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The nature of evidence
#41
RE: The nature of evidence
robvalue Wrote:So...

Is this for real or a wind up? What do we reckon?

I've found Orthodox Christians to be very serious about their logic.
I'm not anti-Christian. I'm anti-stupid.
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#42
RE: The nature of evidence
Orthodox anythings tend to be overly focused on their own bullshit.  It is inherent in the term "orthodox."
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#43
RE: The nature of evidence
Testimony is basically saying something is true. I suppose 'testimony of evidence' is someone saying it is true that there is evidence. Testimony is often acceptable because of Boolean logic: For example, I testify that it is true that I tied my shoes this morning. You'd almost have to be contrarian to reject this testimony out of hand because every part of it is plausible given the available information and the triviality of the claim. Unless I'm a very convincing bot, I exist. Most people have shoes, many shoes have laces, most people can tie their laces, and getting up in the morning, putting on your shoes, and tying your laces is a very common activity.

However, if I testified that after I tied my shoes, I went outside and flew over my house once by flapping my arms before returning gently to earth like a bird; you'd be a fool to believe me without a LOT of strong, verifiable evidence.
I'm not anti-Christian. I'm anti-stupid.
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#44
RE: The nature of evidence
Well, it appears that acceptable evidence for a man made fantasy will be hard to come by.

Alex. I count 2000 cars on your lot for which you have not paid taxes. I'm here to collect!
Being told you're delusional does not necessarily mean you're mental. 
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#45
RE: The nature of evidence
(May 2, 2016 at 5:00 am)Wryetui Wrote:


Nice wall of word salad. Something you missed however. If your gawd, no matter how far outside reality you wish to attempt to place it, can interact with our reality, there will be evidence of that interaction. No one has ever been able to present any.
Thief and assassin for hire. Member in good standing of the Rogues Guild.
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#46
RE: The nature of evidence
(May 2, 2016 at 5:00 am)Wryetui Wrote: I still have the question about which kind of evidence would be conclusive for you to believe the christian God is real. The main "problem" we have is the doctrine ex-nihilo, and the main question we have, how do we know God with our reason? (evidence affects reason), “what is the object of our reason?”, in other words, what is it that we are trying to know? In my opinion, the evidence we need is highly influenced by what we need to know, right?
The point of evidence is to distinguish between those ideas which represent objective reality and those which do not.

This is the most foundational principle of evidence: that it must prove to disbelievers that they are wrong, and that they should therefore change their ideas about reality.

Your feelings or philosophical arguments do NOT do that. The religious evidence we have available is that there are many religions, and that their proponents also have special feelings, faith, and philosophical explanations. The common denominator therefore is not God, but human feelings. Your tendency to use reports of special feeling as proof of God therefore fails in a pretty fundamental way.


Quote:God is not a rock. We cannot put him in a test tube. Nor is God an idea like an isosceles triangle. We cannot figure him out. God is not like a human being either, and yet God created us in his own image that we might know him. More to the point, he has revealed himself to us most fully as a man, the God-man Jesus Christ. The discursive reason is all very fine. God gave it to us after all. But it has its limits. The road to Zion is in our hearts, and if we are to find that road, we must cultivate the nous and direct it inward. That is what the ascetical life of the Church is all about. In this regard, by the way, I highly recommend the works of Metropolitan Hierotheos Vlachos.
Sounds like Buddhism or Hinduism to me, but with a different fairy tale to think about while preparing and endeavoring to do nothing with life.
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#47
RE: The nature of evidence
(May 2, 2016 at 3:28 pm)Mister Agenda Wrote:
Wryetui Wrote:Hello.

I have listened and witnessed that, when debating about God, the main questions that is present within the atheist party is that they do not believe in God because there is no evidence for Him. I am interested but also confused, because I need to understand what "evidence" really means, certainly what for some people is enough "evidence" for others is not even close to that, so, my questions are:

1. What does the word "evidence" mean?
2. What kind of said evidence would be necessary for you to actually believe there is a God?

1. Evidence is a demonstrable observation or fact that leads to a particular conclusion.

2. That's going to vary quite a bit from person to person. The right word from the right individual might do it for some. 'I am real--God' spelled out in galaxies would probably do the trick for most skeptics. Probably most of us fall somewhere in between. For me, one supernatural thing would be enough to send me back to the drawing board, it wouldn't prove God, but it would prove that something supernatural is possible.
Fact = There is a world in which I live. I live in this world and I have relations with this world and its other creatures. I see them and I see that they are ordered. Their behavior is ordered, no matter if they are animal or plants, this is facts, right? I conclude that this order has to come from somewhere, and since order can only bee seen by intelligent minds, there has to be a superior intelligent mind that put this order where it is now, this is my conclusion. Why is it wrong?
"Let us commit ourselves and one another and our whole life to Christ, our God"
 - Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom

[Image: ixs081.png]
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#48
RE: The nature of evidence
GOD COME FROM WHERE
I am John Cena's hip-hop album.
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#49
RE: The nature of evidence
(May 2, 2016 at 8:33 am)Mudhammam Wrote:
(May 2, 2016 at 8:06 am)Wryetui Wrote: Why they contradict everything we know about nature? In order for me to believe you, you cannot just make an empty statement.
By "everything we know about nature," I mean, we have a general and even detailed understanding of  physics to know that many of the miracles in the Bible, if they actually occurred, would be a violation of the natural order that is both well documented and available to anyone for subsequent observation.

Furthermore, there is no shortage of examples involving human beings making incredible, unbelievable claims, and countless others who are willing to believe them. As these often appeal to mutually exclusive occult powers, they can't all be true. As some are quite clearly false, and not a single one in the Bible is able to distinguish itself as categorically superior in rationale or evidence as the most fanciful, it's more likely that they all share a similar, less extravagant, and less "mysterious" explanation: people are ignorant of true causes, or dishonest.

I am glad someone actually tries to debate with me, instead of doing just pure unbased mockery.

"Would be a violation of the natural order". I do not find this correct. Miracles are supernatural works from God. By stating that miracles cannot exist because they "would be a violation of the natural order" you are stating that God is subject to the very nature He created, and this is incorrect. God is the Creator of nature and is not subject to it because the nature was created ex-nihilo, and God can do everything He wants with His creation. What we today call "natural order" is the behavior we observed that occurs in nature, and nature is subject to nature. It would be a contradiction if in the Bible were stated that a man worked miracles by His own powers alone, which is not possible, because all miracles came from God, either directly or with intermedieris that were mere "tools". After all, "With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible." (Matthew 19:26)
"Let us commit ourselves and one another and our whole life to Christ, our God"
 - Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom

[Image: ixs081.png]
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#50
RE: The nature of evidence
Wryetui Wrote:
Mister Agenda Wrote:1. Evidence is a demonstrable observation or fact that leads to a particular conclusion.

2. That's going to vary quite a bit from person to person. The right word from the right individual might do it for some. 'I am real--God' spelled out in galaxies would probably do the trick for most skeptics. Probably most of us fall somewhere in between. For me, one supernatural thing would be enough to send me back to the drawing board, it wouldn't prove God, but it would prove that something supernatural is possible.
Fact = There is a world in which I live. I live in this world and I have relations with this world and its other creatures. I see them and I see that they are ordered. Their behavior is ordered, no matter if they are animal or plants, this is facts, right? I conclude that this order has to come from somewhere, and since order can only bee seen by intelligent minds, there has to be a superior intelligent mind that put this order where it is now, this is my conclusion. Why is it wrong?

Those are facts, correct. Nothing that you said after that are justified conclusions deriving from those facts.

The only way a completely orderless universe could exist would be by the intervention of an immensely powerful entity, because complete lack of order is an order in itself; truly chaotic systems always contain some degree of order. Order observably comes from chaos. And I will point out that there seems to be a LOT of disorder mixed in with the order you observe; why would there be any disorder at all in a handcrafted world?

It does take a mind to recognize that 'order is orderly'. It does not follow that a mind is required for order to exist; though I think one could make a case that a mind would be necessary for no order at all to exist. If there were no humans to observe how orderly their world is, it would still be orderly. A tree that falls in the woods with no one to hear still causes vibrations in the air.

To me, your reasoning seems to be going:

A. Facts.
B. I feel like order has to come from somewhere and the only kind of somewhere it can come from is a superior mind.
C. Therefore, Superior mind.

B is your feelings and intuitions. Your feelings are not evidence of anything outside your head. Reality is under no obligation to conform to your expectations. Even if it was sound to base your conclusion off B, the set of possible minds that could be proposed that satisfy C is potentially infinite, and all but one of those possibilities must be wrong. If you're trying to get to God, you would still need to show why your choice is the true one. The odds of you being right by chance approach zero very closely.
I'm not anti-Christian. I'm anti-stupid.
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