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One question for Christians
RE: One question for Christians
(August 12, 2013 at 4:22 pm)Statler Waldorf Wrote: You’re not following me apparently.

I would never follow you. Listen? Sure. Understand? I try to. Follow you? I don't like presuppositions that try to twist evidence to suit their needs, so no. The only indisputable fact about the Bible is that it exists. I'm never going to suppose that's it's what it claims to be, because there's far too much contrary evidence to my liking. A story here or there that may be shown to be possible does not make it true. It's possible that there are aliens here among us. In fact, it can be demonstrated to be plausible. Can it be demonstrated to be true? That's the unanswered question that let's us realize that the Bible is in the same category as fiction.

Quote: Not only that, but once abiogenesis was shown to be real, we know that it probably happened, even if we don't know how.

SW Wrote:They’ve synthesized life in the laboratory?

They've shown how it's possible, but not that it happened. I'm okay with this. If I was using faith, I would be asserting that I know Abiogenesis is how life began on earth. I don't say this, so I don't use faith. Stop trolling people about that.

SW Wrote:No, it’s an agenda...

Baseless assertion. You love these don't you? This is why I can't take anything you say at face value, and this is why I question all the "so-called" evidence you bring to the table.

SW Wrote:
Quote: Now, to wrap this all up, do you have any demonstrable evidence for your God, SW? Oh, the evidence is all your own? I have to experience God to know him? I need faith, and that's all the evidence I need?

Sure, the very notion of evidence proves that the God of scripture exists.

Then you claim that you don't need objective, demonstrable evidence to prove God exists? I'm sorry, but no one should believe in something simply because they think it's true. I sure won't. Even if I think aliens could probably exist, I'm not going to run my mouth off saying that they are truly real. That's irresponsible and leads people from what really matters: evidence that's demonstrable.

SW Wrote:Speaking of character, it looks like your wife needs to keep your lack of civility in check again.

You're unsettled by magical four-letter words even when they aren't aimed your way to describe your character? And the fact that you're trying to bring my family into this in a derogatory way proves once again what a piece of work you are. You deserve this ad hom.

SW Wrote:
Quote: Evidence of supernatural things exist, as far as anyone has ever been able to demonstrate, only in the minds of those who assert they do.

No, this is a presupposition made in accordance with naturalism; it is not a demonstrable fact.

Actually that's an observation, and an astute one.

SW Wrote:Naturalism and materialism are both positive claims, and according to you and BWS positive claims bear the burden of proof- so prove that the natural is all that exists and prove that the material is all that exists. Until you do so, I simply reject both claims upon the grounds of lack of evidence. Angel

We can observe the natural world. That was easy to prove. Now get back to proving God or shut up about it.
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RE: One question for Christians
Walk away dude...walk away...


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RE: One question for Christians
Eh, it could've been a longer reply. I'm getting more and more unimpressed, and my post length is decreasing at the same rate.
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RE: One question for Christians
I'll hit an old man in public.
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RE: One question for Christians
(August 12, 2013 at 5:12 pm)BadWriterSparty Wrote: I would never follow you. Listen? Sure. Understand? I try to. Follow you?

Obviously I was using the word in the context of comprehension.

Quote: I don't like presuppositions that try to twist evidence to suit their needs, so no.

*Sigh* Evidence is interpreted in light of a person’s presuppositions. Everyone does it, including you.

Quote: The only indisputable fact about the Bible is that it exists. I'm never going to suppose that's it's what it claims to be, because there's far too much contrary evidence to my liking. A story here or there that may be shown to be possible does not make it true. It's possible that there are aliens here among us. In fact, it can be demonstrated to be plausible. Can it be demonstrated to be true? That's the unanswered question that let's us realize that the Bible is in the same category as fiction.

You sure enjoy moving those goalposts around don’t you? You asserted that the flood account in scripture was impossible, I refuted that claim. Now you’re asserting that that does not prove the Bible is true. So? I never said it did. I know the Bible is true for other reasons.

Quote: They've shown how it's possible, but not that it happened. I'm okay with this. If I was using faith, I would be asserting that I know Abiogenesis is how life began on earth. I don't say this, so I don't use faith. Stop trolling people about that.

They haven’t demonstrated it’s possible, every one of those theories you proposed possesses a fatal flaw, that’s why there are so many of them. Everyone can poke holes in every one else’s theory. Why are they unable to synthesize life in the laboratory even under the most controlled conditions?

Quote: Baseless assertion. You love these don't you?

I am sorry, I was merely responding to your baseless assertion that secular scientists are all neutral and unbiased with my own baseless assertion that they are not; I forgot that you like to play by two different sets of rules.

Quote: This is why I can't take anything you say at face value, and this is why I question all the "so-called" evidence you bring to the table.

You do not accept it because it contradicts everything you hope is true about reality; it’s a typical human response.

Quote: Then you claim that you don't need objective, demonstrable evidence to prove God exists? I'm sorry, but no one should believe in something simply because they think it's true. I sure won't. Even if I think aliens could probably exist, I'm not going to run my mouth off saying that they are truly real. That's irresponsible and leads people from what really matters: evidence that's demonstrable.

Again, you’re not following (comprehending) what I am saying. The notion of evidence proves God exists. The very concept of repeatability and demonstrability proves that God exists. In a purely natural Universe where the God of scripture did not reign it would be impossible to make sense of such concepts. You cannot make sense of your belief that your senses and memory are generally reliable, you cannot make sense of your belief that trials under identical conditions will yield identical results, you cannot justify your belief that you can trust your ability to reason, and you cannot justify your belief that there are immaterial and transcendent laws of logic that discern truth. You cannot make sense of any of these things in a purely material and natural Universe, and yet all of them are necessary in order for a person to be able to “weigh the evidence”. You’re trying to start this debate at step 20, I am trying to get you to justify how you got to step 20 without God.

Quote: You're unsettled by magical four-letter words even when they aren't aimed your way to describe your character?

Something describing my character is by definition aimed my way. I find that sort of language juvenile.

Quote: And the fact that you're trying to bring my family into this in a derogatory way proves once again what a piece of work you are.

You brought your family up first, and it was not derogatory at all, I am quite glad she keeps you in line. Cut it out with the martyr routine.

Quote: Actually that's an observation, and an astute one.


Well then, please explain how you can observe what exists in someone else’s mind. This ought to be good.

Quote: We can observe the natural world. That was easy to prove.

Surely you’re not really that ignorant of what naturalism means. How do you know that you are indeed observing the natural world? How do you know that the natural world is ALL that exists, since that’s what naturalism espouses. This is going to be a tough task, I am sure glad you bear the burden of proof on this one and not me. Good luck!

Quote: Now get back to proving God or shut up about it.

I’ll wait for you to prove your naturalism and materialism since you claim that all positive claims bear the burden of proof.

(August 12, 2013 at 4:57 pm)popeyespappy Wrote: Make sense? No. It may qualify you for one of these though.

Seems we have a comprehension problem here, what doesn’t make sense? I will try my best to explain it to you in a manner you can understand. Tongue

(August 12, 2013 at 5:08 pm)HalcyonicTrust Wrote: Why would we have to disprove a book that Christians themselves admit is taken 'on faith'?

It’s not taken on faith in the sense you’re using that word.

(August 12, 2013 at 6:04 pm)Texas Sailor Wrote: Walk away dude...walk away...

I’ll give you credit, you know when you’re whipped!

(August 12, 2013 at 6:10 pm)BadWriterSparty Wrote: I'm getting more and more unimpressed

That hurts my feelings! Tongue
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RE: One question for Christians
(August 14, 2013 at 7:55 pm)Statler Waldorf Wrote: You sure enjoy moving those goalposts around don’t you? You asserted that the flood account in scripture was impossible, I refuted that claim.

I think I remember putting forth that it didn't happen the way described in the Bible. Proving that it's plausible doesn't prove me wrong on what I said. It's too bad you don't see it this way. You did a little goal post shifting yourself though. Not directly, but you tried to show me that since basically every ancient culture has a flood story, then it MUST have happened. By that line of reasoning, every culture also has a creation and god story, so does this mean that there MUST be a god?


SW Wrote:They haven’t demonstrated it’s possible, every one of those theories you proposed possesses a fatal flaw, that’s why there are so many of them. Everyone can poke holes in every one else’s theory. Why are they unable to synthesize life in the laboratory even under the most controlled conditions?

Part of science is poking holes in the theories of one another sure. But you're basing your claim on the idea that there's only one way to skin a rabbit. Basically, there are multiple lines of reasoning on Abiogenesis. It goes without saying that if there's life elsewhere, it's entirely feasible that it did not spring up the same way it did on earth. We're still not certain that it was Abiogenesis that caused the first single-celled organisms, but we can't say that it's a baseless theory no matter how much you want it to be.

SW Wrote:The notion of evidence proves God exists.

Thinking So, if I follow you correctly, you're saying that the fact that there's evidence at all for anything means that there must be a god? This makes a person wonder who's really skipping steps here.

SW Wrote:I find that sort of language juvenile.

Are you sure it's your not your own immaturity that's keeping you from being a bit more colorful with your words?

SW Wrote:...please explain how you can observe what exists in someone else’s mind. This ought to be good.

Straw man. No thanks.

Quote:How do you know that you are indeed observing the natural world?

How do we know a sphere is actually round? It's because it can be observed and demonstrated to be so. Thinking that we are observing a false reality when we are awake is unnecessary since no other reality than this one can be proven to exist. I accept that this reality is actual, and that's really all there is to it.


SW Wrote:I am sure glad you bear the burden of proof on this one and not me.

Not a problem. Now that I've shown you that accepting this reality as fact is more or less the default position since nothing outside it can be proven, how about you go about proving that your god exists.

SW Wrote:
(August 12, 2013 at 5:08 pm)HalcyonicTrust Wrote: Why would we have to disprove a book that Christians themselves admit is taken 'on faith'?

It’s not taken on faith in the sense you’re using that word.

Faith is not a sure knowledge, if that's what you're getting at. Glad I could nip that in the butt.
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RE: One question for Christians
(August 14, 2013 at 8:36 pm)BadWriterSparty Wrote: I think I remember putting forth that it didn't happen the way described in the Bible. Proving that it's plausible doesn't prove me wrong on what I said. It's too bad you don't see it this way. You did a little goal post shifting yourself though. Not directly, but you tried to show me that since basically every ancient culture has a flood story, then it MUST have happened. By that line of reasoning, every culture also has a creation and god story, so does this mean that there MUST be a god?

Every exercise in feasibility I proposed was consistent with the account in scripture, so I did in fact refute your claim that the Biblical flood account was impossible. I simply provided multi-cultural flood accounts as evidence to support the reality of the global flood, which it is. You’ve provided no counter explanation to explain this evidence.

“The more cross cultural the folklore, the more likely it is based upon actual experience.”- Lynne McNeill, Assistant Professor of Folklore, Utah State University


Quote: Part of science is poking holes in the theories of one another sure. But you're basing your claim on the idea that there's only one way to skin a rabbit. Basically, there are multiple lines of reasoning on Abiogenesis. It goes without saying that if there's life elsewhere, it's entirely feasible that it did not spring up the same way it did on earth. We're still not certain that it was Abiogenesis that caused the first single-celled organisms, but we can't say that it's a baseless theory no matter how much you want it to be.

Sure, there are multiple lines of reasoning on Abiogenesis, but not a single one of those lines of reasoning can explain how organic life can arise from non-life without an intelligence guiding it. Since that is precisely what is required in order for Abiogenesis to be a viable theory it is relegated to the realm of wishful thinking.

Quote: Thinking So, if I follow you correctly, you're saying that the fact that there's evidence at all for anything means that there must be a god? This makes a person wonder who's really skipping steps here.

Yes! Now we’re getting somewhere! You’ve completely skipped explaining how you can make sense of the concept of scientific evidence and the necessary preconditions for interpreting it without God existing. I do not believe you can do so in a purely natural Universe.

Quote:Are you sure it's your not your own immaturity that's keeping you from being a bit more colorful with your words?

Yes, I am sure. It is far more difficult for a child to exercise restraint than it is for an adult.

Quote: Straw man. No thanks.

It’s not a straw-man at all, you asserted that all supernatural experiences exist solely in people’s minds and then you claimed this is something that has been observed to be true. So please explain how you observed this to be true.

Quote:Thinking that we are observing a false reality when we are awake is unnecessary since no other reality than this one can be proven to exist.

This does not prove that the existence of any reality is necessary, or that any reality that exists is knowable to us through our senses. In order to prove naturalism you must first prove these two points. This is rather enjoyable, I get to play the role of the skeptic for once.

Quote: I accept that this reality is actual, and that's really all there is to it.
Well shucks, if we’re allowed to do that then I accept that God exists and that’s really all there is to it; so I now have proven God exists with the same level of certainty that you can prove the natural Universe exists.

Quote:Not a problem. Now that I've shown you that accepting this reality as fact is more or less the default position since nothing outside it can be proven, how about you go about proving that your god exists.

It’d be the default position if you could prove this reality exists; you merely asserted it existed so you have yet to do that. The fact you claim to perceive the existence of this reality does not prove it in fact does exist, many people claim to perceive the existence of god.

Quote:Faith is not a sure knowledge, if that's what you're getting at. Glad I could nip that in the butt.

That’s not how scripture uses the term, so to use it that way in reference to scripture is committing the fallacy of equivocation. Scripture uses faith to mean a trust or confidence in something, not to mean belief without evidence as atheists always try to assert.

Faith (noun)- confidence or trust in a person or thing (Webster’s)
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RE: One question for Christians
(August 15, 2013 at 8:01 pm)Statler Waldorf Wrote: Faith (noun)- confidence or trust in a person or thing (Webster’s)

Just as you pick and choose what to biblically adhere to, you are also fond of picking and choosing dictionary terminology.

Shame on you.

Quote:belief that is not based on proof:

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/faith?s=t
"Never trust a fox. Looks like a dog, behaves like a cat."
~ Erin Hunter
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RE: One question for Christians
(August 15, 2013 at 8:01 pm)Statler Waldorf Wrote: Every exercise in feasibility I proposed was consistent with the account in scripture, so I did in fact refute your claim that the Biblical flood account was impossible.

Let's recount a few things real quick about this flood. Could there have been a flood? Many cultures say yes. Was it global? Probably not, as that would require more water than is found on earth. Could there have been just 2000 animals on board? Possibly. But were there? The fossil record says there were over 1 million species alive at that time that can still be found today, so no. Could all the animals have survived extinction for an entire year? Only if there was divine intervention to keep them alive, yes. If god created all the water specifically for the flood, how did marine biology survive at all? Again, divine intervention. Could all diets have been adhered to for the animals? No way. Could all special habitats be artificially constructed on an ark such as Noah's? No way.

The list of improbabilities and impossibilities (without divine intervention, of course) goes on. In the realm of things that are not supernatural, the flood is impossible. You did not prove anything except that if you twist the evidence just right and just the right amount of God juice to the formula, you can have yourself a good ol' global flood. Congratulations on the SW brand of special pleading.

My claim was that the Deluge was impossible, and I did so from a purely godless stand point. You never refuted that; you assumed that I had to add god into the equation, and that's a foul on you.

Quote: “The more cross cultural the folklore, the more likely it is based upon actual experience.”- Lynne McNeill, Assistant Professor of Folklore, Utah State University

And you have no way of knowing what that experience was.

Quote:Sure, there are multiple lines of reasoning on Abiogenesis, but not a single one of those lines of reasoning can explain how organic life can arise from non-life without an intelligence guiding it.

They always show how it's possible without an intelligence guiding it. You just choose to ignore that fact.

SW Wrote:You’ve completely skipped explaining how you can make sense of the concept of scientific evidence and the necessary preconditions for interpreting it without God existing. I do not believe you can do so in a purely natural Universe.

The fact that there's scientific evidence just proves that there are laws in our universe, but the evidence does not preclude the existence of god. I'm not sure what you're on about, but it seems to be a special school of logic that only admits SW and co.

SW Wrote:
Quote:Are you sure it's your not your own immaturity that's keeping you from being a bit more colorful with your words?

Yes, I am sure. It is far more difficult for a child to exercise restraint than it is for an adult.

You're acting as if I didn't choose to use colorful language.

SW Wrote:It’s not a straw-man at all, you asserted that all supernatural experiences exist solely in people’s minds and then you claimed this is something that has been observed to be true. So please explain how you observed this to be true.

Something being supernatural is a qualifier that people attach to something that they can't explain by natural means. This does not preclude the existence of god; rather, it just means that we either don't understand the phenomenon yet, or we just never will. It's completely okay to say, "I don't know." Filling the gaps with god is irresponsible and is described as an Argument from Ignorance Fallacy. "We can't explain it so god must have done it." That's what astronomers were saying about the planets centuries ago, saying that they wandered the skies at random because God willed it to be so. Now we completely understand why those planets move the way they do, that it's actually not random, and that there are completely natural explanations for how planets, stars, and galaxies form. The best part is that there's no need to put god in that explanation either.

SW Wrote:
Quote: I accept that this reality is actual, and that's really all there is to it.
Well shucks, if we’re allowed to do that then I accept that God exists and that’s really all there is to it; so I now have proven God exists with the same level of certainty that you can prove the natural Universe exists.

If you mean that faith is the same level of certainty that accepting this reality of ours as factual is, then you've made a grave error. Even the biblical definition of faith is not as sure as that. Faith is the knowledge of things that are unseen, the hope for that which is true, according to the Bible. That definition itself is nonsensical, just like saying that God is both all just and all merciful, despite these concepts being completely at odds with one another. The Biblical version of faith is more irresponsible than the dictionary's, for it presupposes that something unseen is true, that if you have faith in something that comes from god, then it must be true, so you're okay.

We can't rely on old definitions that make no sense. You can either understand what faith really means, or you can believe false definitions from a 2000 year old book and be even more wrong than using the other form of faith. At least the real version of faith doesn't mix knowledge in there with it. That would be silly.

Any way you want to describe it, you can't weasel your way out of the fact that to everyone else, you're believing in something that hasn't proven to be real or true. That's your faith. That's why it's blind. That's why you're, for all intents and purposes, wrong.

SW Wrote:It’d be the default position if you could prove this reality exists; you merely asserted it existed so you have yet to do that. The fact you claim to perceive the existence of this reality does not prove it in fact does exist, many people claim to perceive the existence of god.

I can prove that I can perceive this reality by observing it and seeing if my sense can detect the same things that the senses of other people do. On the other hand, the people claiming the existence of god can't prove that they perceive him in a way that can be demonstrated, tested, and reproduced every time.

Really, I'd like to know why you're trying to get me to perform mental gymnastics on this. I'm calmly stating these things, and I'm proving to you very clearly the reality of my position. Surely you don't believe you're actually in the Matrix, do you? If you do, do you have proof?
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RE: One question for Christians
(August 15, 2013 at 8:07 pm)Maelstrom Wrote: Just as you pick and choose what to biblically adhere to, you are also fond of picking and choosing dictionary terminology.

Shame on you.

You totally missed the point; I was well aware of the other definitions of “faith” and admitted to such (shame on you for picking and choosing by not presenting the other two definitions of the term). What I was pointing out was the manner in which scripture uses the term. Atheists who claim that when scripture uses the term faith it means believing in something with no proof or evidence they are guilty of the fallacy of equivocation. The apostle Paul says the evidence for God’s existence is so overwhelming that nobody has an excuse for not believing (Romans 1). The Israelites after the exodus knew that God existed but they did not have faith in Him, they did not trust that He would fulfill His promises to them. Shame on you for committing equivocation.

(August 15, 2013 at 8:43 pm)BadWriterSparty Wrote: Was it global? Probably not, as that would require more water than is found on earth.

You see, if you cared enough to keep up on the current Creation model you’d know that this is not an issue at all because catastrophic plate tectonics caused the flood waters to recede, meaning the oceanic trenches were not as deep and the mountain ranges were not as high during the flood as they are today; we have more than enough water currently on Earth. Not only this but you’re engaging in special pleading since secular scientists (whom I am sure you agree with) have no problem believing that there was a catestrophic flood on the planet Mars sometime in the past and yet how much liquid water is on Mars?

http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_...rs_of_Mars


Quote: Could there have been just 2000 animals on board? Possibly. But were there? The fossil record says there were over 1 million species alive at that time that can still be found today, so no.

No, that’s inaccurate, it is nearly impossible to define species from fossilized fragments of bone because the definition relies upon reproductive capabilities. Secondly, secularists assume the flood never occurred when they examine the fossil record, so any appeal to their interpretation of the fossil record is guilty of begging the question. The research suggests that we can account for all of the species alive today and in the fossil record by having merely 2,000 animals aboard the ark. Darwin made the ark account feasible ironically enough.

Quote: Could all the animals have survived extinction for an entire year? Only if there was divine intervention to keep them alive, yes.

Divine intervention is always a possibility, but you’ve provided no justification for your belief that it is required in order to keep all of the animals alive on the ark.

Quote: If god created all the water specifically for the flood, how did marine biology survive at all?
God didn’t create any new water specifically for the flood.

Quote: Could all diets have been adhered to for the animals? No way.

Yes way, there’s not a single family of land animals that cannot survive upon a very simple vegetarian diet- even snakes can.

Quote: Could all special habitats be artificially constructed on an ark such as Noah's? No way.

There’s no reason to believe any animals required special habitats, I am not aware of a family of land animals that cannot survive at room temperature.

Quote: The list of improbabilities and impossibilities (without divine intervention, of course) goes on. In the realm of things that are not supernatural, the flood is impossible. You did not prove anything except that if you twist the evidence just right and just the right amount of God juice to the formula, you can have yourself a good ol' global flood. Congratulations on the SW brand of special pleading.

The only problem is that none of your alleged impossibilities were based upon anything factual. They are almost always due to a general ignorance of the current creation model and reflect no actual weakness in the theory. The answers to your objections are readily available from any one of the major creation institutions; the fact that you do not take the time to actually seek them out is telling. You want the flood account to remain impossible in your mind, this is why you refuse to obtain a greater understanding of the facts on the subject matter. What we want to be true has no bearing on what is actually true though.

Quote: My claim was that the Deluge was impossible, and I did so from a purely godless stand point. You never refuted that; you assumed that I had to add god into the equation, and that's a foul on you.

You can claim that a purely godless deluge is impossible all you want, I am arguing that the Biblical account of the flood is not impossible, which it is not.

Quote: And you have no way of knowing what that experience was.

Sure we do, we have over 500 cultural accounts of a global flood, and we have the infallible word of God giving us numerous details about the event, toss in multiple lines of scientific evidence and we can possess a fairly solid understanding of the event.

Quote:They always show how it's possible without an intelligence guiding it. You just choose to ignore that fact.

No, you ignore the fact that they always sneak intelligence into the experiment through the backdoor. They’ll provide a catalyst, but then remove it before it can destroy the results of the reaction, which never happens in Nature. Couple this with the fact that Cytosine could not be produced in a pre-biotic world without a huge amount of investigator interference, and the fact that pre-biotic processes never produce anything other than a racemic mixture in the experiment and your abiogenesis is dead.

Quote: The fact that there's scientific evidence just proves that there are laws in our universe, but the evidence does not preclude the existence of god.

You’re on the right track; evidence does require uniform natural laws. It also requires the existence of immaterial, immutable, universal laws of logic as well. It also requires that we can generally trust our senses and memory. It also requires that trials under identical conditions will yield identical results. How do you justify your belief in any of these things without the God of scripture existing? Remember, all you have to work with is matter in motion.

Quote: You're acting as if I didn't choose to use colorful language.

You did, you chose not to exercise restraint.

Quote: Something being supernatural is a qualifier that people attach to something that they can't explain by natural means. This does not preclude the existence of god; rather, it just means that we either don't understand the phenomenon yet, or we just never will. It's completely okay to say, "I don't know." Filling the gaps with god is irresponsible and is described as an Argument from Ignorance Fallacy. "We can't explain it so god must have done it." That's what astronomers were saying about the planets centuries ago, saying that they wandered the skies at random because God willed it to be so. Now we completely understand why those planets move the way they do, that it's actually not random, and that there are completely natural explanations for how planets, stars, and galaxies form. The best part is that there's no need to put god in that explanation either.

You’re way off the mark on this one. It’s not an argument from ignorance to conclude that events that defy natural explanation must have supernatural causes; it’s an inference to the best explanation. Arguing that an event that defies natural explanation must still have a natural cause that we just do not know about is the real argument from ignorance. Not only this, but you’d have a very difficult time explaining what a natural cause even is in the first place.
Quote: If you mean that faith is the same level of certainty that accepting this reality of ours as factual is, then you've made a grave error. Even the biblical definition of faith is not as sure as that. Faith is the knowledge of things that are unseen, the hope for that which is true, according to the Bible.

Something being unseen does not mean it is without proof or evidence. The apostle Paul says that the evidence for God’s existence is so overwhelming and undeniable that those who deny it are without excuse, in fact they must actually suppress the truth in their hearts to even do so (Romans 1). My point was that you seem unable to prove that even the natural Universe exists, and every attempt you have made to do so could just as easily be used to also prove God exists.

Quote: That definition itself is nonsensical, just like saying that God is both all just and all merciful, despite these concepts being completely at odds with one another. The Biblical version of faith is more irresponsible than the dictionary's, for it presupposes that something unseen is true, that if you have faith in something that comes from god, then it must be true, so you're okay.

Wait, we’re not allowed to believe in the unseen? Have you ever seen gravity? An electron? Logic? Julius Caesar? Your mind? A singularity? Your DNA? The minds of others? Love? A force? The Earth’s core? The list goes on and on and on…

The Greek actually reads....
“Now faith is the reality of things being hoped for, the proof of things not being seen”

That hardly sounds like believing in something without evidence or proof.

Quote: We can't rely on old definitions that make no sense. You can either understand what faith really means, or you can believe false definitions from a 2000 year old book and be even more wrong than using the other form of faith. At least the real version of faith doesn't mix knowledge in there with it. That would be silly.

Wait, so you do not have faith that your wife loves you? It’s funny how you call it an old definition for the word faith (never mind the fact that creating a new definition for the word and then applying that to scripture would be fallacious equivocation, we must understand how words were used at the time, and the Bible uses the word faith to mean trust) when it’s still the first definition in the dictionary for the word faith.

Quote: Any way you want to describe it, you can't weasel your way out of the fact that to everyone else, you're believing in something that hasn't proven to be real or true.

Everyone else? You act as if there are not 2.3 Billion other Christians who believe what I do. A more accurate statement would be that “everyone else” rejects your naturalism. What you’re asserting is still irrelevant either way, the proof of a claim is independent of what “everyone else” thinks, everyone else could believe that there’s no proof for the existence of gravity and I’d still believe in gravity.

Quote: That's your faith. That's why it's blind. That's why you're, for all intents and purposes, wrong.

Even if I was exhibiting blind faith (which I am not) it’s a logical non-sequitur to assert such faith is wrong.
Since scripture asserts that the proof for God’s existence is overwhelming it’s obvious it is not using the term faith to mean what you claim it means. It is clearly using it to mean “trust”. Lastly, as I have already pointed out you believe a have dozen or more claims upon actual blind faith, so the fact that you object to scripture commanding us to have faith is special pleading.

Quote: I can prove that I can perceive this reality by observing it and seeing if my sense can detect the same things that the senses of other people do.

How do you know what other people perceive with their senses without first appealing to your senses? Since these other people are part of this supposed reality, why are you allowed to appeal to their existence in order to prove this reality exists in the first place? So you know reality exists because you can perceive it and you know that you can accurately perceive reality because the reality you perceive is the reality that exists. That seems a bit circular. Atheism undermines the very possibility of knowing anything at all.

Quote: On the other hand, the people claiming the existence of god can't prove that they perceive him in a way that can be demonstrated, tested, and reproduced every time.
You cannot prove that you perceive reality accurately either. Given your justification provided in the post above, if I perceive that God exists and if someone else also perceives that God exists then God must exist. Why do you insist on making Christians play by a set of rules you yourself do not play by?

Quote: Really, I'd like to know why you're trying to get me to perform mental gymnastics on this. I'm calmly stating these things, and I'm proving to you very clearly the reality of my position. Surely you don't believe you're actually in the Matrix, do you? If you do, do you have proof?

I am proving that without the Biblical conceptual scheme you cannot make sense of anything; even something as basic as our ability to accurately perceive reality. I know I can accurately perceive reality because I have a Biblical conceptual scheme. I am the creation of a God who wants me to learn about His creation and about Him, so I was created being able to accurately perceive reality. Without God you cannot possess any confidence that you can know anything about the real Universe. To the extent that we can know anything at all, we can know that Yahweh exists.
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