I’m not sure he would, but I wouldn’t. What you’re describing is missing a number of important details. Besides, it wouldn’t be automatically rational to become an atheist after reading an atheist book (or, for that matter, a theist after reading a theist book), if it was a badly-written book or the decision was made on irrational grounds, like the book having a nice font or something.
And what’s a “committed” atheist? Someone who really really lives without theism?
There are two issues. The first is whether you decided to believe in something by a rational process. The second is whether the belief itself is rational. It is not irrational to decide you will believe in a god because you find doing so makes you happy. However, this doesn’t mean that your belief in a god is itself rational. To illustrate:
*Imagine this scenario. I read an unnamed book. Through reading that book, I come to adopt a certain viewpoint. Next, let’s say I was reading some book which said that black isn’t the same as white and now I’m committed to the idea that black isn’t white. Well, let’s say I was reading a book called the Book of Grey (which says there is no differenced betwen black and white), and now I’m a committed Greyist. Now, let’s assume I was reading a book that says that black isn’t white and, after reading said book, I’m left feeling empty and unsatisfied, and as a result I turn to Greyism. And finally, let’s say I read the Book of Grey and am turned off by it, thus becoming a person who thinks there is a difference between black and white. To that, you’d now agree I arrived at my views rationally.
I’m going to assume that, in the first and fourth instances, you would say that I arrived at my views rationally. In the second and third instances, however, you would argue that I arrived at my views irrationally. But how can this be? In the above scenario, I read the same material but come to different conclusions. You have no basis under which to say I came to my views irrationally except they disagree with your views.*
I have re-written your examples to highlight your problem. Yes, you can rationally decide to be a Greyist because (as per the third example) it makes you happy. Greyism is still horseshit, however, because black is not white.
Nope. Right here your little scenario falls right on it’s face. I have seen threads on atheism before, and I don’t think I’ve ever seen someone say that they became a "committed atheist’ just because they read a book. That approach may work with the Bible and Christianity, however.
How do I know he didn’t? Because someone here, and I don’t remember his name, stated that he didn’t.
I’m 99% sure the disciples knew that Jesus was the Messiah when he was alive.
It wasn’t a curve ball. I’m well aware of the fact that there are individuals in the Bible who probably did not exist. I wanted to see if you were going to list any of the prophets, kings of Israel or apostles among the list of “fictional characters”.
Joshua and Solomon were real.
You should go back and read what you said. You didn’t just say “corroboration for the supernatural claims of Christianity”. You said, and I’m going to quote you verbatim:
[QUOTE=You]
They don’t have any historical corroboration for anything. The core historical claims of Christianity are corroborated by nothing, and don’t even have any primary testimony (nothing in the New Testament was written by anyone who ever knew Jesus).
[/quote]
In other words, you stated that Christianity cannot corroborate anything it claims. As it stands, both the first and second sentences are simply false. Now you’re more than welcome to backtrack if you will, but don’t try to refrain from moving the proverbial goal posts.
Again, nice way to move the goal post.
You didn’t answer my question and, even now, you’re not answering my question. The choice in your stated example should be between believing a 15th century soldier saying he had a squab for breakfast on some specific date and between believing a 21st century blogger claiming that that soldier ate a squab for breakfast on some specific date. If it were me, I’d be more apt to believe the 15th century soldier than the 21st century blogger, as the 15th century soldier is the one doing the eating.
What zombie assault on Jerusalem? I must have missed that.
Go ahead.
No, he’s not going to because he dead, but the point was that if he was alive, the personal experiences he attributes to himself would be held as more true than the personal experiences others attribute to him. If you were to say “I’ve no supernatural experience” and I were to say “DtC has had numerous supernatural experiences”, which one of those statements do you think would generally be held to be true and which one false?
I already did explain why.
If you’re a Christian, your beliefs are based on the Bible. If you’re a Jew, your beliefs are based on the Talmud (as well as other Rabinnic literature). If you’re a Muslim, your beliefs are based on the Quran. And so on and so forth with almost every other religious group. What you’ve done, and this is typical of atheists in general,is that you’ve set up a situation in which you render the thing your opponent bases his or her beliefs on to be inadmissible on the basis that it’s not evidence, and when they fail to produce any other evidence of their beleifs, you pat yourself on the back and claim to have the intellectually superior and and unassailable position. This, though, is ridiculous.
No matter how many times you assert this-- a million or even ten million-- it’s going to be incorrect.
The Bible might not be proof, but it most certainly is evidence of one’s claims and/or beliefs.
Again, this is false. You can keep repeating this until the world ends, and it won’t be anything other than false. What you mean to say is that the theists lacks evidence you will accept, which it what it boils down to. I’m cutting out a few responses, but the reality of the situation is that you’re demanding the theist start from a non-theistic position to prove that their beliefs are true, whereas the theist wants to start from their own theistic position to prove their beliefs are true. And for the theistic to do the latter, they must be allowed to use their given text upon which their beliefs are based.
Unfortunately, you’re not even allowing the text to be presented in the first place. Seriously. This is like me getting in a debate with a Muslim but preventing them from using the Quran to argue their beliefs. Doing so cripples them from the beginning. If you were interested in true debate instead of pointless intellectual posturing, you would argue against someone’s beliefs or that which forms the basis of one’s beliefs.
First of all, this is another demonstrably false statement, least because it means a decision, conclusion or belief reached in the absence of empirical evidence is irrational. This is nonsensical. If, for example, you were to believe that humans ar
Second of all, as it relates to religious beliefs being ‘irrational’, I was going to type out something long and boring, but I’m far too lazy to do so. So this will have to suffice.
And if God descended down from the Heavens and proceed to carve his image on the moon, being an atheist would be irrational. Of course, if fishes were wishes…
Okay. No, seriously. All you did was take my original post which detailed how one can come to a different conclusion regarding the existence of God based on some reading material, replaced it with something that can be empirically proven (i.e., “What color is this?”) and then have proceeded to argue that my original post was flawed because of this. It wasn’t. Your post, however, is flawed, unless you believe that God has been proven to not exist. In the case He had, then it would be irrational to claim that He exists.
Someone speculated, but, as far as I know, Tex Avery never publicly stated that the Duck never told him not to spill the beans.
Not according to Mark.
Daniel was fiction. David and Solomon may have been too (although david has the Tel Dan Stele in his favor).
Cite? There is no historical or archaeological corroboration for either ofr them. Solomon’s kingdom definitely never existed, and none of the conquest attributed to Joshua.
I said it can’t corroborate any of it’s core claims. The mere existence and crucifixion of an itinerant preacher named Jesus is not a core religious claim. It;s also not even really verified by Tacitus.
I’m not moving the goal post, you just came up short. You have not provided any corroboration whatsoever for the core religious claims of Christianity.
I answered your question twice. The answer is that your question does not contain enough data to to give an answer.
Incorrect. The choice is between believing a plausible claim or believing an impossible one. Impossible claims are not credible no matter how recently they were made.
Matthew 27:52-53
I’m sorry, but i find this non-responsive. If I’m going to start a new thread and put in the work required, I want to know that you’re actually going to read it and engage with it. Will you or won’t you?
Tex Avery did not deny that Daffy appeared to him, so the question is immaterial, but, in point of fact, Tex’s denial would mean nothing because we have the word of Daffy Himself.
Where? In what post? Quote it again.
IOf You’re a Jew your beliefs are still based on the bible. The Talmud is an adjunct to Jewish scripture, but the scripture is the Hebrew Bible (what Christians chauvinistically call the “Old Testament”).
It’s NOT evidence. Do you dispute that?
This is just projection on your part. If you don’t have the nuts, you don’t have the nuts. That’s not our fault.
I assert that you have no evidence. That’s an exttremely easy assertion to refute if you actually do have evidence. you don’t. You want to enter the bible as evidence, but it isn’t. What else have you got?
You keep using that word. I don’t think it means what you think it means.
No, it means you don;t have any empirical evidence whatsoever. Claims are not evidence. If you think you have evidence, put it on the table. You don’t have it. Your magic book is not evidence. Sorry, but it isn’t. Claims, in and of themselves, are not evidence. The supernatural claims of the Bible are exactly the thing that us being tested. To try to aver that they are true because the bible says so is circular bullshit.
This is how it works. You don’t get to assume your own claims. You ahve to prove them. Have you had no training in science or debate at all?
The historical/literal truth of the text is exactly what’s being debated. You don’t get to assert that it’s true just because it says so. Surely you can understand how fallacious that is
If they were trying to say that [ial Qu’ran* was evidence for supernatural claims, you would be right to do so.
\So what? That’s their problem, not mine. If you want to make a claim, back it up with something beside the mere claim itself.
That’s exactly what I am doing.
It certainly is.
Something got cut off here. I’m sure it was devastating, though.
I’m not interested in reading some blogger. If you can’t defend yourself, don’t bother.
[/QUOTE]
Why am I talking about something that does not exist seriously with someone who believes it does exist?
[/QUOTE]
Well, you don’t know these things don’t exist, obviously. No one does.
BUT, atheists argue with Christians and Christians argue with atheists because Christians think they’re right and atheists think THEY’RE right and they need everyone else to agree with them so that they can feel secure about their beliefs.
Sheesh. If a person is happy with his/her religion, LEAVE 'EM ALONE! It’s not hurting anyone. What happened to agreeing to disagree? :rolleyes:
Why am I talking about something that does not exist seriously with someone who believes it does exist?
[/QUOTE]
Sheesh. If a person is happy with his/her religion, LEAVE 'EM ALONE! It’s not hurting anyone. What happened to agreeing to disagree? :rolleyes:
[/QUOTE]
I’ll leave them alone if they leave me alone. Stop preventing me from buying wine on Sunday mornings. If I decided to drop my wife and marry a man, don’t prevent me from getting the same benefits I got while straight. Don’t put their god on my money or have him be in my pledge to my country. etc. etc. etc.
In real life, absent any particular challenge or harassment, I do leave religious people alone. My RL persona is much more low key than it is here, but this is a place where theists are willing to debate, and I enjoy doing it for the intellectual challenge of it. Some of the theists here are pretty smart (albeit the smart ones don’t take literalist approaches to stuff like Noah’s Ark), and stand their ground pretty well. I actually enjoy it a lot more if my opponent has some intellect and wherewithal. It’s fun and it makes me work.
The OP should understand that a lot of the debate that goes on here (and not just in religion threads) is done in the same kind of spirit as a pick-up football or basketball game. we play hard and give hard fouls, but it generally isn’t that personal and ifthere’s a defining characteristic of Dopers is that we’re people who like to argue.
I do know that there are people who don’t like to argue, and find it uncomfortable (I’m married to one), and this probably isn’t the board for them. Honestly, though, if a lot of us couldn’t fight with each other, I don’t know what we’d do. We’re all Batmans and Jokers. we need each other.
When exactly did “atheism” become “not believing in God”, anyway? I thought “atheism” meant “without theism”, i.e. without religion. Religion doesn’t automatically mean “God”, after all.
Heck, God may or may not exist, but even if God does exist, I’ve no reason for confidence that any human religion has accurately described God’s nature (at least among the human religions that mention God), given all the contradictions among (and even within) the God-religions and not a whisker of proof between them.
Looks to me like arrogance; believers who think “atheism” means you don’t share their particular beliefs.
and where is the problem with making such a demand?
at some point in your life you indeed started from a non-theistic position and made a choice to accept a set of beliefs. I assume that you did so because the evidence was strong enough.
What I am interested in is what made you do that? and why *that *set of beliefs rather *those *? Why can’t you recount that thought process for us now?
At some point you didn’t have your beliefs and now you do. Surely it must either have been a conscious choice on the basis of evidence, or the other option may be indoctrination/revelation of some type.
If the former…explain why?
If the latter it is intellectually more honest to admit a lack of evidence and/or rational choice and confess that it is more to do with comfort, gut feel or perhaps aesthetics.
That is pretty much it Bryan, it is also seeks to shift the burden of proof.
“aha! you are claiming that god doesn’t exist and you can’t prove it”
That sort of thing. Really atheism just means that you don’t have a belief in a god, that is all. Some people may go further and make a positive claim about non-existence but that is not a necessary criteria for atheism.
Being fair, wouldn’t you also say that Believers also take their information from other humans? All written things, read things, thought things,or taught things, come from humans…that is a proven fact weither one is religious or not.
Tacitus can be used to support what some early Christians might have believed - he cannot be used to support the actual crucifixion. He was not a contemporary.
Further, as I’ve pointed out in a few threads, why believe him? Why believe the Gospels?
The people back then were not idiots - however they viewed the world radically differently than most modern people. They accepted miracles as normal occurrences. Josephus doesn’t bat an eye when reporting that a cow gave birth to a lamb.
Do you believe that happened? In this post, I outline some of the problems I have with just accepting the Gospels. I think that it is inconsistent to accept one and not the other (the other being the incidents I mention). What are your thoughts?
If that’s ‘score one’ for Christians, then a similar line of evidence produces ‘score one’ for Vespasian curing a blind man with spit. Do you accept this?
In a later post, you write:
So you concede that the rest on that list were fictional?
If so, why do you think they are in there? I’m not asking you do go through each and every one, but do you have an over-arching idea as to why (perhaps they are simply characters in a metaphor that is intended to make the reader learn something?)?
Being charitable, the Bible is anecdotal evidence, at best. The NT, the Gospels in particular, are second/third hand anecdotes at that.
You also say:
What do you base this certainty on?
I don’t think we have access to what the original disciples ‘knew’ or believed. We could believe that they believed similar to Paul, but I wouldn’t put my confidence level anywhere near 99%.
This all seems to me to be the fact that people are not really believing in God or “A” god, but they are believing in the person (or persons) who wrote, taught , or thought about what their idea of what a God is, or was. They desire for there to be a being,who existed before there was a place to exist. I wonder who created the place for God or “a” god to exist. If God is a being, then he couldn’t exist with out being in existence.
On the SD, there seem to be a lot of skeptics that like to debate/discuss religious issues.
The converse, theists who like to debate/discuss religious issues do not seem so prevalent here (on other MBs they seem to be more prevalent).
This sets up a lopsided ratio. It can be intimidating to be the only one in a thread having to answer a 1/2 dozen skeptics. It’s also time consuming.
I think this can lead to a heated discussion because the person defending their beliefs most likely is not going to spend hours rebutting every post from the skeptic. This leads to the situation where the skeptic basically feels like their arguments were handwaved away.
I’m not sure if others see things this way, if this is a fair generalization, or what the solution is. It just occurred to me. Thoughts?