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Author | Topic: The Atheist Prayer Argument Is A Dull Generalisation Predicated On INEXPERIENCE | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Percy Member Posts: 23085 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 6.3
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mike the wiz writes: Black swans are found in south Australia and Tasmania. Atheists; "I don't know anyone that has seen a black swan in New York, none of my friends do. Indeed if I ask many people from all over the world who I know online they also don't know of any and don't know anyone that does, therefore they don't exist." This is the atheists general argument for prayer. I don't think many atheists would argue in this way, it being readily apparent that absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. An atheist would be more likely to argue that there is no evidence of the efficacy of prayer, except for the solace that offering it might bring.
The usual argument goes something like this with many of the popular atheist speakers; "children get bad illnesses, parents are praying all over the world, if prayer is real show some scientific proof of it. The truth is prayer doesn't work." (or something like this as an argument) Yes, this seems closer to the truth. It is the lack of evidence that atheists are likely to focus on.
What is the problem with the argument? Well it depends on the silent-assumption that God is a being made in the image of human reason, that should and would do everything a human being says God should and would do. (not a person filled with biases please note, like if you argue for answered prayer as a believer.) So yes, if your beliefs are a sort of general theism where God is just a nice guy then you are right, generally prayers are landing on deaf ears. This touches on a key issue. What is it that believers claim prayer is supposed to do? Any atheist approaching the question of the efficacy of prayer would need to ask believers what they think prayer is supposed to accomplish. What atheists think it should accomplish is irrelevant, and atheists would have no trouble recognizing that.
However, if God is the Lord God of the bible, then we are made in God's image and we are told it's a sinful, fallen world and we have a sinful, fallen nature. This touches on another key issue. Is God the God of the Bible? Of the Torah? Of the Quran? Of the Bhagavad Gita? Of the Book of Mormon? Of the Guru Granth Sahib? Of the Tripitaka?
Under this scenario, like with the black swan, you only really get pockets of true died-in-the-wool believers that truly have God's spirit being born again spiritually as Jesus mentioned, and these are the people that do get their prayers answered, I can testify to. Someone has to live amidst a "pocket" of born again Christians before their prayers are answered? And you've gathered enough data about this that you can present evidence that it is so?
However they are not answered under the assumptions of a general theism. Jesus said for example, "in this world you will have trouble, but do not fear I have overcome the world." So you're saying that someone who believes in God but is not a born again Christian won't have their prayers answered. I would go one step further and say that no one has their prayers answered, according to the available evidence. And if prayer were real, aren't you just being a born again Christian bigot by denying its benefits to all who don't share your Christian beliefs?
So when an atheist says to us, "God hasn't cured cancer, God hasn't fixed the world",... Is this an actual atheist argument? Wouldn't an atheist be more like to structure his argument like this: "Consider two universes identical in all ways but one: one has a loving God and the other has no God. Both universes have sunsets and cancer and love and earthquakes and so forth. How do you tell which universe has the loving God?"
...they are labouring under the delusion that God wants to fix the world. It seems unlikely that atheists would labor under any delusions about what a God they don't believe exists wants.
In fact it says in the New Testament that this, "world and it's desires are passing away but he that does the will of God will abide forever." (see how assumptions change if we don't just go with atheists that don't open the Bible?) Aren't you being a Christian bigot again by only considering the Christian holy book?
So under Christianity at least, God isn't going to employ large-scale fixes, because Jesus didn't come and die on the cross to save the earth but the eternal soul, hence the person will abide forever but the world will, "pass away". If that's what you believe, fine.
Is the atheist general prayer argument one of the most annoying? That's not the "atheist general prayer argument." I don't know that there is one. It's just an argument you're claiming atheist's make.
Yes, because of their inconsistent behaviour. Because if we get an answered prayer then according to atheists we are fallible fools that commit post hoc reasoning and confirmation bias and are riddled with all sorts of foibles. I think the atheist would wonder how you know when a prayer has been answered.
But when it comes to prayer not getting answered we are supposed to believe humans are all of a sudden NOT these fallible, bias-ridden creatures but are all of a sudden making perfect judgements about what God would or should do if God exists. I think the atheist would believe prayer useless, whether believers think they've been answered or not.
You can't win. Sure you can. If your faith makes you happy, you're a winner!
Conclusion; so we are basically uselessly inept fallible apes if our prayers are answered but if we say they're not we're perfect morally-pure all-knowing Einsteins that know how God should exactly behave. I think the atheist would think anyone who believes prayer works is engaged in flawed thinking.
If you instead want to be an informed atheist that is consistent,... Let's keep in mind that for the sake of your argument you made up the inconsistent atheist, and now you appear to be about to make up a consistent one.
...look into what you preach. You preach humans are fallible and make all sorts of mistakes and can't be trusted,... I don't think atheists preach much, at least not in any religious sense, but your characterization of humans seems pretty accurate. Don't Christians believe the same, that humans are all fallen sinners?
... which means this would not place you in a good position to judge an all-knowing God. Atheists don't think there's any such thing as God. Why would they bother judging a non-existent thing?
Nor would your subjective moral-commands be regarded logically as anything more than favourite flavour of ice cream. (arbitrary and baseless, as evolved apes) Wouldn't it be more accurate to say that all morality is subjective, and that the religious use their religion to rationalize their morality? Southern Christianity was big time into rationalizing slavery.
Get over yourself. Inexperience doesn't count as experience, if a witness sees Jack the ripper it doesn't matter if most people didn't, so no, we don't have to conclude that the majority of people are correct in saying that the ripper doesn't look like what the witness reported them to have looked like. Didn't follow that.
Disclaimer; I am not trying to provide a persuasive argument for prayer being real. As far as I am concerned the correct people already know God answers prayer being of a noble conscience and honestly seeking the true answers according to God's will, in a position of integrity. I am not covering the philosophical, "problem of evil and suffering" as it is known. I think you're buried in subjectivity.
I am also NOT invalidating atheist concerns when it comes to genuinely being puzzled as to why God would allow the suffering of innocent children for example. I am NOT saying that this is not a legitimate concern. ALL PEOPLE struggle with the negatives that exist, and the questions are honestly asked. That isn't the issue. Right. You're focused on prayer in this thread.
The issue is this; does it make rational sense to argue limited humans could ever compete with understanding these matters on an omniscient level? Does it make logical sense to see human atheists as the standard? Wouldn't atheists be the last people to suggest holding any person or group up as a standard?
Well if you are really rational would would say, "No, because an all-knowing God can have reasons only they can fully understand rather that what just seems like truisms to us, which may in fact only represent simplified concepts on our own inferior level." Wouldn't a truly rational person want evidence of "an all-knowing God"? And aren't you changing the subject from prayer to the nature of God?
After all we can't really compete in any other areas can we? For example do you know any atheists have have invented any contraflow lungs or a brain or metamorphosis? But these would all be attributable to God's level of understanding under the biblical worldview. Not getting this one, either.
Conclusion; It doesn't matter how wide and far ignorance extends, it cannot be counted as experience and knowledge. Black swans simply exist. Uh, yes, of course:
But your thread's about prayer. Do you have evidence of the efficacy of prayer? --Percy
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Percy Member Posts: 23085 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 6.3 |
“Stream of consciousness” much?
—Percy
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Percy Member Posts: 23085 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 6.3 |
mike the wiz writes: In the same way logically speaking if one true miracle occurs on earth beyond question, this would negate the absence of forty two million billion zillion miracles. Said another way, we accept that for which there is evidence. Here's a list of Catholic miracles. I think you'll find them believable, and some employ scientific tests, but replication is a key part of science. Look at what happened very recently to the scientist who claimed to have discovered room temperature fusion. No research group was able to replicate his findings, instead discovering other explanations for his observations. He was forced to withdraw his paper. For validation of miracles you need an interrupted chain of evidence and repeated and replicated analyses. Lacking that the miracles are articles of faith, not science.
If prayers are not answered generally, this is NOT an impressive argument that God does not exist. If the reality is that prayers are not answered generally, then there can't be many answered prayers to offer as evidence. But if someone wants to believe their prayers have been answered what's wrong with that? Their belief isn't forcing anyone else to believe, although it is a bit tedious listening to a proselytizer testifying to God's presence in their life and how He has answered their prayers.
Even Darwin knew and employed this logical thinking when he said that if there were to be just one anatomy that could not be explained by evolution his theory could be counted as false. If the definition of a miracle is a scientifically inexplicable event then there are a huge number of miracles out there. One thing currently inexplicable by science that has received recent attention is the magnetic moment of the muon. Why does measurement differ with theory? We don't know. We may never know (though some additional data becomes available in September that may help). Is this scientifically inexplicable contradiction a miracle? I think most would answer that it is not. They would just see it as science trying to better understand the universe. So if water in a vessel turns to blood, is that a miracle? Or is it just one more thing science can't explain? (We'll leave aside the question of the quality and quantity of any scientific analysis performed.)
So what atheists may believe is a good reason to dismiss God, may for others just lead them to another question, that question being; then why the rarity? How do you tell the difference between a miracle and something science can't explain yet? And since miracles happen in religious contexts rather than laboratories, scientific analysis happens later, not during. One can imagine a conversation like this: "I've noticed that some of the parishioners are commenting that the condensation on the outside of the vessel looks like blood. Let us play a little joke. After everyone has gone to sleep you sneak down to the mortuary and take the blood saved from someone recently embalmed, then replace the water in the vessel with the blood." Is this what happened in the case of The Eucharistic Miracles of Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1992-1994-1996? Who can say? If Catholics want to believe it is a miracle then let them. Science itself has no evidence that water ever turns spontaneously to blood.
It makes consistent sense that if the bible is true and we do have a sinful nature, that you don't get the gift without the giver. Any logic in this escapes me.
God is not a friend with benefits, or a Santa claus you can take gifts from then on boxing day say, "now phuck off, we just want the gifts". You could have stopped at, "God is not."
No being likes to be used. Can you name one intelligent person that wants to be treated with disrespect and have people be mean to them? Look at J.K.Rowling. They want her creation but they want to divorce her from it. "give us the Harry Potter, but cut J.K out of Harry Potter!" I have no idea what you're on about here, but I don't pay much attention to the goings on in the Potter/Rowling world. --Percy
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Percy Member Posts: 23085 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 6.3 |
Phat writes: You may never get the evidence that you require. This is often true in science. But believers in miracles also never get the evidence they require. They just believe anyway. It's called faith. --Percy
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Percy Member Posts: 23085 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 6.3
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Phat writes: One other thing that I DO believe in is that there are many who, under the name of science, evidence, and critical thinking have an agenda to discredit the Bible in the way that Christians throughout History have believed it to be. You're just another crazy Christian paranoid. There is no anti-Christian agenda within science. Science only cares about Christianity when Christians begin marching into school classrooms and filling future scientists heads with nonsense.
IF God exists, He likely won't replicate anything just because a team of scientists require it in order to complete their experiment. How nice for you that you know the mind of God. --Percy
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Percy Member Posts: 23085 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 6.3
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mike the wiz in Message 28 writes: Tangle in Message 27 writes: Looks like Micky's post was another fire and forget. This is excellent troll work. Sorry if I give that impression a few things are at play. 1. I don't like confrontation. As I said recently, I am more of a writer than a fighter. It just seems a forum like this was geared more towards fighting. My recollection is that you're very willing to confront people and tell them what's wrong with them. Thinking I might be remembering incorrectly I thought I'd spend a couple minutes randomly looking at a few of your old posts to refresh my memory. This is from the second one I read, Message 1534 from the Did the Flood really happen?:
That's part of the problem, laypeople like you are making claims about honest people like you just did here, that basically the mainstream scientists wouldn't make. A lot of you are die-hard atheists, and that is your real motive, so there is usually a disparity between what scientists say we must accept and what atheists INSIST we must accept. This is the kind of thing I remember, going on the attack and casting aspersions against people with different opinions than you. You seem pretty confrontational to me.
2. I try to be an interlocutor as best I can, rather than taking the role of an adversary. You may have misunderstood my intentions because they may appear troll-like. I wish I had the time to research this, too, but I don't. But to the best of my recollection, the way you see yourself likely diverges greatly from the way others see you.
3. I write in the hopes there are types of people, readers and lurkers, that will be more open-minded, rather than the old crowd that have their minds firmly made up. A bit confrontational, don't you think? You know, we're not here to give our personal assessments of the other participants. We're here to discuss the topic. And look at your thread's title: The Atheist Prayer Argument Is A Dull Generalisation Predicated On INEXPERIENCE. The title is your opportunity to characterize your thread, and you used it to cast an insult. No atheist had even said anything in the thread yet, and already you're insulting them. Pretty confrontational, don't you think? You might not be as non-confrontational as you think. Other people are mirrors reflecting back to you the way they perceive you. You might find that information useful. Oh, some more feedback. Drive-bys already have a bad reputation. It's as bad a ghosting someone, the worst of passive-aggressive attacks in the social media world. --Percy
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Percy Member Posts: 23085 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 6.3 |
mike the wiz writes: Percy writes: I wish I had the time to research this, too, but I don't. But to the best of my recollection, the way you see yourself likely diverges greatly from the way others see you. What a silly error to believe the small portion of words and actions on forums would be an accurate measure of me. Your behavior here is all people can see of you. If there's another side of you that isn't insulting, challenging and confrontational that you want people to see then you're going to have to display that side of you here.
How others see me is irrelevant, they don't see me. They don't know me. Why is it about me? Listening to your own in-head echo chamber is a path to delusion. How others see you is all that counts.
Why do you feel the need to say all these personal things when we were just discussing my posting activity? You made claims about yourself and I responded to them.
I am expressing honest things about myself. You can't refute things about people that live out things of which you are not even aware. You don't know the issues of my life. As Feynman said, the easiest person to fool is yourself. If you'd like to present another side of yourself here then you're more than welcome to do so. But the way you've described yourself so far doesn't at all resemble the person we see here.
I was saying that it may APPEAR that if I write a topic then go away I am trolling, but that isn't my intention. I then gave reasons for it. Yes, we know that you believe you have perfectly good reasons for issuing insults and treating people like shit.
I DID NOT SAY THAT YOU HAD PERMISSION TO JUDGE ME OR MAKE PERSONAL JUDGEMENTS TOWARDS ME. If you're going to make personal claims about yourself, people have the right to respond. It was you who introduced these aspects of yourself as a topic of discussion.
Percy writes: The title is your opportunity to characterize your thread, and you used it to cast an insult. No atheist had even said anything in the thread yet, and already you're insulting them. Pretty confrontational, don't you think? How is that insulting? OBVIOUSLY I was talking about the general experience of atheism we get online. Where is the insult? They don't have experience of prayer and it is a generalisation. Did you think anyone would be complemented at being accused of dullness and of generalizing beyond their experience?
You propose debate should include snowflakism. Debate can be a hard and tough thing, you seem to be overly sensitive here.....indeed, the rhetorical device, PLAYING IT UP comes to mind since you even take issue with the thread name I gave. What a REACH. How non-confrontational of you. --Percy
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Percy Member Posts: 23085 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 6.3 |
mike the wiz writes: Percy your style was always subtle. You make insinuations a lot. You're fairly docile but you are still indulging the ad-hom attack because when creationists come here you always allow them to get chewed up and spat out in terms of personal attacking. I can't moderate threads in which I'm a participant, and you seem to do more than hold your own with regard to ad hominem.
That's why you're not the worlds most objective admin, because you should know that the debate shouldn't be about the person. You should have noticed as an admin that Tangle's posts were both contentless and personal and that a lot of his posts seem to only exist to incite fighting. Again, I'm a participant. If you want a moderator presence here post a note to the Report Discussion Problems Here 4.0 thread.
Why don't you notice this? Of course I noticed. But again, I'm a participant. No moderating for me here. --Percy
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Percy Member Posts: 23085 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 6.3 |
mike the wiz writes: Percy writes: For validation of miracles you need an interrupted chain of evidence and repeated and replicated analyses. Lacking that the miracles are articles of faith, not science. That there is no general science to validate miracles pretty much doesn't touch anything that I said. I did not accept by neurotic agreement with you that I must validate miracles. I was arguing that the atheists I have heard and come across have argued from their own ignorance of them, their own inexperience. You are trying to get me to score through a goal hoop which is solid and can't be scored through. This seems contradictory to your earlier comment about if "one true miracle occurs on earth beyond question." This requires a method of validating miracles "beyond question." It's contradictory to claim it possible to unquestionably show a miracle has occurred while also claiming there is no way of doing this.
Percy writes: If the reality is that prayers are not answered generally, then there can't be many answered prayers to offer as evidence. But if someone wants to believe their prayers have been answered what's wrong with that? Their belief isn't forcing anyone else to believe, although it is a bit tedious listening to a proselytizer testifying to God's presence in their life and how He has answered their prayers. It follows there can't be many answered prayers as evidence but like you said in your verbose responses of which I cannot address all, it depends who you are praying to. Who do you think you're praying to, and why do you think that?
In the NT it says the natural man cannot understand spiritual things. It makes it pretty clear that God only answers those who genuinely believe and seek in truth. How do you know what the NT says is true?
Hebrews 11 is it? Where it says, "He who comes to God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of those that seek Him." You are really laser focused on the Christian canon. What about other canons?
It would seem unlikely that God would ever put Himself forward as a guinea pig for arrogant people like you demanding scientific evidence. You are merely a human being, nothing more. Yep, not confrontational at all.
Percy writes: How do you tell the difference between a miracle and something science can't explain yet? You really seem to be trying hard to get me to make a case for miracles. You introduced miracles into the conversation asking about "if one true miracle occurs on earth beyond question." How do you establish that such a miracle has occurred?
But this sounds like an appeal-to-the-future fallacy. I don't know what that means, but you need to explain how you establish that a miracle has unquestionably happened.
In a way you can always answer by making this appeal. It can seem the only way you can get some things for example is by design, and a designer ticks all the boxes but you could just say, "how do you know it's something science can't yet explain?" Now you're substituting "designer" for "miracle," and your question becomes about "if one true designer is found on earth beyond question." How do you establish that you've unquestionably found a designer?
The point is at what stage does "coincidental beyond what chance would allow" become silly. And next you describe something you find coincidental beyond chance:
Just as a hypothetical. If God says, "go to this place" which is a certain location. Then He says, "go to this shop", where beforehand you are looking for answers for why your goods were stolen from your property and were angry at God, if you then enter the shop and your stolen things are for sale, was it just something science has no answer for yet? If for you this is a miracle then that's fine. But if you think others should also consider it a miracle then you need some data, some evidence.
In that sense, you can never have an answered prayer. You would be a sort of stubborn idiot PRETENDING science always took precedent. No one has said science always takes precedence. In matters of faith it does not. If you want to believe based on faith that finding your stolen things was a miracle then I doubt many would have a problem with that. But if you're going to claim that everyone should accept that it's unquestionably a miracle then you've got a bit of work to do.
(taken from the testimony of Andrew Owen, iirc) I have written a few more from memory, you can read them here;Bot Verification (there may be more in that thread that might satisfy some of your responses, I don't know.) This is a bare link. Is there something from it that you'd like to introduce into the discussion?
Remember my emphasis is upon atheists I have genuinely heard argue the things I complained about in the opening message. As I said in my original reply, they didn't really sound like arguments atheists would make. They sounded more like parodies of atheist arguments.
Even on an atheist-talk day the speaker made the argument that God doesn't answer prayer, he used the analogy of an email spam box with too many emails to handle for one person. It is a well known argument, but the assumptions of this popular argument do the very thing you mentioned is a problem; they amalgamate many mutually exclusive religious faiths. You're a smart boy, figure it out. You're being confrontational again. If there was point in there I couldn't find it. --Percy
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Percy Member Posts: 23085 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 6.3
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I had a hard time keeping straight what was from mike the wiz and what was from driewerf, so I reformatted the above post to make it easier for me to read. I also added back in some missing italics in the quoted sections:
driewerf:
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Percy Member Posts: 23085 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 6.3 |
driewerf in Message 53 writes: I wrote my reply in a Word file with different fonts. But copy - pasting it as a reply got the different fonts lost. I working on a new website where cut-n-paste will maintain all Word font styling. --Percy
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