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"Corrie" wrote
"Eric Miller" wrote God wants us to trust him. Remember that trust isn't a right, it has to be earned. I can't trust that which: a) doesn't exist in the first place, or b) if it did exist has been shown to be arbitrary, inconsistent and at least as foul tempered and prone to tantrums as any over-tired 2 year old. He can have my trust after a spanking, a time out, has thought about all he's done wrong, and has sincerely apologized for his bad behavior. Maybe. You're mixing apples and oranges. We're not talking about a technology demonstration, we're talking about a singular historical event. The historical is irrelevant, it's the singular that's the conundrum. If it only apparently happened once 2000 years ago, we can safely call it observer/experimental error and ignore it. I can accept mundane specific events that don't violate the laws of physics. If an observation conflicts with our understanding of how the world works, then either the observation or our understanding may be in error. You're assuming that your undertanding of the way things work is accurate. Two hundred years ago, it was believed that a human being would die if he traveled at more than 25 miles per hour. A hundred and ten years ago, it was believed that heavier-than-air flight violated the laws of physics. Seventy years ago, it was widely believed that supersonic flight was impossible. Fifty years ago, the thought of living in space was the stuff of fantasy. But continued observation and experimentation has led to greater understanding of how things work. No observation or experimentation has resulted in resurrection. Until it does, there's no need to change our understanding. Today, laboratory observations of quantum synchronicity phenomena appear to violate the laws of physics. Does that mean that the observations are erroneous, or that the "laws of physics" need to be revised? No, because they're predicted and expected by quantum mechanics. What's more, quantum mechanics predicts other things which we can test and verify. That's what makes QM useful and valuable. Theories which don't predict and can't be tested or verified are useless and worthless. Now you can say that the Resurrection predicts an after-life... but unless someone comes back and confirms then it's untestable. If someone DOES come back, it satisfies my required for repeatability. But then it would also supply proof, which defies faith, so it can't be ALLOWED to happen. A nice little bit of circular logic. Now, I already know that you're going to counter with the "but those are repeatable experiments." But they are repeatable only if you're willing to use the tools. If I refuse to believe the evidence of an airspeed indicator, then you can never convince me that Yeager broke Mach 1. It's like the "Apollo was faked" crowd. They reject or reinterpret every piece of evidence there is. What will it take to convince them of the truth? They don't know and they can't say. :-D Concepts of reality change. My view of what is possible is simply larger than yours. Prayer works. But you have to actually PRAY to find that out. Prayer works. So do sugar pills, with the same efficacy. Consult your physician for possible side effects of either. BTW, have you ever read "Flatland"? It's a very good metaphor for what we're talking about. There's a whole race of beings that exist in two dimensions. The all live on a flat plane called "Flatland." One day a sphere passes through. The Flatlanders see it as a dot that grows into a circle, expands, and finally shrinks back to a dot and vanishes. Some Flatlanders perceive this phenomenon as evidence of the 3rd dimension. Skeptics argue that the third dimension simply does not exist. They've never personally experienced it, don't trust eyewitnesses who saw the circle, and have no use for such silly superstitions. Of course I know "Flatland". And if the sphere should pass through flatland but once, what need is there to explain it? And just because they're in a 2D world, doesn't prohibit them from formulating a 3D model. That, however, doesn't make the 3D world real (see superstring theory... not to be confused with Silly String). Further, while there's a elegant 3D explanation in this case, it's not REQUIRED. You could just as easily explain it as a growing and shrinking circle, and it's just as valid. Fortunately, there's no need to, because I suspect human nature has changed very little over 2000 years. People are just as poor observers, just as gullible, just as superstitious and just as willing to believe what they want to believe today. That's not an argument based on the evidence. That's merely a slur directed at people of a different culture. A thousand years from now, people will look back at us as hopelessly backwards, gullible, etc. (Remember Star Trek's Dr. MCoy's reaction to the idea of surgery? "Cutting people open and sewing them back up - how BARBARIC!") I challenge you to get off your modernist high-horse and actually investigate the scholarly evidence. I'm not suggesting that you take the Bible on faith. Just look at it through the lens of a scholar. Set your assumptions and prejudices aside and just look at the evidence. You misread me. No modernistic high-horse here! I'm not judging the people of 2000 years ago and saying they're gullible.... I'm saying people TODAY are gullible, and the people of 2000 years ago were likely no better. No, I don't wonder at all. People believe in life after death because they don't like the idea of a one time existence and then vanishing forever into nothingness. What I find truly disturbing is that these people find more comfort in the possibility of eternal torment than in just being snuffed out. Interesting point. There's a fairly large school of thought within even conservative Christianity that suggests that Hell is eternal destruction, not eternal torment. Dead and gone, not dead and burning. Either way, it's a ****-poor alternative to eternal life in paradise. Imagine - no need for annuals or pre-flights! :-D Or maybe an endless string of BFRs! :P But is paradise an actual, available alternative or are you just fooling yourself? "If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is" clearly applies. I see it as just the opposite. Believing that this-is-all-there-is lets you avoid the unpleasant thought that maybe there really is a Judge, and that you don't measure up - no matter how "good enough" you think you are. Grow up indeed. It's just a reality, pleasantness or unpleasantness doesn't enter into it; it simply is. And I have no doubt about measuring up as "good enough", in this or any other category... except humility. (But really, what's the point if you can't claim bragging rights for being the Most Humble Ever! ![]() People all over the world, regardless of religion, are generally good. We band together and help each other in times of need. We don't have to be told this, we just do it, and we do it well. You can say the same for murder and pillage. "We just do it, and we do it well." Didja ever stop to consider that the civilization we take for granted here in the US is wildly atypical? Most of the world settles disagreements with guns and knives, not words. People band together, sure - to help their own tribe. But we better kill the other guys before they take our stuff - THAT is the history of the human race. Sad but true. Murder and pillage are also universally punished. Not when it's government policy, or if there's no government. Just ask anyone from Cambodia, Bosnia, or Rwanda. Exceptions which prove the rule. Eric |
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