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| | #23 (permalink) (top) | ||||
![]() Never mad Location: Hong Kong, China Posts: 1,877 | Quote:
I have to do a paper on Carl Sagan and I like the movie. But my point was that this was an example of an semi-faith experience. Quote:
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The most importent argument I would like to make is, trying to prove a faith experience is like trying to prove love. I would like to hear an attempt at such proof. I think it is fair to say that if you can't prove you love someone and still say religious experiences should be provable if they exist, then you must also say that love shouldn't exist. Don't forget this is all in good fun! "I want to know God's thoughts; the rest are details." Albert Einstein "The devil is in the details" -? | ||||
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| | #24 (permalink) (top) |
| Glad to be back! Location: Vernal, UT Posts: 1,725 | These type of debates are always frustrating. Both sides claiming that the other has the burden of proof, each rejecting the other's definition of what constitutes proof etc. etc. This issue will not be resolved in this fashion because both sides are perpetrating logical fallacies and not really listening to the other side. I've seen it 100 times if I've seen it once. Before I get into my point, let me admit my bias as a theist who believes in a God who exists in the same literal and physical sence as you and I. Though these type of debates are normally frustrating to me, I must admit that it is probably the "beleivers" who cause this to happen. The agnostics/atheists wouldn't feel a need to argue so vehamently against God if the theists weren't to bloody determined to impose their will/beleifs on others. You don't see people vehamently denying the Tooth Fairy or Santa. Why? Because you don't have politics based on, society formed around, moral judgement passed etc etc regarding the Tooth Fairy and Santa Clause. That said, I will see if I can offer some comments that will provide a little bit of middle ground that both sides can come to terms with. As a believer in God, I would never seek to prove the existence of the divine. All I can say is that I have had experiences convincing me of the reality of God above and beyond something simply internal to my 5 sences. I can only way that for myself. My experiances were for me and even if I could explain them adaquately and convincingly, it may or may not be enough to convince someone else. The quest for God is personal. It can't be given or transmitted. This probably sounds like a cop out, but follow me on a little hypothetical. Suppose my concept of God, that he has placed us here as a test of our innate propensity to seek him and follow him. Under such a premise, aquireing a knowledge of God is part of the test, and it would be logical to make it such that a person can't "cheat" on the test by gaining their knowledge of God's reality through someone else's experience. If it were possible to prove God's existence over some internet forum, it would short-circuit one of the prime purposes of this life. The point is that you can only prove God's existence to yourself. This is normally not easy and how to do so is another huge topic if you are actually interested in it. When an atheist asks a theist to prove God's existence, he is asking what the theist believes to be impossible. This is where the two sides meet their impasse. So here is the middle ground that I offer. Atheists need to recognize that theists cannot, and don't claim to be able to prove god's existence to others. Atheists need to recognize that this is logical. Theists need to stop trying to impose their will and beliefs on others. Theists need to realize that atheists are not bad people and stop being disdainfull and condescending and generally very unchristian. Fixed ideas are like a cramp in the foot - the best remedy against it is to tread on it. -Søren Kierkegaard |
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| | #25 (permalink) (top) | ||||||||||||
| technê Posts: 2,543 | First of all, welcome back. Quote:
The argument is either accept all religions or reject all religions. Either accept all gods or reject them all... I see no logical fallacy. Quote:
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What is more of a real possibility here. Man's own personal desire to be praised and worshiped or some magical spirit that wants to be praised and worshiped? Quote:
I knew I would have to buy something... Quote:
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think watchmaker analogy.... Quote:
![]() [i]"One objection that many critics have is the problem of logistics. However, with technologically advanced aircraft at His disposal, transportation for Jesus was NEVER a problem ---- loser | ||||||||||||
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| | #26 (permalink) (top) |
| Kuldeep Location: Bhopa, M.P, India Posts: 1,640 | Has the following question any similarity with that asked in OP: How can anybody prove that rest of the people see the world exactly same as he ??? Example: I am seeing a red pen. How can it be proved that second person sees exactly similar pen as well ??? !!! NO. I am serious.At least, I would not be able to !!! Can anybody?? If anybody can give a method to do that, then same method can be used to prove a devine experienced by me !!! ![]() |
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| | #27 (permalink) (top) | ||||||||
| Glad to be back! Location: Vernal, UT Posts: 1,725 | exibit A - the False Dilemma: Quote:
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And you return it with mockery. Very poor form. It undermines any intellectual credit you may have had. Quote:
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Building a relationship with God dosen't require a building or money. Those may come much later as a demonstration of devotion, but I would not tell you to go to a building or pull out your wallett to contact God. Quote:
If there is a God, do you really think that this life is what he made us for? How could a loving God create us for this to be the primary stage in our existance? This world sucks. It is merely transitoy. Yes, a test. And a truely valuable test is never easy. Quote:
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Careful that you don't find yourself in another Fallacy: Guilt By Association Fixed ideas are like a cramp in the foot - the best remedy against it is to tread on it. -Søren Kierkegaard | ||||||||
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| | #28 (permalink) (top) | |||
![]() Made of pure win. Posts: 3,600 | Quote:
If god exists in the same literal and physical senses that you and I exist in then god can be proven to anyone just as I can offer evidence for my existence to you. You could call me, meet me, take DNA samples, shake my hand, read what I've written, etc. Yet, you do a 180 and claim that god CAN'T be proven to other people. Your argument contradicts itself. You want to have it both ways: a literal real god that's been evidenced and an insubstantial god that doesn't require evidence. Sorry, but if you want god to be real you have to prove it. It's your claim. You support it. Quote:
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That being said, do you have any evidence any religious experience was caused by your god or do you simply choose to label some experience "caused by god" because you've been trained by other theists to do so? | |||
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| | #29 (permalink) (top) | |||||
| Glad to be back! Location: Vernal, UT Posts: 1,725 | Quote:
God is an incredibally powerful being who chooses to be evidanced only on an individual basis. It's not that God is mystical or etherial, it's simply that *he* chooses where and when he will be revealed. This revelation is not something that can be forced. You may not believe that this is true, but it is logically consistent. Quote:
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Fixed ideas are like a cramp in the foot - the best remedy against it is to tread on it. -Søren Kierkegaard | |||||
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| | #30 (permalink) (top) | ||||||||||
![]() Made of pure win. Posts: 3,600 | Quote:
Prometheus, there are only two kinds of questions in this world: scientific questions and non-scientific questions. A non-scientific question is anything subjective that doesn't have a definite answer. "Was that a good ballgame?" isn't a scientific question because the answer is arbitrary and will change from person to person. "Was there a ballgame?" is a scientific question. Either a ballgame took place or it didn't. One or the other. Not both. We can use science to determine it. Even in situations where our technology is limited, questions with a definite answer are still scientific. For example, for centuries we had no idea what the sun was made of. We couldn't get to it. Couldn't measure it in a test tube. Could barely look at it. It seemed a question we'd never answer. But that doesn't mean it ceased to be a scientific question. In our uncertainty, we made predictions and eliminated the ridiculous ("The sun is NOT a fiery chariot of Apollo."). Eventually, the technology came along and we answered it. That being said, you seem to want the issue of god to have the best of both worlds. You want god to be something subjective and opinion based, yet still reap the benefits as though god is proven. Go back to the ballgame example. Imagine if you asked me, "Did the Indians play the Mets in 1987? If so, on what date?" and I answered, "Well, each person has to decide that for themselves. You can prove it for yourself, but not for other people." How is that any different than what you originally stated? Stating that god exists "outside of time and space" doesn't cut it, either. To continue with the analogy, it would be like stating, "1987 was in the past and outside our city. There's no way to know for sure." Even if it's in the past and happened far away, it either happened or didn't happen. It's not a matter of personal opinion nor is it something each person can prove or not prove for themself. It's a fact one way or the other. God is the same way. Quote:
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1) The claim "God exists and created the universe" is a scientific hypothesis. It either happened or it didn't happen. Let's call this hypothesis the god hypothesis. 2) For the god hypothesis to be possible (a necessary step before being true) the following must be true: a) Energy can be created from nothing.3) Conservation of energy derived from Physics tells us that energy is finite and cannot be created from nothing. Stating "Energy can pop into existence from nothing" is a false statement. 4) Biology has proven intelligence is a function of a biological matrix; neurons firing in patterns. Stating "intelligence can exist without a brain" is about as accurate as stating "Microsoft Word can function normally outside a computer". 5) Since two of god's necessary traits are impossible, the god hypothesis is false. It's not logical to state "Energy can be created from nothing and intelligence exists outside of any sort of brain" so why imply it in a hypothesis? You've evidenced nothing that makes these claims possible. Quote:
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First, kids taking a math class aren't told from infancy "You're a Calculaus-ist" and forced to base their lives around their belief in higher math. It's just a class not a decision on how to spend one's life. Second, math may work, but theism doesn''t. There isn't a shred of evidence to support it and volumes of scientific data (and common sense) showing how god is impossible. Quote:
I invite you to embrace intellectual honesty by doing one of the following: A) Find a way to provide evidence for your claims and contine the debate. B) Concede that whatever experience you had is the result of wishful thinking. Meaning you had some potent, yet mundane experience(s) which you attributed to god arbitrarily / without evidence. i.e. "I feel really good. It must be god." or "I had a really positive coincidence. It must be god." This would end the debate. C) Table the issue of personal experience while you brainstorm how to provide evidence for it and instead provide evidence for the existence of god to continue the debate. Please pick one or I will assume you're unable or unwilling to continue the debate / conceded. | ||||||||||
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| | #31 (permalink) (top) |
| Volcanic Erupter Posts: 4,375 | Prometheus You had it right in Post #27. A fanatic theist or atheist will always present the argument as a False Dilemma because they think absence of evidence is evidence of absence. Don't bother arguing any further. Just use the Ignore feature and save time. IT'S A BOY!! |
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| | #32 (permalink) (top) | |
![]() Made of pure win. Posts: 3,600 | Quote:
Pay no attention. | |
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| | #33 (permalink) (top) |
| Hucking Fuskies Location: Conn Posts: 2,390 | I could walk into a room full of people and ask a question: "Is the moon made of rock and not cheese?" Now the room is full of chinese who do not speak english. None of them can provide an answer. So lacking an answer does that mean that none of them has been able to prove the moon is rock and not cheese? So the moon must be made of cheese then. Of course we know from outside sources the moon is most certainly made of rock. This thread however asks people in a forum to describe a personal experience. I doubt anyone here is a brain specialist who can describe their experience in scientific detail. Or I even doubt anyone here has had such an experience. So lacking any details we the question remains unanswered. Unanswered = unanswered, not false as Zhavric try's to paint it. What do you say to an atheist who sneezes? Yourdeadthatsit! - Dane Cook |
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| | #34 (permalink) (top) | ||
![]() Made of pure win. Posts: 3,600 | Quote:
The goal of this thread: prove your experience was, specifically, your god. The burden of proof you're working against is the science of the brain that tells us we have 5 senses that work by electro-chemical signals passing between neurons. You want us to believe otherwise? You want us to believe that we can "experience" god? Quote:
If you are alleging that your experience was caused by your god (something theists often state), the point of this thread is to prove it was your god that caused your experience. Provide evidence, concede, or don't post. Don't try to re-write the thread into something it's not. | ||
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| | #35 (permalink) (top) | |
![]() Moderator Location: Reading, UK. Posts: 6,439 | Zhravic, ZNFYRH, stop bickering. Stay on-topic and drop the baiting.
I spent a lot of money on booze, birds and fast cars. The rest I just squandered. -George Best, on being asked what he did with his footballing fortunes. | |
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| | #36 (permalink) (top) | |
| Hucking Fuskies Location: Conn Posts: 2,390 | Quote:
Your asking for direct evidence and proof as to "god" experiences from a group of people who don't appear to have had any such experience. Your making a conclusion beforehand that these experiences are bogus, and use the fact nobody had provided anything contrary to backup your claim. This reminds me of that overused riddle. If a tree falls in a forest and nobody is around to hear it does it make a sound. I don't think a single religion has any claim that every member of it experiences "god" in some measurable way. Your just fishing for a disagreement where you can repeat the same lines you read from a book. What do you say to an atheist who sneezes? Yourdeadthatsit! - Dane Cook | |
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