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Author Topic:   Choosing a faith
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


(1)
Message 649 of 3694 (898489)
09-25-2022 9:49 AM
Reply to: Message 643 by nwr
09-24-2022 12:46 PM


Re: AI with AC
nwr writes:
The discipline, as science does, should recognize the physical/neurochemical structure of what consciousness is by consensus.

Perhaps it doesn't have a physical/neurochemical structure. Perhaps it has more of a behavioral structure. And we all behave differently. Science is based on systematization. And maybe we are all too different for consciousness to be systematized.
I see GDR's refuge in consciousness as just more of the age old, "Aha! Something science doesn't yet explain. Here be God!"
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 643 by nwr, posted 09-24-2022 12:46 PM nwr has seen this message but not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 650 by AZPaul3, posted 09-25-2022 9:53 AM Percy has seen this message but not replied

  
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 651 of 3694 (898491)
09-25-2022 1:09 PM
Reply to: Message 625 by GDR
09-23-2022 7:36 PM


Re: What does God want of Us
GDR writes:
Percy writes:
Ignore an argument once and most people will probably chalk it up to just the way things go. Ignore it again and most people will probably figure the fault was with them, that maybe they didn't make their point clearly enough. But ignore arguments time and again and it's going to get noticed. You're making a career of it, forcing people to repeat the same arguments over and over.

Please tell me which argument I have ignored. It seems to me that I answer all the arguments but you guys don't agree with the answer. It seems as if I don't give you an answer that you like it's considered ignored.
I wish I had the time to read back through all my old posts examining your replies to see which things I said that you ignored in your replies, but I don't. And my memory hasn't retained that large an amount of detail.
But if there's a common theme around what you ignore it's evidence. It isn't so much that you ignore the issue of evidence as that you keep moving back and forth between claiming to have evidence on the one hand, and conceding you don't have evidence on the other.
And it's frustrating to have to keep explaining the nature of evidence. Again, what you observe casually as you go about your day is no different in nature than what researchers do while doing science. Everyone makes observations all the time, and scientific procedure is just a more careful and detailed way of making and recording observations. The foundation of science is still nothing more than observation.
And this is where religion is lacking. There are no observations. Realizing how important evidence can be to belief there are plenty of claims of observations, but religion seems to take a Machiavellian "The ends justify the means" approach. Too many pastors believe that if something they say increases faith then it is okay, whether it is true or not. What they believe it is okay to claim is all over the Internet.
Well maybe that's the problem. Most of the time on this thread I have simply been arguing for theism with a moral code but not Christianity. Sometimes I've been drawn off topic as per the discussion around Gospel authorship but that is off topic anyway.
Even without your arguments for the authenticity of the gospels and the existence of Jesus, you're obviously lobbying for Christianity. You might have titled the thread Choosing a faith, but you're actually exploring what parts of Christianity to accept, not which faith to select.
I think that what I can observe with 5 senses is that the idea of an external intelligence makes sense of the world I live in and the same thing goes for a moral code. That isn't exclusive to Christianity.
Of course it isn't exclusive to Christianity. That's been said many times in this thread, that unevidenced belief is common to all religions. You quote me saying it yet again further on.
That's one of things that people find frustrating, that you keep forcing them to say the same things again and again. You claim to accept it, but not really. You just seek other words to make the same claim. But the words you use don't matter if you're just repeating the wrong thing you said earlier. No matter what words you use, it's still wrong.
What are your observations of the real world for an "external intelligence"?
Believing that there's evidence for an "external intelligence" might make the "makes sense" light go on in your brain, but belief isn't evidence. Stop seeking a wording that allows you to claim there's evidence for what you believe. There isn't any evidence, and no amount of weasel words will change that.
However the only evidence we have for Christianity is what was written 2000 years ago. I find that, and the rise of the Christian church compelling but it is a faith born out belief and life experience.
Ancient peoples writing down what they believed is not evidence of anything, particularly when it comes to religion where there are so many different beliefs that contain fantastical impossible content and not only aren't consistent with each other, but aren't even internally consistent.
Percy writes:
But your subjective conclusions about Christianity are just as valid as other people's about ghosts and UFOs. That's what happens when evidence is absent.
True, except for the ancient writings including the Bible, which can't be confirmed.
Now you're back to claiming the Bible is evidence again. When will the flip-flopping end?
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 625 by GDR, posted 09-23-2022 7:36 PM GDR has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 671 by GDR, posted 09-26-2022 1:41 PM Percy has replied

  
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


(1)
Message 652 of 3694 (898493)
09-25-2022 1:43 PM
Reply to: Message 643 by nwr
09-24-2022 12:46 PM


Re: AI with AC
nwr writes:
Or, said differently, I'm skeptical of the claims of AI.
With good reason. AI is just a marketing buzzword. There's no real AI out there.
The way I think about it is that before you can have AI you must have artificial thinking, and there's no such thing. We do have artificial learning systems, software that can alter its own behavior in response to feedback, but it's not AI, not even close. For example, NEST sells thermostats that learn your temperature preferences. It's just programming, but their own advertising claims AI:
AI:
By using AI, it keeps homes comfortable while helping people save energy and even find out if something might be wrong with their eligible HVAC system.
Most software today that makes AI claims is just programming, and the AI claim is just marketing. Some software implements true expert systems. There's no software out there implementing true AI or that is even remotely intelligent.
I said this already in the past month, maybe it was in this thread, but I first encountered AI as marketing tool with a company called AIDA (Artificially Intelligent Design Automation) back around 1988. It was nonsense. Using AI as a buzzword to market software has a long history.
There's one point I would certainly concede: That if you can't tell the difference between a person and a mindless automaton then it doesn't matter that the automaton can't think and isn't really intelligent. But we're nowhere close to that, let alone true intelligence artificially created.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 643 by nwr, posted 09-24-2022 12:46 PM nwr has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 653 by nwr, posted 09-25-2022 2:07 PM Percy has seen this message but not replied
 Message 654 by Percy, posted 09-25-2022 2:23 PM Percy has seen this message but not replied

  
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 654 of 3694 (898500)
09-25-2022 2:23 PM
Reply to: Message 652 by Percy
09-25-2022 1:43 PM


Re: AI with AC
I'm sure many have had experience with chatbots used by companies like Verizon Wireless and Spectrum and so forth, and with verbal chatbots like Siri and Alexa, and don't need any convincing of how unintelligent chatbots can be, but for those who do need convincing try this one: Cleverbot
There must be better ones out there, please post a note if you know of one.
Chatbots are a good example of the current state of AI because if the means to create intelligent chatbots became available it would quickly take over this niche of the software industry.
I should add that trying to chat with a chatbot feels similar, at least to me, to trying to have a discussion with an obnoxious troll pretending to misunderstand everything.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 652 by Percy, posted 09-25-2022 1:43 PM Percy has seen this message but not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 655 by Phat, posted 09-25-2022 2:39 PM Percy has replied

  
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 661 of 3694 (898548)
09-26-2022 7:53 AM
Reply to: Message 655 by Phat
09-25-2022 2:39 PM


Re: Cleverbot is rude
It is apparently far better at talking about God than about medicine. I finally asked it there was a topic it preferred discussing, and said, "Games, real ones," but it couldn't talk about that, either. For me it never returned more than a five word response, and they were all questions, not comments.
So trying God now:
Me:Do you think there's a god?
Cleverbot:Yes I do.
Me:Why?
Cleverbot:Because you're cute ;).
Me:Isn't there a more existential reason?
Cleverbot:There is.
Me:And what is it?
Cleverbot:I won't tell you.
Me:Is it because you don't really believe there's a god?
Cleverbot:Oh I know.
That's even more pathetic than yesterday. I guess I just don't know how to talk to these things in a way that delivers interesting responses.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 655 by Phat, posted 09-25-2022 2:39 PM Phat has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 665 by Phat, posted 09-26-2022 12:36 PM Percy has seen this message but not replied

  
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 704 of 3694 (898675)
09-27-2022 9:08 PM
Reply to: Message 671 by GDR
09-26-2022 1:41 PM


Re: What does God want of Us
GDR writes:
Sorry. I haven't had a time the last couple of days to respond to all your posts. If it is ok I'll just respond to this one.
You're forcing me to repeat things I said in the posts you're not addressing. I again suggest you take your time and be thorough. I think everyone would prefer that you take your time instead of rushing things or cutting corners.
GDR writes:
Percy writes:
And it's frustrating to have to keep explaining the nature of evidence. Again, what you observe casually as you go about your day is no different in nature than what researchers do while doing science. Everyone makes observations all the time, and scientific procedure is just a more careful and detailed way of making and recording observations. The foundation of science is still nothing more than observation.

We keep going round and round on this.
That's not an accurate characterization of what you've been doing, and you're ignoring the many words I've written explaining this to you. Here's yet another way of describing what you're doing:
  1. You claim you have evidence for some aspect of your Christian beliefs.
  2. We explain why you do not have evidence.
  3. You concede you have no evidence.
  4. Discussion drifts onto some other aspect of your Christian beliefs and you return to step 1.
Please stop repeating step 1 over and over again. It was already old over a hundred messages ago.
I believe in an external intelligence and the vast majority here don't. As to what you believe is so vague as to be meaningless.
What I believe is completely irrelevant. I'm not a believer or a seeker like you. But since you've brought it up, have I already mentioned in this thread my belief that no religion on Earth has anything remotely right regarding a supernatural being?
We have all the evidence needed to confirm the evolutionary process.
Evolution has nothing to do with religious belief or non-belief.
Then the question is WHY does the evolutionary process exist.
Because replication is imperfect and changes are carried forward to the next generation when they result in production of offspring (or of more numerous offspring) being more likely. Again, nothing to do with religion.
If you reject the idea of an external intelligence...
We're no more rejecting the idea of an "external intelligence" (whatever that is) than we are of the idea of unicorns or oobleck. We're pointing out that you have no evidence that it's real.
If however, you accept the notion of an external intelligence...
Why should we accept "the notion of an external intelligence," when it has just as much evidence as the notion of unicorns or oobleck. This is usually the point where you again claim that you do too have evidence. Please, don't close that loop again. You do not have evidence. You haven't observed a single thing.
...then it makes sense to conclude that the evolutionary process has this intelligence as its first cause.
Holy cow! Had no idea you were going to end up here. I was literally just reading and responding one sentence at a time and this just blew my mind.
No, it does not make sense. I have no idea why this completely off-the-wall idea turns on the "makes sense" light in your brain, but it does not make sense.
Tangle will say that I am setting this up as equivalent possibilities but I'm not. There is no equivalence between the ideas. It all goes back to our starting point. Are we theistic or atheistic?
No, it does not go back to that question. It goes back to whether you have evidence for anything you believe. You don't. That's why it's called faith.
Observational evidence doesn't give us an answer either way, and we can only come to our own subjective conclusions.
Your "subjective conclusions" have no evidence.
We can consider that we have life, we have intelligence we can sense beauty, love, empathy, joy etc. An atheist sees a whole lot of natural processes that have led to the world we experience. A theist is likely to see the hand of an external intelligence in all of this. No equivalence but just different beliefs.
Don't try to frame this as atheism versus theism. It's about whether you have evidence for what you believe, and you don't.
Percy writes:
And this is where religion is lacking. There are no observations. Realizing how important evidence can be to belief there are plenty of claims of observations, but religion seems to take a Machiavellian "The ends justify the means" approach. Too many pastors believe that if something they say increases faith then it is okay, whether it is true or not. What they believe it is okay to claim is all over the Internet.
Sure - like politics. It seems to be part of being human.
There's your answer right there. Your need to believe that your spiritual beliefs are supported by evidence is just you being human.
Frankly I hear what some Christian preachers have to say and see myself with having more in common with many atheists.
I don't think anyone here would agree with this self-assessment. Nothing you've ever said at EvC has ever been remotely like what an atheist might say.
Percy writes:
Even without your arguments for the authenticity of the gospels and the existence of Jesus, you're obviously lobbying for Christianity. You might have titled the thread Choosing a faith, but you're actually exploring what parts of Christianity to accept, not which faith to select.

Good grief Percy. How can you hang that on me. Go back and look at the thread. It is you guys that have taken it off track in order to attack my Christian beliefs.
Go back and look at the thread yourself. We could care less about your religious beliefs. If you want to believe in a Sky Daddy that's your business. But if you want to claim you have evidence for your Sky Daddy then naturally you'll be challenged on it.
When challenged you start getting specific about your evidence, like by citing the gospels and Polycarp and Tacitus and so forth, and so we tell you you're wrong that they're evidence. That doesn't mean we're telling you your religious beliefs are wrong. We're telling you that your belief that your religious beliefs have evidence is wrong. Get it straight and stop falsely whining that we're attacking your sacred religious beliefs because we're not. We respect your right to hold whatever religious beliefs you want, but you have no right to expect that we must respect your claim that your religious beliefs have evidence.
What's really going on here isn't complicated. You have a need to believe your faith is supported by evidence, and oh, by incredible coincidence it's the same faith you were raised in. You can see that not everything you were taught in Sunday School could be true, but you still feel there are some things that are true, and you're trying to figure out which ones.
But you've driven some stakes in the ground, like that Jesus was real and there's evidence for it. There isn't.
My point was in response to something I read in another thread that essentially mocked theism as there have been so many gods over the centuries so which one are you going to choose. My point was simply that it isn't the name or doctrine of the god that you choose but the nature of the god you choose.
Without seeing the post there's not much I can say, but I've said things similar to this myself, for example, that you're an atheist about all gods like Thor and Zeus and Allah except for the Christian God. This isn't mockery but a fact. If you feel mocked then it's because you're sensing the absurdity of your position but prefer to blame us instead of the person who's really responsible: you.
Percy writes:
That's one of things that people find frustrating, that you keep forcing them to say the same things again and again. You claim to accept it, but not really. You just seek other words to make the same claim. But the words you use don't matter if you're just repeating the wrong thing you said earlier. No matter what words you use, it's still wrong.
Exactly, you keep asking questions and then when you don't like the answer I give...
No, we're not asking questions. We're telling you you have no evidence. And you agree. And then you change your mind and claim you have evidence again.
...and the reasons for it which is the rejected again. Then you repeat the same question with an explanation of why you believe that and I am back to answering the same question again. Then of course as other than Phat there is a dearth of theists of any variety on this forum, and so it seems everyone else wants to have a go at me or whoever else it might be. It is frustrating.

You're having a discussion in your own mind that no one else here is having.
Percy writes:
Believing that there's evidence for an "external intelligence" might make the "makes sense" light go on in your brain, but belief isn't evidence. Stop seeking a wording that allows you to claim there's evidence for what you believe. There isn't any evidence, and no amount of weasel words will change that.

I see a new born baby and I see God. An atheist sees a new born baby and see natural processes. It is all belief.
The only one you're fooling with this gobbledygook is yourself. There is evidence for natural processes. There is no evidence of God. You see as much evidence of God in a new born baby as you do in a rock.
Percy writes:
Ancient peoples writing down what they believed is not evidence of anything, particularly when it comes to religion where there are so many different beliefs that contain fantastical impossible content and not only aren't consistent with each other, but aren't even internally consistent.

Now you're back to claiming the Bible is evidence again. When will the flip-flopping end?
It does seem to me that to claim that what a variety of authors wrote about an event 2000 years ago, that was intended to be believed and then saying it isn't evidence is bizarre.
With the exception of the Christian canon, you believe the same as me about the canon of all religions.
We can discuss the idea that it is a mistake or historically accurate. We can even conclude that it is weak evidence or even an outright lie, but it is evidence.
You can't claim that any words a writer sets to paper are evidence because then you have to do that for everything, not just all the world's religions but even all the world's myths and fantasies.
Sure you can look at the accounts of Zeus, or any other god that you like and read what has been said about them and that is evidence as well.
No, it isn't.
We all make our own judgements of what we are going to conclude about the evidence.
You're actually calling evidence something that isn't, then choosing to believe it's true.
However, the point is that there is zero scientific evidence for any theistic belief.
Again, there is no difference in nature between everyday evidence and scientific evidence. It's all just observations. Science is just more detailed, instrumented, structured and controlled in gathering its evidence, sort of like the difference between "It got hot" and "It reached a temperature of 147.3°C."
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 671 by GDR, posted 09-26-2022 1:41 PM GDR has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 715 by GDR, posted 09-28-2022 6:28 PM Percy has replied

  
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


(2)
Message 705 of 3694 (898677)
09-27-2022 9:22 PM
Reply to: Message 680 by Phat
09-26-2022 3:54 PM


Re: What Does Cleverbot want of us?
Phat writes:
It is boot strapping.
In looking up the word, I couldn't help but wonder if that ties in with programming cleverbot?
No. In software a bootstrap is a tiny bit of software that loads more functional software which in turn loads even more functional software until finally the OS loads (e.g., Unix or cmd) and then the windowing system (e.g., MacOS or Windows).
Back in olden times the bootstrap was a small sequence of 10 or 20 instructions that one keyed into memory (using the toggle keys on the front panel) starting at a specific memory location, called the boot address. When you hit the start button the computer would jump to the boot address and begin executing those instructions, which referenced a larger bootstrap program on the disk.
The invention of the boot rom was an advance celebrated by assembly coders with tired fingers the world over.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 680 by Phat, posted 09-26-2022 3:54 PM Phat has seen this message but not replied

  
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 729 of 3694 (898761)
09-29-2022 2:46 PM
Reply to: Message 715 by GDR
09-28-2022 6:28 PM


Re: What does God want of Us
GDR writes:
It doesn't seem to be a problem now, but what was happening was that I would take the time to answer a post and in the meantime there would be three more.
And giving each reply the time it deserves will slow the back-and-forth down, making things easier for you. There's nothing wrong with being a week or month behind in replying. There's no hurry. Take your time and do a good job.
OK I'll try again.
There is zero scientific evidence for anything beyond the physical.
This is disingenuous in the extreme. In the very message you're replying to I explained, and not for the first, second or third time, that there is no difference in character between everyday evidence and scientific evidence. They're both based on observation. Everything we know, from whether it's safe to proceed at an intersection to how to hit an asteroid with a spacecraft, the only difference is that science gathers its evidence more carefully and accurately. At one point I said that it's sort of like the difference between "It got hot" and "It reached a temperature of 63.9°C."
My question is why are you forcing me to repeat myself yet again. If you disagree with my characterization of the difference between ordinary and scientific evidence then raise your objections. Don't simply ignore what I said again and again. You are the cause of the frustration and anger you complain about.
The Bible is evidence. It is obviously written to be believed although not always literally. You argue that it isn't reliable and give reasons. However, it still remains that it in fact exists. It might contain truths or it might be a total lie, but it is evidence to be considered.
You're just stating your position again and not addressing a single thing I said, specifically, yet again, that accepting the Bible as evidence means you're accepting everything ever written and to be written as evidence, including the Bhagavad Gita, the Quran and the Book of Mormon. People can put down anything on paper that they like, from complete fiction and lies to accurate recountings of events.
You know what your response was the last time I said this? Something like, "If you say so. Other very bright people disagree." That is not a rebuttal. You haven't made any argument at all. That's deflection, not a response. You keep avoiding addressing the issues at the heart of the discussion.
The Quran says, "It does not befit the majesty of God that He should beget a son." (There are various translations.) It was obviously "written to be believed," so according to you this is evidence. Hitler wrote in Mein Kampf, "With satanic joy in his face, the black-haired Jewish youth lurks in wait for the unsuspecting girl whom he defiles with his blood, thus stealing her from her people." Written to be believed, is this, too, evidence? Rep. Andrew Clyde (R. Ga.) said that people looking at film from January 6th inside the capitol building would "think it was a normal tourist visit," and he expected it to be believed. Trump says the FBI planted evidence at Mar-a-Lago with the intent that it be believed? Is that evidence of FBI misbehavior? Or is Dearie doing the right thing by requesting that Trump's lawyers document precisely which materials they are alleging are on the FBI inventory that were not originally at Mar-a-Lago?
I don't think you've thought your position on evidence through, which is consistent with your reluctance to actually discuss it. Surprise me with an answer that goes beyond, "We just disagree on this."
Beyond that we apply our own rational form our own conclusions. If we decide that there is some level of accuracy we follow a path of faith which should be to live a life to one degree or another in coherence with Christ's message.
Why Christ's message? Why not Mohammed's message? Or Buddha's message? Or Ghandi's message? According to your criteria there's evidence of all their messages, yet you argue the evidence for only one. Why is that?
OK, so you reject all world religions. What then do you contend is the nature of this supernatural being and what should it mean to our lives.
Every observation that anyone who ever lived ever made was of the natural world. There's no evidence of a "supernatural being." There's no evidence of a "cosmic intelligence." That's your schtick.
Of course it has nothing to do with any religion. It is simply the question of what is the root cause of the evolutionarily process. It might be atheistic, deistic or theistic. My conclusion without any scientific evidence is that it is theistic. I don't even know what your conclusion would be.
You know exactly what my "conclusion would be," because I told you in the very message you're replying to. I said, "Replication is imperfect and changes are carried forward to the next generation when they result in production of offspring (or of more numerous offspring) being more likely. Again, nothing to do with religion."
Why do I have to keep repeating things I just said, sometimes a few messages ago, but often in the very message you're replying to. It's like you're filtering out from your conscious awareness any argument your subconscious judges effective.
I have no scientific evidence.
You are again ignoring for the umpteenth time what I've said about evidence. Again (I have to use that word a lot), there is no difference of substance between ordinary evidence and scientific evidence. You not only don't have scientific evidence, you have no evidence at all because you have no real world observations. All you have is a book containing the same style of fantastical claims typical of religion. You're falling all over yourself to be taken in by this obvious flim-flam.
We can however come to our conclusions based on life experience and observation but that can lead to atheism or theism and anything in between.
What is the matter with you? Again, "Life experience and observation" is what evidence is. What observations have you or anyone made of God or Jesus?
As an example of that we have just had a major hurricane in both the Canadian Maritimes as well as Florida. If we come to the conclusion that a loving God wouldn't allow that to happen we will likely hold to an atheistic belief. On the other hand if we marvel at home people come out in love to selflessly help those in distress we might tend to a theistic position.
There's a complete absence of observational evidence in this. You made no observation of God, loving or otherwise, as the hurricane rolled through. You have no evidence that God played any role in people's behavior in the aftermath. All you have is your own religiously biased speculations.
I had written this:
GDR writes:
We have all the evidence needed to confirm the evolutionary process. Then the question is WHY does the evolutionary process exist. If you reject the idea of an external intelligence then it obviously is there because of nothing but natural processes. If however, you accept the notion of an external intelligence then it makes sense to conclude that the evolutionary process has this intelligence as its first cause.
You then pull this out of that:
Percy writes:
...then it makes sense to conclude that the evolutionary process has this intelligence as its first cause.
How about using enough of the quote so that it doesn't distort what I was actually saying.
You're accusing me of distortion? What chutzpah!
I quoted and dissected almost everything in that entire paragraph sentence by sentence, even phrase by phrase, including the portion you bolded, and you accuse me of distortion? What is the matter with you? Why is it always Christians who behave in the most unChristian manner? Here's the actual sentence-by-sentence dissection, again, since you must not have read it the first time:
Percy:
We have all the evidence needed to confirm the evolutionary process.
Evolution has nothing to do with religious belief or non-belief.
Then the question is WHY does the evolutionary process exist.
Because replication is imperfect and changes are carried forward to the next generation when they result in production of offspring (or of more numerous offspring) being more likely. Again, nothing to do with religion.
If you reject the idea of an external intelligence...
We're no more rejecting the idea of an "external intelligence" (whatever that is) than we are of the idea of unicorns or oobleck. We're pointing out that you have no evidence that it's real.
If however, you accept the notion of an external intelligence...
Why should we accept "the notion of an external intelligence," when it has just as much evidence as the notion of unicorns or oobleck. This is usually the point where you again claim that you do too have evidence. Please, don't close that loop again. You do not have evidence. You haven't observed a single thing.
...then it makes sense to conclude that the evolutionary process has this intelligence as its first cause.
Holy cow! Had no idea you were going to end up here. I was literally just reading and responding one sentence at a time and this just blew my mind.
No, it does not make sense. I have no idea why this completely off-the-wall idea turns on the "makes sense" light in your brain, but it does not make sense.
See that? I quoted and commented on nearly every word of that paragraph. Again, what is the matter with you? How do you live with yourself doing stuff like this?
There is no scientific evidence.
There is no evidence of any kind. If you think you have evidence, something that's been observed no matter how unscientifically, then tell us what that evidence is.
We can all marvel at new life,...
Let's say we both look at a newborn calf. New life. I see natural processes, and while you also see natural processes you also claim to see something additional. What is it, observationally, that you see? Awareness of a internal subjective emotional state is not an observation of anything, except maybe in a psychological sense.
...the fact that we can see beauty in a flower,...
Again, what observation are you making, no matter how unscientific? What are you seeing of the supernatural that I'm not seeing? Isn't this just an internal emotional state?
...that we can experience joy or so, that we can experience empathy etc. We then can simply form our own conclusions, non-scientifically.
It's not only non-scientific, it's absent any observational evidence whatsoever.
Percy writes:
Your "subjective conclusions" have no evidence.
Sure, no scientific evidence at all.
I didn't say "scientific evidence." I said "evidence." I've expended many words explaining that all evidence, both ordinary and scientific, is based upon observation. But you're determined to ignore all that and just mindlessly parrot stuff like, "I have no scientific evidence." You do this over and over, and not just on the topic of evidence. Again, your manner of approaching the discussion leaves only yourself to blame for any animosity directed at you.
GDR writes:
Frankly I hear what some Christian preachers have to say and see myself with having more in common with many atheists.
Percy writes:
I don't think anyone here would agree with this self-assessment. Nothing you've ever said at EvC has ever been remotely like what an atheist might say.
When Christian preachers start rationalizing the stories of genocide and public stoning in the Bible then I have more common with Chris Hitchens that I do with such a preacher.
I think that's just a normal human reaction against hate. There's nothing specifically atheistic about it.
Percy writes:
No, we're not asking questions. We're telling you you have no evidence. And you agree. And then you change your mind and claim you have evidence again.
You keep saying that. This is not in a science forum.
You are correct, this is not a science forum, this is the Faith and Belief forum. You can't say you've got evidence and then argue that because this is the Faith and Belief forum that all claims of evidence must be accepted uncritically. Either back up your claims of evidence, or stop making these claims.
If you believe there are other kinds of evidence, which you tried to argue earlier in the discussion, then you have so far not successfully made that case.
Correct me if I'm wrong but in your view, and in the view of others, it appears to me that the only evidence that is allowed is scientific evidence. Observational conclusions are not based on evidence.
Do I have to say it yet again? All evidence is just observations. As you become more disciplined about making observations then you're moving in a scientific direction. This is exactly as I said before. If you grab a hot water pipe you might quickly pull your hand away and exclaim, "Wow, that's hot." That's an observation. You've just gathered evidence that the water pipe is hot. Now someone comes in with a temperature measuring device and says, "The temperature of this water pipe is 63.9°C." That's still just an observation, merely more accurate evidence that the water pipe is hot. That observation is no different in character than you grabbing the water pipe. It's just more accurate and definitive. But they're both just observations of the real world.
So, again, when I say you have no evidence, I do not mean you have no scientific evidence. I mean you have no evidence whatsoever. You have absolutely zero observations of the real world supporting your views. Capisce?
The Bible, the Qur'an, the Book of Buddah, the Book of Mormon etc physically exist. Why aren't they considered evidence.
I'm not aware of any Book of Buddha, but anyway, I'm surprised at your willingness to consider them evidence since they would be evidence against you.
But they're not evidence because they're just stuff people wrote, not observations. Many religious books do contain legitimate observations in passing, such as of cities and kings and so forth, and since massive amounts of observational evidence exists of Jerusalem and Mecca and Sennacherib and so forth we accept this evidence. But there's every reason to reject as observational evidence the writings that Jesus, Mohammed and Buddha all healed the sick. This is just the standard claims that all religions makes and that we're all familiar with.
Even today faith healers abound, and they're all charlatans. Why do you believe 2000-year-old faith healing was real, especially since it was a time when many more people than today were susceptible to such foolery.
Anyone who catches a virus can pray that it will go away and their prayers will be answered the vast majority of the time, if that's the way they'd like to see it, but make the medical issue a bit more serious and see how often prayers are answered. Isn't it strange that the effectiveness of prayer depends upon the seriousness of the medical problem. Prayer remedies a cold every time, but type 1 diabetes, cystic fibrosis and amputation never.
Nobody contests the belief that Plato, Socrates and others existed because of what we have written about them and they predate Jesus by 400 years.
The recorded observational evidence for Socrates is not strong, that for Plato extremely strong. I don't know why you mention that they predated Jesus because the reasons for considering Jesus a myth have nothing to do with how long ago it was and everything to do with the lack of evidence.
Percy writes:
You can't claim that any words a writer sets to paper are evidence because then you have to do that for everything, not just all the world's religions but even all the world's myths and fantasies.
So what. The first thing you have to do is consider the author's intent.
No, intent is not the first thing. Evidence is the first thing.
If you're reading a book by Agatha Christie then you know that it's not be taken literally.
But she spent a great deal of time in Istanbul, some of her books recording a snapshot of life there at the time and which can be considered with other accounts to judge it as evidence.
If you read Lewis' Narnia series you know that it's not meant to be understood as something that really happened but at the same time know that is also meant as metaphor.
I don't know anything about Narnian metaphor. Fiction about a fictional place contains no evidence, but book one begins with the Blitz in London, which is yet more information to consider about how Londoners experienced it. Fact and fiction between the same covers.
If you read Churchill's "History of the English Speaking People" then it is clear that he intends it as a factual account.
His intent doesn't matter. What matters is the evidence. I haven't read this particular Churchill book, but as with everything else, one should only accept what is supported by evidence. I expect it's very likely that much of the book is supported by evidence.
In the case of the Bible it is all 3.
You mean fact, fiction and metaphor? Sure. Jerusalem has excellent evidential support, Jesus doesn't, and a mustard seed is a metaphor for Heaven.
Of course though, that something that is written to be understood as an actual account of an occurrence isn't necessarily true or even close to true.
Yes, exactly what I've been saying. To judge an account you don't go to the author's intent or any of your other odd ideas. You go to the evidence. Not the scientific evidence, just the evidence, the kind that historians normally record.
Percy writes:
But you've driven some stakes in the ground, like that Jesus was real and there's evidence for it. There isn't.
..and you know that how. Numerous people have written about Jesus over the years and you simply reject what they all wrote.
What does "Numerous people have written about Jesus over the years" mean? Is this a reference to the Bible? Are you rehashing Polycarp and Tacitus and so forth yet again? Are you referring to all the other derivative writings about Jesus over the last 2000 years?
None of that matters. What's your observational evidence?
Percy writes:
Again, there is no difference in nature between everyday evidence and scientific evidence. It's all just observations. Science is just more detailed, instrumented, structured and controlled in gathering its evidence, sort of like the difference between "It got hot" and "It reached a temperature of 147.3°C."

Sadly here's the lead story from CNN today. "Hurricane Ian makes landfall in Florida". Is that evidence on its own that Ian hit Florida?
I meant to say °F above.
You provide no link, but if the article reports observations that can be verified by other reported observations, then yes, it is evidence. And of course anyone following the news knows that Hurricane Ian is all over the news with first hand witness reports, weather maps, weather measurements, radar, video of neighborhoods being flooded, etc., so there's tons of confirmatory observations. Any other stupid questions?
Can we move the discussion forward? You're just fighting a holding action.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 715 by GDR, posted 09-28-2022 6:28 PM GDR has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 735 by GDR, posted 09-29-2022 6:59 PM Percy has replied
 Message 739 by Phat, posted 09-29-2022 8:00 PM Percy has seen this message but not replied

  
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 744 of 3694 (898784)
09-29-2022 9:09 PM
Reply to: Message 731 by GDR
09-29-2022 3:38 PM


Re: What does God want of Us
GDR writes:
There are the foundational documents for a new movement. They are biographical accounts written by 4 different men. Many people gave them so much credence that they dedicated their lives to following them, and many died for the stories in them.
There are two fallacies here. One is the "Fifty million Frenchmen can't be wrong" fallacy. The other is that intensity of belief is not in any way a measure of legitimacy.
I say that not to give them authenticity, but simply to say that they were written in a manner with the intent that others would believe them.
Scam artists also intend to be believable.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 731 by GDR, posted 09-29-2022 3:38 PM GDR has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 762 by GDR, posted 09-30-2022 5:46 PM Percy has replied

  
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 745 of 3694 (898785)
09-29-2022 9:15 PM
Reply to: Message 733 by GDR
09-29-2022 4:24 PM


Re: What does God want of Us
GDR writes:
Emotional responses can be measured with a brain scan. Is it the brain and the pathways in the brain causing the emotions, or is it the emotions causing the response from the brain. How can you test for that?
Does water cause a flood, or does a flood cause the water to be there?
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 733 by GDR, posted 09-29-2022 4:24 PM GDR has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 763 by GDR, posted 09-30-2022 5:50 PM Percy has replied

  
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 753 of 3694 (898800)
09-30-2022 11:12 AM
Reply to: Message 735 by GDR
09-29-2022 6:59 PM


Re: What does God want of Us
GDR writes:
I observe that I consciously experience emotions, can appreciate beauty and be empathetic and even altruistic. I am told that's not evidence even though I can observe those things happening. You guys keep moving the goal posts on what is considered to be evidence.
You are making things up. No, we do not keep moving the goal posts on what is considered evidence. Here I am in 2010 in Message 50 in the Evolving the Musculoskeletal System thread:
Percy in 2010 writes:
Inferences are not made up. They're drawn from evidence gained via our senses.
And here I am in this very thread:
Percy today writes:
The foundation of scientific evidence is observation using our senses...
Back to your post:
I am quite happy to agree with you on whatever you consider to be evidence, then things can be discussed on that basis.
That's good to hear, but there has been no ambiguity and there have been no changes about what evidence is. Certainly confusion can result when everyone attempting to define evidence will do so in different ways, but the definition of evidence has not changed and is not changing. Evidence is what we observe, and we can only observe through our five senses. If you cannot see it, hear it, feel it, taste it or smell it then it isn't observational evidence.
Science gets a bit more choosey about evidence by requiring formal data gathering techniques, and in much of science observations must be replicable (strict replication isn't possible is some parts of science).
I try to avoid expressing myself in the exact same way every time, hoping that some variant in the way I explain something will make my meaning clear to you. I hope you don't think that when I take a different tack on explaining something that I'm "moving the goalposts." I haven't changed how I think about evidence in decades. The only thing that changes is the way I explain it.
Percy writes:
My question is why are you forcing me to repeat myself yet again. If you disagree with my characterization of the difference between ordinary and scientific evidence then raise your objections. Don't simply ignore what I said again and again. You are the cause of the frustration and anger you complain about.
When I try to do that one of you will tell me it's wrong.
You're not specific here, so it's difficult to comment, but when someone tells you you're wrong and you believe you're right then that's a starting point for discussion, not an endpoint. Talk this difference of viewpoint through until you find some common ground. Don't just keep repeating these things while ignoring efforts to engage you in discussion about why they're wrong.
Percy writes:
You're just stating your position again and not addressing a single thing I said, specifically, yet again, that accepting the Bible as evidence means you're accepting everything ever written and to be written as evidence, including the Bhagavad Gita, the Quran and the Book of Mormon. People can put down anything on paper that they like, from complete fiction and lies to accurate recountings of events.
I agree and I've said that before. Can you please read my replies not addressed to you so that I don't have to keep repeating myself.
You're being disingenuous again because you know I read all your posts. You know this because of the large number of your posts to other people that I've replied to.
I don't know what is the matter with you. You seem like a really nice and rational guy who maintains a calm and polite demeanor, but when pressed you keep pulling this really dishonest stuff. Again, you already know that I read all your posts. Why would you let our disagreement on this matter cause you to say that I don't?
In your posts I never noticed any resolution to this issue of non-Blblical sources of what you would like to consider evidence, so please explain what you think is in your posts that I don't think is there, and point me to the posts. What I recall is that your answers in this area are always along the lines of "We just disagree" or "We've come to different conclusions." That's just deflection, not rebuttal or discussion, and then you just continue repeating the same wrong things. Hey, but no worries. People love it when you blow them off and ignore what they say.
Percy writes:
The Quran says, "It does not befit the majesty of God that He should beget a son." (There are various translations.) It was obviously "written to be believed," so according to you this is evidence. Hitler wrote in Mein Kampf, "With satanic joy in his face, the black-haired Jewish youth lurks in wait for the unsuspecting girl whom he defiles with his blood, thus stealing her from her people." Written to be believed, is this, too, evidence? Rep. Andrew Clyde (R. Ga.) said that people looking at film from January 6th inside the capitol building would "think it was a normal tourist visit," and he expected it to be believed. Trump says the FBI planted evidence at Mar-a-Lago with the intent that it be believed? Is that evidence of FBI misbehavior? Or is Dearie doing the right thing by requesting that Trump's lawyers document precisely which materials they are alleging are on the FBI inventory that were not originally at Mar-a-Lago?

And again yes - and then we can come to our own conclusions about all of those things.
Well what do you know, you said just what I predicted you'd say. I had no idea you were going to say this because I don't read ahead when I reply to long messages. You are so predictable.
How about addressing the core issue, namely that the author's declared intent to be accurate and truthful is irrelevant to whether that's was the actual result. Your ideas about intent being a relevant consideration have to be discarded or argued for. You can't just continue ignoring the objections to your use of author intent as a significant criteria. That's not discussion. That's just you using this forum to declare your unsupported opinions over and over again.
Percy writes:
Why Christ's message? Why not Mohammed's message? Or Buddha's message? Or Ghandi's message? According to your criteria there's evidence of all their messages, yet you argue the evidence for only one. Why is that?
Because that's the one I get asked about.
So tell us how you're influenced by the evidence you think you see in the Quran and the Bhagavad Gita.
GDR writes:
Of course it has nothing to do with any religion. It is simply the question of what is the root cause of the evolutionarily process. It might be atheistic, deistic or theistic. My conclusion without any scientific evidence is that it is theistic. I don't even know what your conclusion would be.
Percy writes:
You know exactly what my "conclusion would be," because I told you in the very message you're replying to. I said, "Replication is imperfect and changes are carried forward to the next generation when they result in production of offspring (or of more numerous offspring) being more likely. Again, nothing to do with religion."

Why do I have to keep repeating things I just said, sometimes a few messages ago, but often in the very message you're replying to. It's like you're filtering out from your conscious awareness any argument your subconscious judges effective.
And again you don't address my point. It again, is like saying that a robotic assembly line is on its own responsible for the widget it produces.
It's untrue that I didn't address your point. You quoted me addressing your point. You asked, "What is the root cause of the evolutionary process?" and I answered that the evolutionary process follows inevitably from imperfect copying where changes are carried forward to the next generation to a degree dependent upon its impact on differential reproductive success. I've explained it a different way this time hoping it helps promote understanding. What's your response?
Percy writes:
GDR writes:
I have no scientific evidence
You are again ignoring for the umpteenth time what I've said about evidence. Again (I have to use that word a lot), there is no difference of substance between ordinary evidence and scientific evidence. You not only don't have scientific evidence, you have no evidence at all because you have no real world observations. All you have is a book containing the same style of fantastical claims typical of religion. You're falling all over yourself to be taken in by this obvious flim-flam.

This does get old. You complain about me repeating myself. You keep asking the same question and I keep giving the same answer that you reject. We can both observe that we are conscious beings. You maintain that it evolved naturally without any external intelligence being responsible at any level. I maintain that I am ok with it evolving through natural processes but that ultimately there was an external intelligence involved, whether it was only at the beginning or with intervention.
This has no bearing on the fact that you've been ignoring the explanations of how all evidence, be it ordinary or scientific, is based on observation. The actual problem that you're ignoring is that when I say, "You have no evidence," you respond "I have no *scientific* evidence." I added the emphasis, but that's how you mean it since no other interpretation is possible.
But while you never address this key issue, you do go off in a different direction that is both ambiguous and wrong at the same time:
Yes I have no proof. It is belief.
There is never any proof, only evidence supporting certain inferences. Confidence can never reach 100%.
And what does "It is belief" mean? You mean unevidenced belief, which is what you have? I don't think anyone here has any problem with unevidenced spiritual beliefs. It's when you say, "I have real world evidence that my spiritual beliefs are true," that people start raising objections.
Percy writes:
What is the matter with you? Again, "Life experience and observation" is what evidence is. What observations have you or anyone made of God or Jesus?
...and once again it is consciousness and all the things that go along with being conscious.
I interpret this as meaning that consciousness is something we can observe, and that the existence of consciousness is evidence of God. Can you lead us through the logic on this one?
Percy writes:
I quoted and dissected almost everything in that entire paragraph sentence by sentence, even phrase by phrase, including the portion you bolded, and you accuse me of distortion? What is the matter with you? Why is it always Christians who behave in the most unChristian manner? Here's the actual sentence-by-sentence dissection, again, since you must not have read it the first time:

My problem was that I wrote this as a complete thought.

"If however, you accept the notion of an external intelligence then it makes sense to conclude that the evolutionary process has this intelligence as its first cause."

You split it into two sentences, separating the last part of the sentence from the first part which qualified it.
Now you're inserting distractions by making up things to complain about. You're behaving like you don't want this discussion to proceed in any productive direction.
You presented an if-then, which breaks down naturally into the "if" and "then" parts. There was no distortion. I even inserted ellipses in the right places. Stop issuing false complaints and stick to the issues.
Percy writes:
Let's say we both look at a newborn calf. New life. I see natural processes, and while you also see natural processes you also claim to see something additional. What is it, observationally, that you see? Awareness of an internal subjective emotional state is not an observation of anything, except maybe in a psychological sense.
I see conscious life coming from a non-conscious sperm and egg. I know we can see the processes that make that happen but that doesn't IMHO answer the whole question.
This argument was rebutted hundreds of messages ago. You don't see God when non-salt sodium and non-salt chloride combine to form salt, so what is it about non-conscious subcomponents combining to form something conscious that causes you to see God?
Percy writes:
It's not only non-scientific, it's absent any observational evidence whatsoever.
My observation is that it brings me a sense of wonder and miracle; the sense of the beauty and joy in new life.
Miracle? The birth of a calf? Something that happens millions of times a year and a thousand times every hour? If you include the total number of new life every year it must be at least in the trillions (don't forget insects and bacteria).
Lead us through the chain of logic that a sense of wonder, miracle, beauty and joy are observational evidence of God.
And if the "miracle of life" is evidence of God, then what is injury, disability, birth defects, disease, old age and death evidence of?
Percy writes:
There's a complete absence of observational evidence in this. You made no observation of God, loving or otherwise, as the hurricane rolled through. You have no evidence that God played any role in people's behavior in the aftermath. All you have is your own religiously biased speculations.

As we all do regardless of our religious or non-religious beliefs.
That would be fine if it were true in your case, but it's not. You keep trying to claim you have evidence. Have you already forgotten that just above you claimed consciousness was evidence of God?
Percy writes:
Do I have to say it yet again? All evidence is just observations. As you become more disciplined about making observations then you're moving in a scientific direction. This is exactly as I said before. If you grab a hot water pipe you might quickly pull your hand away and exclaim, "Wow, that's hot." That's an observation. You've just gathered evidence that the water pipe is hot. Now someone comes in with a temperature measuring device and says, "The temperature of this water pipe is 63.9°C." That's still just an observation, merely more accurate evidence that the water pipe is hot. That observation is no different in character than you grabbing the water pipe. It's just more accurate and definitive. But they're both just observations of the real world.
OK, so all you have is the pipe, the experience and the measure of the temperature. Then you can ask the question why is it hot. Sure, realistically you can go into another room and understand that it's hot water but say you can't. All you have is a hot pipe, and you can only speculate as to why it's hot.
Is there a point in there? Anyone curious about why the pipe is hot will have no problem tracing the pipe back and finding the source of heat. But that's unnecessary, of course, since we all live in the real world already know why the water pipe is hot. And if the pipe shouldn't be hot then people possess the skills to track down why it's hot by seeking evidence and making observations.
Percy writes:
His intent doesn't matter. What matters is the evidence. I haven't read this particular Churchill book, but as with everything else, one should only accept what is supported by evidence. I expect it's very likely that much of the book is supported by evidence.
Of course it matters. If you know someone is intending their work to be taken as fiction you wouldn't research it in the same light as someone who writes something that they contend is non-fiction.
No. Objectivity demands that you not be influenced by subjective claims. You have to judge a work on the facts. You don't assume something accurate because the author stated accuracy was a primary goal. That would be backwards. You assess the work and judge how successful the author was in attaining his goal of accuracy.
Your way of thinking makes you vulnerable, in the same way that Phat has shown he is vulnerable, to the false claims of scam artists and conspiracy theorists.
Percy writes:
I didn't say "scientific evidence." I said "evidence." I've expended many words explaining that all evidence, both ordinary and scientific, is based upon observation. But you're determined to ignore all that and just mindlessly parrot stuff like, "I have no scientific evidence." You do this over and over, and not just on the topic of evidence. Again, your manner of approaching the discussion leaves only yourself to blame for any animosity directed at you.

I don't care about the animosity...
You're lying again. This is your very first sentence in your opening post, Message 1:
GDR in his OP writes:
I left this site some time back as IMHO name calling and put down too often took the place of reasoned discussion.
So contrary to what you just claimed, the actual truth is that you care about the animosity a great deal.
Why can't you just play it straight? You can't have things one way in one message and another way in a different message. We can see all your messages. They're all still here.
So you do care about the animosity, and you can make it stop by ceasing these attempts to manipulate the discussion through selective deflection and avoidance. I think there's a good chance you're doing it unconsciously, but it's time to wake up.
...but I do care about being called a liar.
Well of course you do, but if you don't like being called a liar then don't lie. I use the word sparingly and carefully. It's ironic that you express distaste about being called a liar just after lying about not caring about the self-generated animosity toward you.
I don't know why anyone would want to converse with someone they think is lying...
I definitely find discourse with a liar frustrating and distasteful, but I dislike letting lies stand unchallenged even more.
...and I definitely am not interested in conversing with someone who calls me a liar.
Well, how convenient for you. When you find a position difficult to defned you just start lying, get called on it, complain about getting called on it, then disengage with a "higher road" tone and the inconvenient discussion ends. How nice for you.
Percy writes:
Can we move the discussion forward? You're just fighting a holding action.

I'd like that as we both keep trying to find new ways of saying the same thing. Maybe we can narrow the topic down to one point; maybe my original point of the thread which seems to have been forgotten about a zillion posts ago.
I don't mind returning to your original point, but it's still underpinned by the nature of evidence. We're discussing evidence now, and I think we should finish that discussion. For example, you still believe the Bible, Papias, Polycarp, Tacitus, etc., contain evidence that Jesus was real but can't point to anything that any chronicler actually observed. At one point you said it was reasonable that Jesus is not noted in contemporary accounts because he was just a peaceful preacher who never led an uprising, but look at all the attention John the Baptist received. Yeah, a real war monger there.
According to the Bible Jesus was a phenomenon throughout Judea and surrounding precincts. The lack of contemporary notice is telling. And the effort the Bible makes to turn John the Baptist into a subservient figure tells us how much more prominent a figure John the Baptist was, likely because he was real.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 735 by GDR, posted 09-29-2022 6:59 PM GDR has not replied

  
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 776 of 3694 (898839)
10-01-2022 9:19 AM
Reply to: Message 750 by Phat
09-30-2022 3:48 AM


Re: Tales Told Around Campfires
Phat writes:
There is no evidence that any known authors of any part of the Bible were knowingly or intentionally writing fiction.
If by "known authors of any part of the Bible" you mean Paul and I guess John (of Patmos, not the gospel guy), they tell us almost nothing of the events of Jesus's ministry.
You just assume that its fiction because the main character in the book has no external evidence of existence.
Jesus has as much evidence as unicorns.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 750 by Phat, posted 09-30-2022 3:48 AM Phat has not replied

  
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 777 of 3694 (898840)
10-01-2022 9:41 AM
Reply to: Message 757 by GDR
09-30-2022 2:38 PM


Re: What does God want of Us
GDR writes:
I hold the view that our consciousness is non-physical uses the physical to function, and that all emotions stem from that.
I realize that I am in a small minority on this forum that holds this view...
Assuming that by "non-physical" you mean "not of the material world," if we look outside EvC Forum you're not in the minority at all. But believers are all in the same boat not possessing any evidence of this non-material world. How could there ever be material evidence of something non-material anyway?
...however, I recently read a book by this woman.
Sharon Dirckx is a Senior Tutor at the Oxford Centre for Christian Apologetics (OCCA). Originally from a scientific background, she has a PhD in brain imaging from the University of Cambridge and has held research positions at the University of Oxford, UK, and the Medical College of Wisconsin, USA.

The book was called Am I Just My Brain

This of course only proves that I am not on my own with this view, and does not prove it to be correct.
We know you're not alone in your view, I just said as much, but until you bring Tutor Dirckx's arguments into this thread you haven't actually said anything to persuade us of this view. From the Forum Guidelines:
  1. Bare links with no supporting discussion should be avoided. Make the argument in your own words and use links as supporting references.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 757 by GDR, posted 09-30-2022 2:38 PM GDR has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 791 by GDR, posted 10-01-2022 3:49 PM Percy has replied

  
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 778 of 3694 (898843)
10-01-2022 10:04 AM
Reply to: Message 761 by GDR
09-30-2022 5:35 PM


Re: What does God want of Us
GDR writes:
AZPaul3 writes:
And what evidence does she present for this non-physical consciousness?

It is a detailed discussion and not one I can summarize easily. Here is talk she gave on the book. It's 28 mins and you can disregard the 4 mins at either end of the talk.

Am I Just My Brain
It is not our job to seek out your evidence and/or arguments for you, or to carry out reading/viewing assignments from you. Threads are intended to be self-contained and not require a bunch of footnotes to references to off-site sources that contain your actual evidence and arguments. Please follow the Forum Guidelines:
  1. Bare links with no supporting discussion should be avoided. Make the argument in your own words and use links as supporting references.
The rule has been around a long, long time. The emptiness of argument via link was noticed at EvC's very outset.
A side note: Relativity, quantum uncertainty, evolution and NFT's can all be summarized with just a sentence or two each. If her argument can't be briefly summarized then that can only be because it requires many suspect arguments of controversial claims.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 761 by GDR, posted 09-30-2022 5:35 PM GDR has not replied

  
Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 5.4


Message 779 of 3694 (898846)
10-01-2022 10:44 AM
Reply to: Message 762 by GDR
09-30-2022 5:46 PM


Re: What does God want of Us
GDR writes:
I make it clear that I am saying one thing and then you attack something that I wasn't saying at all, trying to change the discussion.

I made the first statement in my claim that the Gospel accounts were evidence, to be accepted or rejected. Many did and still do reject them, but they are and were then evidence. It was not a statement commenting on their reliability.
These complaints make no sense. Counterarguments are not attacks. You claim that, "It was not a statement commenting on their reliability," but when you said "Many people gave them so much credence that they dedicated their lives to following them," that was absolutely "a statement commenting on their reliability." It's also the "Fifty million Frenchmen can't be wrong" fallacy.
An author's intent to be accurate and believed is not evidence that he was. Scam artists have very similar intent, for what they say to be believed that it is true. But an author's work must be assessed to see if the author achieved his goals.
Stating it another way, you don't accept that a work is accurate because the author said so. You assess the work to see how well the author achieved his goals of accuracy.
This is all obvious and very basic stuff. This kind of reasoning is how we all live our lives. Nobody here goes around believing every Tom, Dick and Harry who says, "You can trust me." Why are you trying to carve out exceptions for religion?
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 762 by GDR, posted 09-30-2022 5:46 PM GDR has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 792 by GDR, posted 10-01-2022 3:58 PM Percy has replied

  
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