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Author Topic:   There is an appalling lack of historical evidence backing the Bible's veracity
Dawn Bertot
Member (Idle past 112 days)
Posts: 3571
Joined: 11-23-2007


Message 76 of 306 (479649)
08-29-2008 9:02 AM
Reply to: Message 73 by PaulK
08-28-2008 1:49 PM


Re: Is anyone unbiased?
Paulk writes
In fact it's quite correct. Since experts can and do disagree they are not guaranteed to be correct. Thus arguing solely on the basis of expert opinion is not logically valid.
I will deal with Pauk's response here then deal with brians claims, as they will take al ittle time to research at the different sites I use.
As a starter, I would indicate that your above statment makes no logical sense to both what I said and what brian is contending for in his two above posts. If there is no agreement between shcolars and archeologists then it would follow that most if not all of the dates and titles they contend for maybe inaccurate.
If it is a logical fallacy then it would follow that brian, yourself and others are involving yourself in this mistake. Which horn of the delimma do you want. Do you want to contend for the things these "authorities" are advocating or do you want to maintain your inconsistency by using them and citing from there "research".
The context was disagreement between experts, not agreement. And "logical fallacy" is NOT a strong term to apply at all. Logical validity is a very strict standard, thus observing that an argument fails to reach that standard is not a strong claim.
If logical validity is a very strict standard, then it would follow that most if not all of the information you and others advocate must be rejected as well, for where will you find "authourites", that agree for example,on the dates that Brian and others are advocating for the names, dates and places suggested in Genesis and Exodus. As I begin to provide "authorites" that disagree with his conclusions, this will become apparent.
"Fallacy", is a False idea, false reasoning. The appeal to thier scholarship in agreement or disagreement, does not fall into that category. Again, if anything can be determined to be correct from thier scholarship it invalidates the idea of appealing to them and thier scholarship as a "fallacy". It was an oversight an over statement on Rahvins part.
And if you go back to the OP you can see that the issue is lack of evidence - DESPITE claims to the contrary. Falsity or inaccuracy are not the issue. (Which of course means that in dismissing the OP BambooTiger was either taking the position that the validating evidence MUST exist or not bothering to even read the OP before rejecting it. Now that's bias !).
Well according to brians most recent posts falsity or inaccuracy are of vital importance. I cannot speak for BT, my contention was that "lack" of evidence at present on a specific person or place does not constitute falisity or inaccuracy on the Biblles part, as in the case of the Hitties, which was dismissed and ridiculed by "experts" as mythical until excavated. New excavation could and will no doubt reveal this principle.
D Bertot
Edited by Bertot, : No reason given.
Edited by Bertot, : No reason given.
Edited by Bertot, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 73 by PaulK, posted 08-28-2008 1:49 PM PaulK has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 77 by PaulK, posted 08-29-2008 9:31 AM Dawn Bertot has not replied
 Message 78 by Percy, posted 08-29-2008 9:34 AM Dawn Bertot has replied
 Message 94 by Brian, posted 08-30-2008 5:34 AM Dawn Bertot has replied

PaulK
Member
Posts: 17828
Joined: 01-10-2003
Member Rating: 2.3


Message 77 of 306 (479654)
08-29-2008 9:31 AM
Reply to: Message 76 by Dawn Bertot
08-29-2008 9:02 AM


Re: Is anyone unbiased?
Your problem is that you do not understand what it means for an argument to be a "logical fallacy".
A valid logical argument is one where the truth of the premises absolutely guarantees the truth of the conclusion. It is a very strict standard, which is why we do NOT restrict ourselves to arguments which meet it. Any argument which does not meet that standard is a logical fallacy.
To say that the argument from authority is logically valid is to say that each and every expert is infallible, when speaking on matters within their field of expertise. If you do not beleive that then you must accept that the argument from authority is a logical fallacy.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 76 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-29-2008 9:02 AM Dawn Bertot has not replied

Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 4.9


Message 78 of 306 (479655)
08-29-2008 9:34 AM
Reply to: Message 76 by Dawn Bertot
08-29-2008 9:02 AM


Re: Is anyone unbiased?
You may be missing PaulK's point. I think he was only trying to steer you away from the fallacy of appeal to authority and toward a discussion focused on evidence.
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 76 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-29-2008 9:02 AM Dawn Bertot has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 79 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-29-2008 9:53 AM Percy has replied

Dawn Bertot
Member (Idle past 112 days)
Posts: 3571
Joined: 11-23-2007


Message 79 of 306 (479665)
08-29-2008 9:53 AM
Reply to: Message 78 by Percy
08-29-2008 9:34 AM


Re: Is anyone unbiased?
You may be missing PaulK's point. I think he was only trying to steer you away from the fallacy of appeal to authority and toward a discussion focused on evidence.
To demonstrate my point and answer your and Paulks last response, I would ask this question. Where would we get the "evidence" from if not from those "authorites" that Brian and others are relying so heavily. You cant eat your cake and have it too.
D Bertot

This message is a reply to:
 Message 78 by Percy, posted 08-29-2008 9:34 AM Percy has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 81 by Percy, posted 08-29-2008 11:28 AM Dawn Bertot has not replied
 Message 84 by PaulK, posted 08-29-2008 1:43 PM Dawn Bertot has not replied

Rahvin
Member
Posts: 4046
Joined: 07-01-2005
Member Rating: 7.6


Message 80 of 306 (479675)
08-29-2008 11:08 AM
Reply to: Message 68 by Dawn Bertot
08-28-2008 11:30 AM


Re: Is anyone unbiased?
Rahvin writes
quote:
Which is the reason that appeals to authority are logical fallacies.
These kinds of post do show some simlitude of objectivity in relationship to the question at hand. However, the above statement is actually an over application of the term "logical fallacy". If it can be demonstrated that several authorites do agree on cetain biblical historical aspects, then the application of logical fallacy is simply to strong a term to appply.
You fail to understand what an appeal to authority is, as demonstrated again in subsequent posts. An appeal to authority is a logical argument whereby the conclusion is asserted to be valid based on the authority of an individual(s). This is fallacious because authorities can be wrong. The weight of an individual's authority is irrelevant - all that matters is their evidence and their argument, which are the substance missing from an appeal to authority.
If you claim that the Bible is historically accurate because x, y, and x are all authorities on the subject and they also say that the Bible is historically accurate, this is fallacious reasoning because there is no actual evidence or argument presented byond the appeal to authority.
If you claim that the Bible is historically accurate because of evidence a, b, and c, and repeat argument d as presented by authority x, your argument will not be fallacious (at least so far as an appeal to authority is concerned) because there is an actual line of reasoning and evidence beyond a simple "it's true because this guy said so."
"Lack of evidence" presently for a specific person or place is not the same as saying that those events or peoples are false or inaccurate, as in the case of the Hitties. So much of the scriptures can and has been demonstrated true and accurate and it is appreciated by myself when I see individuals acknowledge these facts, atleast that shows some objectivity.
You are correct that lack of evidence is not positive evidence for falsification. However, in the case of significant historical events where physical evidence and ancient records should be found aplenty as with such accounts as the global Flood, the Exodus, the plagues of Egypt, 6-day Creationism, etc, a lack of evidence is strongly suggestive that the accounts are not historically accurate even if they were originally based on far less broadly reaching real events. In the case of 6-day Creationism or the global Flood, there are also significant amounts of contradictory evidence that falsify the historical accuracy of such accounts.
quote:
It's the extraordinary claims where the Bible breaks down. Fundamentalists typically use examples of historically accurate parts of the bible to claim that the Bible in its entirety is a historically valid set of documents, and this is plainly silly.
Far from being silly, it lends credible support that those things actually happened. If on the other hand those peoples places and civilizations were demonstrated to be completley false or inacurrate, or fabrications, this then would be evidence to reject those outlandish claims. One of the things that I see happening here is that the words "absolute proof" is simply getting replaced by the word "evidence". Absolute proof is one thing and "evidence" is quite another.
Such reasoning is absurd, and it's trivially easy to illustrate it as such:
Imagine that I write an account of World War 2. It's not overly detailed, just most of the more significant events, and the places and names used are all accurate and objectively verifiable elsewhere. However, I make an addition: I speak of a super-soldier named Captain America, who was the subject of a top-secret government program to develop a serum that would physically transform any regular person into a virtual superman with beyond-Olympic level strength and agility. In one instance I recount a tale of Captain America single-handedly devastating several German army divisions and thwarting the German attempts to develop nuclear weapons.
Does the overall accuracy of my account of World War 2 "lend credible support" that the US government actually developed a "super-soldier serum," and that a single successful subject of this project essentially won the war single-handedly?
Of course it does not. Each claim in a historical text must be handled individually, and as always, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. The accuracy of the remainder of my account may give sufficient reason to look for further evidence of a super-soldier program, but it certainly doesn't provide "credible support" that such a program ever actually existed. The strength of evidence provided by a single extraordinary account in a single text without outside verification rregardless of the accuracy of the more mundane aspects of the same text is extremely weak. So weak that simply dismissing such evidence out-of-hand as "likely mythological" is a reasonable conclusion, as we have many examples of such mythology, as in the case of the Illiad - a story that recounts real places and possibly some real events and people, but also contains wholly untrue mythological fabrications.
quote:
The point, though, is that on the whole the Bible makes a rather unimpressive historical document because it records such things as 6-day Creationism of the global Flood that are wholly contradicted by multiple fields of science, as well as stories like the Exodus or the Tower of Babel where no archeological or anthropological evidence is ever found to corroborate the stories even where such evidence should be found.
Again, lack of "evidence" at present is not the same as saying it is false, innacurate or fabricated. Isnt it almost always the case that when the scritures are verified or exonerated, that that evidence is scrutinized and usually dismissed OR reduced the comments that characterize this post to which I am responding presently. "So what the Bible got some facts correct", mentality.
The lack of evidence I'm speaking of is specific, Bertot. The Exodus should have left significant evidence of so many people traversing the desert over 40 years; we have found evidence from desert nomads in far smaller groups than described int eh Exodus account, and yet the Exodus of the Jews seems to have left absolutely no evidence whatsoever. When we expect to find evidence, have found similar evidence for far less significant events, and find nothing, the lack of evidence is strongly suggestive that the account is not actually historically accurate.
Likewise, the Egyptian plagues, including the loss of all firstborn children, resulted in no records being left by the Egyptians. The only account of those plagues is in the Biblical texts, and nowhere else. Such a significant event is bound to be recorded somewhere, and yet there is nothing. The river turning to blood should have also left evidence of a mass die-off (most aquatic creatures wouldn't do so well living in a river that suddenly, magically turned into blood), and no evidence is found.
Extraordinary accounts such as these require extraordinary evidence to provide "credible support" that they actually happened. Such evidence cannot be provided by a single account in the Biblical texts, and is not found elsewhere. It is not likely that these events ever actually happened as recorded in teh Bible.
Other examples, such as the Flood or 6-day Creationism, have mountains of objective evidence directly contradicting the Biblical accounts. In these cases it's not a mere lack of evidence we're discussing, but the contradiction of significant amounts of it. The weak evidence provided by an extraordinary claim in an ancient text is completely and utterly overridden by actual objective evidence to the contrary. In these cases we can say with near certainty that these Biblical accounts are not even remotely historically accurate. To give you the level of certainty, I would say that it is as certain that the Biblical accounts of the Flood and Creation did not happen as reported as it is that the Sun will rise tomorrow.
Point of interest, what amount of evidence would convince the die hard skeptic, answer, where the miraculous or divine is involved, absolutley none.
Quite to the contrary. The reason I am not convinced is the lack of evidence. if you can provide objective evidence of the divine or miraculous, I will follow it.
Your response is a childish "I'm right, you're just being stubborn" approach, and you take this course because you know you cannot win this argument because your evidence and arguments have the logical strength of wet tissue.
Edited by Rahvin, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 68 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-28-2008 11:30 AM Dawn Bertot has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 82 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-29-2008 11:33 AM Rahvin has replied

Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 4.9


Message 81 of 306 (479677)
08-29-2008 11:28 AM
Reply to: Message 79 by Dawn Bertot
08-29-2008 9:53 AM


Re: Is anyone unbiased?
Bertot writes:
To demonstrate my point and answer your and Paulk's last response, I would ask this question. Where would we get the "evidence" from if not from those "authorites" that Brian and others are relying so heavily. You cant eat your cake and have it too.
Avoiding the argument from authority does not mean ignoring evidence uncovered by experts. In many cases that's the only evidence available.
The fallacious argument from authority: "This guy's an expert, he says I'm right, therefore I'm right."
A valid argument from evidence: "The tablets found in the desert by renowned archaeologist Professor Smith and translated by the renowned scholar Professor Jones and dated to the relevant period using multiple methods by the renowned Waikato Radiocarbon Dating Laboratory clearly support my position and render your own position untenable."
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 79 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-29-2008 9:53 AM Dawn Bertot has not replied

Dawn Bertot
Member (Idle past 112 days)
Posts: 3571
Joined: 11-23-2007


Message 82 of 306 (479678)
08-29-2008 11:33 AM
Reply to: Message 80 by Rahvin
08-29-2008 11:08 AM


Re: Is anyone unbiased?
Rahvain, Thanks for your response I will get to it later on this evening. let me say initially that it demonstrates the exact point I was making in an earlier post, that what is being dealt with here is not strict evidence. When you inculcate and inncorperate the supernatural into the discusssion, you have left the area of strict physical "evidence" as you call it. To many things are possibilites once you claim the miraculous as where the process breaks down.
My point is this, if you want ot go by strict physical evidence, you cannot invoke the supernatural, these are two different discussions. M reason for entering the argument was that you stated this is where the bible breaks down. this is simply not true and just the opposite is true. As in the case with the Nile and the aquatic life. Could not the same God that caused the miracle sustain the fish or return the nile to its natural order and the miracle. Your mixing oranges with apples in your attempt to include the miraculous with what we now see. Am I corret or not?
I will return this evening to demonstrate this point. I will deal with you post item by item.
D Bertot
Edited by Bertot, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 80 by Rahvin, posted 08-29-2008 11:08 AM Rahvin has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 83 by Percy, posted 08-29-2008 1:24 PM Dawn Bertot has not replied
 Message 85 by Rahvin, posted 08-29-2008 2:11 PM Dawn Bertot has replied

Percy
Member
Posts: 22505
From: New Hampshire
Joined: 12-23-2000
Member Rating: 4.9


Message 83 of 306 (479684)
08-29-2008 1:24 PM
Reply to: Message 82 by Dawn Bertot
08-29-2008 11:33 AM


Re: Is anyone unbiased?
Bertot writes:
My point is this, if you want ot go by strict physical evidence, you cannot invoke the supernatural, these are two different discussions...Your mixing oranges with apples in your attempt to include the miraculous with what we now see.
Am I completely misinterpreting you, or do you really believe Rahvin invokes the supernatural in his arguments?
--Percy

This message is a reply to:
 Message 82 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-29-2008 11:33 AM Dawn Bertot has not replied

PaulK
Member
Posts: 17828
Joined: 01-10-2003
Member Rating: 2.3


Message 84 of 306 (479687)
08-29-2008 1:43 PM
Reply to: Message 79 by Dawn Bertot
08-29-2008 9:53 AM


Re: Is anyone unbiased?
quote:
To demonstrate my point and answer your and Paulks last response, I would ask this question. Where would we get the "evidence" from if not from those "authorites" that Brian and others are relying so heavily. You cant eat your cake and have it too.
The only thing that you have demonstrated is that you either have not read or completely failed to understand my post. If you disagree, feel free to explain - AFTER carefully reading Message 77 which you are allegedly replying to.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 79 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-29-2008 9:53 AM Dawn Bertot has not replied

Rahvin
Member
Posts: 4046
Joined: 07-01-2005
Member Rating: 7.6


Message 85 of 306 (479691)
08-29-2008 2:11 PM
Reply to: Message 82 by Dawn Bertot
08-29-2008 11:33 AM


Re: Is anyone unbiased?
Rahvain, Thanks for your response I will get to it later on this evening. let me say initially that it demonstrates the exact point I was making in an earlier post, that what is being dealt with here is not strict evidence. When you inculcate and inncorperate the supernatural into the discusssion, you have left the area of strict physical "evidence" as you call it. To many things are possibilites once you claim the miraculous as where the process breaks down.
My point is this, if you want ot go by strict physical evidence, you cannot invoke the supernatural, these are two different discussions. M reason for entering the argument was that you stated this is where the bible breaks down. this is simply not true and just the opposite is true. As in the case with the Nile and the aquatic life. Could not the same God that caused the miracle sustain the fish or return the nile to its natural order and the miracle. Your mixing oranges with apples in your attempt to include the miraculous with what we now see. Am I corret or not?
Even the miraculous should leave evidence.
As an example, miracles were used in the Biblical account of the Exodus to account for the logistical problems of food and water. Similarly, the plagues of Egypt were said to be miraculous. Given that these events actually happened, we should expect to see evidence of their happening regardless of whether their cause was miraculous or not. If the plagues of Egypt occurred, we should see corroborating accoutns of such disasters in teh writings of ancient Egypt from around the right time. If the Exodus occurred, we should see corroborating writings regarding the sudden release/escape of hundreds of thousands of slaves from across the nation. We should further see physical evidence of such things as rivers turning to blood or hundreds of thousands of desert nomads wandering a relatively small area of the desert for 40 years (particularly since, as I noted above, we do see evidence of much smaller nomad groups not related tot he Biblical account, emaning we are obviously capable of detecting such evidence). If the Flood actually happened as recorded in teh Bible, we should see in the fossil record a massive die-off of basically everything living followed by a mass dispersal of a small population from the middle-east repopulating the Earth, as well as genetic bottlenechs in every single species corresponding to the appropriate time. If Creationism happened, we should not see contradictory evidence regarding the age of the Earth from multiple, agreeing fields of science, and the Theory of Evolution should not fit the evidence.
These events should have left evidence regarless of whether their source was miraculous or not.
The exception would be if you claimed that further miracles were used to erase all trace of their occurrance, in which case we cease to discuss the matter rationally and gain the ability to make up literally whatever we want and claim equal validity. After all, it's equally likely that the Judeo-Christian deity miraculously allowed the Exodus as it is Zeus is responsible for lightning if we allow that further miracles are used to disguise these "facts" from us. This would, of course, mean that any deity would have to be purposely misleading us, leaving false trails and completely erasing any trace of his miraculous deeds with the exception of a set of ancient texts from a single nomadic middle-eastern culture.
That's an incredible extraordinary claim, one for which you have no extraordinary evidence to match. In fact, such a line of reasoning is identical to the pitiful "reasoning" of conspiracy theorists - there's no evidence for such bizzare claims because the evidence is being hidden!
Once again, Bertot, you have failed to support the Bible as a historically accurate texts as it pertains to its extraordinary claims such as the Flood, Creation, or the Exodus. If your best attempt is to hand-wave it away witha miraculous divine cover-up, then your position is sorely lacking in intelligence.
If you'd like to convince me that these miracles happened, simply provide the evidence that such miracles would leave behind. For instance, if I were to try to convince you that I could miraculously fire high-energy laser beams from my eyes, I would provide you with the evidence of laser-burned holes in objects spaced the same distance as my eyes. This is perhaps a poor analogy, but it illustrates that even the miraculous should leave evidence behind unless further miracles are invoked to explain the alck of evidence, at which point no objective evidence or even rational discussion is possible.
I will return this evening to demonstrate this point. I will deal with you post item by item.
I eagerly await your response, as I'm sure it will prove to be just as easily dismantled as your previous posts.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 82 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-29-2008 11:33 AM Dawn Bertot has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 86 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-29-2008 4:16 PM Rahvin has not replied
 Message 87 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-29-2008 11:10 PM Rahvin has not replied

Dawn Bertot
Member (Idle past 112 days)
Posts: 3571
Joined: 11-23-2007


Message 86 of 306 (479700)
08-29-2008 4:16 PM
Reply to: Message 85 by Rahvin
08-29-2008 2:11 PM


Re: Is anyone unbiased?
I eagerly await your response, as I'm sure it will prove to be just as easily dismantled as your previous posts.
We will see Junior from 1981.
D Bertot
Edited by Bertot, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 85 by Rahvin, posted 08-29-2008 2:11 PM Rahvin has not replied

Dawn Bertot
Member (Idle past 112 days)
Posts: 3571
Joined: 11-23-2007


Message 87 of 306 (479736)
08-29-2008 11:10 PM
Reply to: Message 85 by Rahvin
08-29-2008 2:11 PM


Re: Is anyone unbiased?
Rahvin writes
You are correct that lack of evidence is not positive evidence for falsification. However, in the case of significant historical events where physical evidence and ancient records should be found aplenty as with such accounts as the global Flood, the Exodus, the plagues of Egypt, 6-day Creationism, etc, a lack of evidence is strongly suggestive that the accounts are not historically accurate even if they were originally based on far less broadly reaching real events. In the case of 6-day Creationism or the global Flood, there are also significant amounts of contradictory evidence that falsify the historical accuracy of such accounts.
Let me say first off I am sure that you love, appreciate the aspect of logic, we all do in some form or fashion otherwise we would not be on this site. It is a fine thing and I am sure we all misapply or over apply it at times. In this connection I would point out that you dont see the "fallacy" if you will, that you have commited here.
As I was reading through the strickly physical evidence thread here I noticed that You, not myself invoked the "miraculous" in a statement in one of your post, then you formulated an argument from it in two respects. First you directly stated that, it was were the evidence starts to break down. Secondly, you even went further to state that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, then carried it even further by giving several examples where direct evidence should be present if those events took place.
If a person chooses to observe the existing physical evidence only and reject outright the miraculous, this would make atleast logical sense. If, however one invokes the miraculous in this connection and forms an argument in conjunction with existing physical evidence, it is implying that that person atleast is assuming the "possibility" of that miracle, because of the reference to it and the argument formulated from it. In this instance to give an example, the water turning to blood. Logic, commonsense and valid reasoning would dictate that that person that referenced that miracle and assumes its possibiltiy, would further take into consideration the other inferences and characteristics and aspects that would accompany that miracle and Deity that performed it. Complete objectivity would demand this consideration if you inculcate the miraculous to form an argument against the existing evidence
If the miraculous is a possibility, especially in the context of a document where numerous things can be demonstrated to be true, accurate and reliable, then it would follow that that Deitys intervention in these affairs would and could alter, correct, and return things to thier natural order, so that the "evidence" that reaches us may even appear as that event never happened.
As I see it, you have one of two choices, you can view the physical evidence without invoking the miraculous or view the physical evidence in conjunction with the miraculous. If you choose the later, objectivity would require two things. It would ask you to entertain all or some of the possibilites that would be involved in intervention and and it would ask you to view the physical evidence with this consideration in mind, especially if you are going to form a negative argument using them. Any or all of the "extraordinary claims" as you call them could be easily explained from both a physical evidence standpoint if the Deity, changed or altered those facts. Two examples will suffice.
Lets say Adam was real (I believe he was) and on day 10 an alien visits him and introduces himself and asks Adam how long he has been there, Adam responds by saying 10 days, the alien says, no not how long have you been in this exact place, but how long have you been alive, Adam says 10 days, the alien says this is not physically possible, everything I "know" indicates you could not only be ten days old. He begins to show Adam fossils and the such like. Adam responds by saying I can only tell you that according to God he created me ten days ago and thats all the memory I have. Deity and the miraculous would answer both questions. The miraulous would alter what the alien actually believed to be true or observable. Six day creation.
Rejection of the miraulous is on thing, invoking it and assuming its possibilty and formulating arguments against it, based on the exact information contained in the miracle, is another story completly. Further, the extraordinary evidence itself would be the very real existence of God himself and his ability to function in this manner. You my friend invoked the miraulous not me, I am just giving you a lesson on how argumentation and examples should be applied. To argue the existence of God is atleast to assume the possibilty of his existence in conjuction with the physical evidence in that respect. Hows that for a start junior?
Sorry for the dissertation, somethings require more than a yes or no answer.
You fail to understand what an appeal to authority is, as demonstrated again in subsequent posts. An appeal to authority is a logical argument whereby the conclusion is asserted to be valid based on the authority of an individual(s). This is fallacious because authorities can be wrong. The weight of an individual's authority is irrelevant - all that matters is their evidence and their argument, which are the substance missing from an appeal to authority.
Again, you miss the point. I agree, an appeal to authority is not an appeal to his status but the information he is presenting. I never stated that the appeal is to his authority, is that, which was in question. This is why it is only a logical fallacy, if you want it to be, but not in reality. This also demonstrates the point that these terms can be missaplied and the ambiguity of thier very nature. Why is this so hard to see?
Imagine that I write an account of World War 2. It's not overly detailed, just most of the more significant events, and the places and names used are all accurate and objectively verifiable elsewhere. However, I make an addition: I speak of a super-soldier named Captain America, who was the subject of a top-secret government program to develop a serum that would physically transform any regular person into a virtual superman with beyond-Olympic level strength and agility. In one instance I recount a tale of Captain America single-handedly devastating several German army divisions and thwarting the German attempts to develop nuclear weapons.
Does the overall accuracy of my account of World War 2 "lend credible support" that the US government actually developed a "super-soldier serum," and that a single successful subject of this project essentially won the war single-handedly?
Of course it does not. Each claim in a historical text must be handled individually, and as always, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. The accuracy of the remainder of my account may give sufficient reason to look for further evidence of a super-soldier program, but it certainly doesn't provide "credible support" that such a program ever actually existed. The strength of evidence provided by a single extraordinary account in a single text without outside verification rregardless of the accuracy of the more mundane aspects of the same text is extremely weak. So weak that simply dismissing such evidence out-of-hand as "likely mythological" is a reasonable conclusion, as we have many examples of such mythology, as in the case of the Illiad - a story that recounts real places and possibly some real events and people, but also contains wholly untrue mythological fabrications.
Yes actually the overall accuracy would "Lend credible Support" to that account, not prove it. In contrast, if nothing you said could be demonstrated as accurate, from the outset, we would immediatley reject it, correct? The further problem with your illustration is that "Ominpotence" and "Omniscience" is not involved. Remember Junior, we are assuming the possibility of that miracle and the characteristics of the Deity involved. The fact that God exists and is so obviously connected with the source involved it would tend demonstrate the accuracy of those events, so as to render it not "extremely weak". Actually, the mere fact of his existence would do this itself.
The corroborative information in the scriptures are such that they are not demonstrated to be false or inaccurate, depending on what scholar you wish to consult. If you choose liberal scholars one would be able to demonstrate from his or standpoint that no book of the NT was ever written before the year 200 AD. Yet, demonstratable evidence would conclude that this is inaccurate. The same is true of the OT, the flood, the Exodus as will be indicated by the links I post. It depends on your perspective at times, so it is therefore reduced to
Let me demonstrate. Not to pick on my Mormon friends but the Book of Mormon is suppose to be an account of some of the inhabitants of this continent some 4 to 5000 years ago. Yet, not a single palce, name, peoples or events described in that book afford us the ability to verify anything. This would be an example of no supporting evidence. Therefore while I cannot demonstrate from a miraculous standpoint those things did not happen and are only fabrications, it does not get me out of the starting blocks, so to speak.
accuracy of the remainder of my account may give sufficient reason to look for further evidence of a super-soldier program, but it certainly doesn't provide "credible support" that such a program ever actually existed. The strength of evidence provided by a single extraordinary account in a single text without outside verification rregardless of the accuracy of the more mundane aspects of the same text is extremely weak
Again, it depends on the sort of evidence at hand. If there is no reason to believe that divine intervention is involved and the obvious evidence that goes along to support that type of information,you would be correct. Actually if there is no credible support then there would be no real reason to look for anything, even if there were sufficient reason. However, sufficient reason and credible support are exacally what the scriptures offer in the context of believabilty about miracles. To desribe the information and credible history of the scriptures as "mundane", is the worst form of unobjectivity. the following are a few websites that demonstrate that point. There are literally so many pages, sites and links that deal wih this information, they could not all be listed in one evening. Here are a few examples.
Biblical archaeology - Wikipedia
Biblical Archaeology - Bible History
Archaeology and the Old Testament - Apologetics Press
The lack of evidence I'm speaking of is specific, Bertot. The Exodus should have left significant evidence of so many people traversing the desert over 40 years; we have found evidence from desert nomads in far smaller groups than described int eh Exodus account, and yet the Exodus of the Jews seems to have left absolutely no evidence whatsoever. When we expect to find evidence, have found similar evidence for far less significant events, and find nothing, the lack of evidence is strongly suggestive that the account is not actually historically accurate.
Describe the sort of evidence you are requesting here. It is a known fact they did no plant crops, build houses and these sorts of things. What sortof evidence would suffice for a situation as this one. Literally thousands upon thousands of people would have traversed this area before, during and after this time period. It would be immposible to distinguish nomadic peoples from one another. Any of these peoples could have sufficed for the Hebrews, since they were not desiganted as a people or a nation. Again, the aspect of intervention would come into play in this respect as well. This does not suffice as any valid argument against such an event.
God bless you
Page not found - aish.com
Quote from the above website:
"In fact," asserts Dever, "the archaeological record is not at all silent. It's only that some historians are deaf."
Likewise, the Egyptian plagues, including the loss of all firstborn children, resulted in no records being left by the Egyptians. The only account of those plagues is in the Biblical texts, and nowhere else. Such a significant event is bound to be recorded somewhere, and yet there is nothing. The river turning to blood should have also left evidence of a mass die-off (most aquatic creatures wouldn't do so well living in a river that suddenly, magically turned into blood), and no evidence is found.
Extraordinary accounts such as these require extraordinary evidence to provide "credible support" that they actually happened. Such evidence cannot be provided by a single account in the Biblical texts, and is not found elsewhere. It is not likely that these events ever actually happened as recorded in teh Bible.
And ofcourse we know they Egyptians were completly objective in recording things that were not in thier favour. these simply do not suffice as evidence of those events as mentioned in the scriptures. Do you really believe those events recorded in Egyptian history are indicative of the actual truth. Any amount of information could been left off or added.
The scriptures themselves must first be demonstated as unreliable if they are to be considered as an unreliable account of those events. Rejecting them on the basis of miracles will not suffice. Like wise accepting on the basis of miracles will not work. It should be something else. However, the miraculous is more than believable due to the evidence it supports.
Other examples, such as the Flood or 6-day Creationism, have mountains of objective evidence directly contradicting the Biblical accounts. In these cases it's not a mere lack of evidence we're discussing, but the contradiction of significant amounts of it. The weak evidence provided by an extraordinary claim in an ancient text is completely and utterly overridden by actual objective evidence to the contrary. In these cases we can say with near certainty that these Biblical accounts are not even remotely historically accurate. To give you the level of certainty, I would say that it is as certain that the Biblical accounts of the Flood and Creation did not happen as reported as it is that the Sun will rise tomorrow.
Instead of responding here i will let you provide the mountain of evidence, that would indicate these things could not occured they miraculous way they said they did.
Quite to the contrary. The reason I am not convinced is the lack of evidence. if you can provide objective evidence of the divine or miraculous, I will follow it.
Your response is a childish "I'm right, you're just being stubborn" approach, and you take this course because you know you cannot win this argument because your evidence and arguments have the logical strength of wet tissue.
Its called the existence of God, otherwise decribed as intervention and the sustainable scriptures.
Your response is that of an arrogant pompous (pretintiously dignified)Ass. You believe because you have studied a field as logic, that you have all the answers, and you can "dismantle", this or that, niether of which are true,as is indicated by your attempts and inexperience in the area of deductive reasoning. Knowing the terms is not all that is required at argumentation. Keep trying though junior you will get the hang of it.
These events should have left evidence regarless of whether their source was miraculous or not.
Now watch this bit of arrogant nonsense. You dont believe in miracles but you will lay down the ground work for how they will function and work, you pompass little turd.
Your arrogance and assumptions aside, the miraculous is not a slave to your wishes or categorical statements. There are simply to many variables when the miraculous is involved. again you invoked the miraculous not me. I was simply responding to the aspect that if you wish to bring it up objectivity and fairness would need to follow you line of reasoning.
Secondly, the miraculous would and could alter what we now see or what the facts might have been in those instances. Implying that God would need to follow up with a cleanup miracle to hide evidence is nonsensical. The miracle and its results were simaltaneous unless God decided other otherwise.
The exception would be if you claimed that further miracles were used to erase all trace of their occurrance, in which case we cease to discuss the matter rationally and gain the ability to make up literally whatever we want and claim equal validity. After all, it's equally likely that the Judeo-Christian deity miraculously allowed the Exodus as it is Zeus is responsible for lightning if we allow that further miracles are used to disguise these "facts" from us. This would, of course, mean that any deity would have to be purposely misleading us, leaving false trails and completely erasing any trace of his miraculous deeds with the exception of a set of ancient texts from a single nomadic middle-eastern culture.
That's an incredible extraordinary claim, one for which you have no extraordinary evidence to match. In fact, such a line of reasoning is identical to the pitiful "reasoning" of conspiracy theorists - there's no evidence for such bizzare claims because the evidence is being hidden!
Rejecting the miraculous as set out in the scriptures, is not equivalent to saying there is no evidence supporting thier claims. It on the other hand is not proof of those events either. But inconjuction with the existence of an intervining Deity and the support the scriptures, it offers a person the ability to accept a supportable belief, given the evidence. Care to level a "logical inconsistency" against this premise, one that shows it as a logical contradiction, not one that says you dont like it.
As long as the existence of God is reasonably demonstratable, the possibiltiy that the miraculous happened will always persist. One then simply has to choose from the prospects out there that claim his signature and the evidence that supports the best. however, rejecting it is always a possibility but not due to a lack of evidence, but only a force of will.
If you'd like to convince me that these miracles happened, simply provide the evidence that such miracles would leave behind. For instance, if I were to try to convince you that I could miraculously fire high-energy laser beams from my eyes, I would provide you with the evidence of laser-burned holes in objects spaced the same distance as my eyes. This is perhaps a poor analogy, but it illustrates that even the miraculous should leave evidence behind unless further miracles are invoked to explain the alck of evidence, at which point no objective evidence or even rational discussion is possible.
Your right, it is a poor analogy given the fact that you do not make the rules for how God and miracles work. Further I have already demonstrated why objective evidence and rational discussion is still possible, even if so-called evidence is not left behind. This is rule you set up, not any Valid reasoning process.
I eagerly await your response, as I'm sure it will prove to be just as easily dismantled as your previous posts.
Have at it junior .
D Bertot
Edited by Bertot, : No reason given.
Edited by Bertot, : No reason given.
Edited by Bertot, : No reason given.
Edited by Adminnemooseus, : Fix 1 link (get the ":" after the http, which oddly was also breaking the next link which didn't have any error).

This message is a reply to:
 Message 85 by Rahvin, posted 08-29-2008 2:11 PM Rahvin has not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 88 by subbie, posted 08-29-2008 11:29 PM Dawn Bertot has replied
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 Message 92 by PaulK, posted 08-30-2008 4:16 AM Dawn Bertot has replied
 Message 93 by cavediver, posted 08-30-2008 4:43 AM Dawn Bertot has replied
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subbie
Member (Idle past 1284 days)
Posts: 3509
Joined: 02-26-2006


Message 88 of 306 (479737)
08-29-2008 11:29 PM
Reply to: Message 87 by Dawn Bertot
08-29-2008 11:10 PM


Re: Is anyone unbiased?
Assuming I accurately sussed your meaning after sifting through your various misspellings, malapropisms and ad hominem asides, it sounds like your basic point is that if goddidit using miracles, he could have erased all evidence of it ever having happened with the same miracle. To the extent that this is your position, you're basically conceding the accuracy of the point thread; there's very little historical evidence supporting the accuracy of the bible.

Those who would sacrifice an essential liberty for a temporary security will lose both, and deserve neither. -- Benjamin Franklin
We see monsters where science shows us windmills. -- Phat

This message is a reply to:
 Message 87 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-29-2008 11:10 PM Dawn Bertot has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 89 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-29-2008 11:37 PM subbie has not replied

Dawn Bertot
Member (Idle past 112 days)
Posts: 3571
Joined: 11-23-2007


Message 89 of 306 (479739)
08-29-2008 11:37 PM
Reply to: Message 88 by subbie
08-29-2008 11:29 PM


Re: Is anyone unbiased?
subbie (the first person I responded to on the PBS site, writes:
Assuming I accurately sussed your meaning after sifting through your various misspellings, malapropisms and ad hominem asides, it sounds like your basic point is that if goddidit using miracles, he could have erased all evidence of it ever having happened with the same miracle. To the extent that this is your position, you're basically conceding the accuracy of the point thread; there's very little historical evidence supporting the accuracy of the bible.
Ill be happy to respond to you when you have the courage to respond to the arguments directly and not in a short irrelevant post, admittimg you cant. Thanks for you "Opinion", though. Arrogance and intimidation still do not work with me, subbie
D Bertot

This message is a reply to:
 Message 88 by subbie, posted 08-29-2008 11:29 PM subbie has not replied

Coyote
Member (Idle past 2136 days)
Posts: 6117
Joined: 01-12-2008


Message 90 of 306 (479740)
08-29-2008 11:37 PM
Reply to: Message 87 by Dawn Bertot
08-29-2008 11:10 PM


Evidence for a global flood
In your long post, above, you glossed over perhaps the biggest testable event of all: the purported global flood about 4,350 years ago.
Can you provide, in a succinct post, the evidence you consider scientific supporting this purported event?

Religious belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 87 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-29-2008 11:10 PM Dawn Bertot has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 91 by Dawn Bertot, posted 08-29-2008 11:43 PM Coyote has not replied

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