Don't question the power of the invisible pink unicorn to transcend logic. :uhhuh: (if it's omnipotent, how can it be omniscient?)3unitz said:if its invisible how can it be pink??
oh and sorry for stealing your usual argument enteebee.
Don't question the power of the invisible pink unicorn to transcend logic. :uhhuh: (if it's omnipotent, how can it be omniscient?)3unitz said:if its invisible how can it be pink??
you haven't provided a rebuttal to my explanation3unitz said:you just dont get it...
Supposing you're right and the Bible is a myth, then what do you make of the fact that this "myth" is the only one out there in which the protagonist claimed to actually BE God and offer eternal salvation?Enteebee said:No evidence against 'christianity' ?
a) There is no more evidence for the christian god than there is magical pixies making people fall in love with one another, it is good enough for me to discount magical pixies on this basis (as i'm sure it is for you also) and thus is good enough for me to equally discount the personal christian god.
a2) There is equal evidence for any other religion.
b) There is plenty of rational logic which goes against the concept of a personal god, as well as scientific notions which would need to be broken/bent in some way to allow for a personal god.
c) There is a lot of evidence for the claims of the christian bible being wrong.
d) There is evidence that the bible is indeed very much so a product of man, while this doesn't mean it couldn't still be true, it makes it seem very similar to all the other myths which exist/have existed in our world.
"holds valid in its self" i.e. is true just because it is?inasero said:It's completely different, because the Christian isn't saying that their faith is dependent on the lack of evidence, but rather that it holds valid in itself just as rationalists use scientific reason. A very important distinction.
a) A good number of people (muslims/jews) don't believe that jesus ever claimed to be god, they probably have decent reasons for believing so, so it's possible this whole idea that he even claimed to be god is a part of the myth. (this is because I'm assuming your 'gotcha' will be something about how someone couldn't possibly claim to be god without being adequately tested by the people of the time... which would ignorant because there are many people alive today that people believe to be a god/godman)Supposing you're right and the Bible is a myth, then what do you make of the fact that this "myth" is the only one out there in which the protagonist claimed to actually BE God and offer eternal salvation?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zalmoxisinasero said:Supposing you're right and the Bible is a myth, then what do you make of the fact that this "myth" is the only one out there in which the protagonist claimed to actually BE God and offer eternal salvation?
And what, outside the bible, suggests that jesus did ever claim to be god?According to Herodotus, at one point Zalmoxis traveled to Egypt and brought the people mystic knowledge about the immortality of the soul, teaching them that they would pass at death to a certain place where they would enjoy all possible blessings for all eternity.
Zalmoxis then had a subterranean chamber constructed (other accounts say that it was a natural cave) on the holy mountain of Kogaion, to which he withdrew for three years (some other accounts considered he actually lived in Hades for these three years).
After his disappearance, he was considered dead and mourned by his people, but after three years he showed himself once more to the Getae, who were thus convinced about his teachings: an episode that some considered to be a resurrection (Thus he can be seen a life-death-rebirth deity, parallel to Tammuz or Jesus.)
You mean historical sources of Jesus' claims to divinity? I posted that like 100 pages ago- there are plenty of 'secular' sources.webby234 said:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zalmoxis
And what, outside the bible, suggests that jesus did ever claim to be god?
EDIT: I could find more similar myths - that's just one example.
Sorry, i missed that. Which secular sources?inasero said:You mean historical sources of Jesus' claims to divinity? I posted that like 100 pages ago- there are plenty of 'secular' sources.
That's not the point - it's about the rough structure of the cultural 'meme'. In particular, some religious beliefs protect themselves by stating that we should expect not to find evidence, or that we should expect to find disconfirming evidence (which is just there to trick us!). This creates a situation in which the belief insulates itself from potentially disconfirming evidence. It simply absconds from the game of empirical confirmation/disconfirmation. This is bad intellectual practice.inasero said:if a conspiracy was acknowledged it wouldn't be a conspiracy then would it? in any case no one's been promoting any conspiracy theories here...unless you go with the theory that Christianity is a tool to control the masses, in which case the burden of proof is on you
Meh muslim/jewish scholars would obviously disagree with them and offer up their own evidence... I also know there is secular evidence that 'jesus' may not have even existed (at the very least in the form christians imagine). I personally care little either way.inasero said:You mean historical sources of Jesus' claims to divinity? I posted that like 100 pages ago- there are plenty of 'secular' sources.
Zalmoxis was an obscure figure and few historical sources were found. The source on which your comparison was based made a wild misinterpretation of vague historical accounts.webby234 said:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zalmoxis
And what, outside the bible, suggests that jesus did ever claim to be god?
EDIT: I could find more similar myths - that's just one example.
Islams believe jesus is a prophet. =]Enteebee said:Meh muslim/jewish scholars would obviously disagree with them and offer up their own evidence... I also know there is secular evidence that 'jesus' may not have even existed (at the very least in the form christians imagine).
Wait, if you believe Jesus existed but that he had no holy qualities what makes you think he's going to return? He's dead. You can't believe he'll 'return' if you don't think he had any of the powers which would allow him to do so...?beentherdunthat said:Islams believe jesus is a prophet. =]
but jesus DID exist. just not as a god, or a trinity, or a son of god... ( just religion don't attack me)
Jesus will return and set this battle straight, once and for all anyway. We will know. Or our future generations will know. I'll leave a letter with 'I told you so' on my grave. ;P
The Bible never made claims that "disconfirming" evidence is there to "trick" us, only that confirming evidence had been provided in abundance in times past and would no longer be provided not because there wasn't any, but because people wouldn't believe it anyway (I mean being resurrected after three days, c'mon) and it would contravene God's requirement that we come to Him by faith.KFunk said:That's not the point - it's about the rough structure of the cultural 'meme'. In particular, some religious beliefs protect themselves by stating that we should expect not to find evidence, or that we should expect to find disconfirming evidence (which is just there to trick us!). This creates a situation in which the belief insulates itself from potentially disconfirming evidence. It simply absconds from the game of empirical confirmation/disconfirmation. This is bad intellectual practice.
I think such features should make us wary of such beliefs from the start (as in the case of conspiracy theories).
Note, though, that I am not saying this is the structure of all religious belief, merely that people often construe religious claims in such a manner (as in the case of *true*).
she's muslim..^CoSMic DoRiS^^ said:Wait, if you believe Jesus existed but that he had no holy qualities what makes you think he's going to return? He's dead. You can't believe he'll 'return' if you don't think he had any of the powers which would allow him to do so...?
I know. She also said Jesus would return and I want to know why.inasero said:she's muslim..
Yes... I'm just asking how it's logical to believe that Jesus can return when you don't believe he's the son of god. Because if he's not, and he's just a person who was around at the time, there's no way he can return. Because he's dead and dead people do not just come back when they feel like it unless they are supernatural which she just said he isn't.inasero said:because Muslims believe that Jesus will return, that's why.