be certain of NO resurrection - A Response
(October 1, 2015 at 8:58 am)Randy Carson Wrote:
(October 1, 2015 at 8:49 am)TheRocketSurgeon Wrote: I can only conclude that you are willfully being dishonest, at this point.

I'm sorry that you feel that way. Our discussion has been so much better than that to this point.

When are you going to stop following false gods and accept FSM into your life, I don't want you to boil for 500,000,000 years.

RAmen  FSM Grin
"For the only way to eternal glory is a life lived in service of our Lord, FSM; Verily it is FSM who is the perfect being the name higher than all names, king of all kings and will bestow upon us all, one day, The great reclaiming"  -The Prophet Boiardi-

      Conservative trigger warning.
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