Zzyzx wrote:.
From another thread:
CalvinsBulldog wrote:You keep throwing up straw men - choosing the worst examples of apologetic behaviour as if this characterises everybody. If I were less logical and chose as my prime examples of atheistic argument those put forward by extremists or fundamentalists, then I too could erect a whole cornfield of straw men! How about dealing with the best rather than the worst that is on the table?
List the best arguments in favor of Christianity. Show that the arguments are sound (or not sound).
Interesting Zzyzx. I thought in our previous thread that we
were getting close to deciding on a topic for an actual head-to-head debate - and given your confident assertions that my "chances of success were near zero" - I felt at least partially justified in thinking that you demonstrated some enthusiasm for such a project. Remember, it was you who said:
Zzyzx wrote:I will be happy to engage you in Head to Head regarding validity of any Christian supernatural claims – without any personal comments permitted – and kick your posterior if you have the nerve to try.
I found this faintly ironic since you
explicitly acknowledged on the one hand that your "considered opinions" have not been researched, do not rely upon data, and contain no expert input, whereas, on the other hand, my discipline is history - I teach it.
Instead of responding to
at least three suggestions for a debate topic - most of which use your wording - there is now a deathly silence on that thread and you have chosen to start another. I think you implicitly accused Christian apologists several times in that thread of bailing on discussions when they "could not defend their propositions". I find this apparent double-standard significant.
Turning my attention to this thread.
Firstly, I point out that for someone who supposedly has a background in science, you have a poor conception of how to ask questions with any reasonable degree of specificity. My first thought upon reading the thread title was, "
apologetic arguments for what"?
It should be reasonable self-evident that not all apologetic arguments are the same. Some arguments seek to establish a good case for believing in the existence of God. Other arguments seek to show the early belief in the divinity and deity of Jesus of Nazareth. Other arguments still attempt to show that an intelligent force was necessary for creation, as opposed to only the irrational forces of nature. And so on.
If you could specify which field of apologia you are thinking of, I would be happy to provide some arguments (though perhaps not ten), and I would be very happy to defend those arguments in a head-to-head debate with clearly agreed upon rules. I did propose this earlier with our historical questions, but that seems to have fallen now by the wayside It seems it is you, rather than I, who is running from scrutiny in debate.
I have been twice invited to debate, and twice received either confusion or negation as soon as I mentioned mutually hammering out debate definitions and rules, according to
standard scholarly protocols. I find this simply staggering since this arises from people who believe themselves to reside squarely in the human race's brains trust, but maybe it was to the idea of formal debating rules that you objected. I do not know.
My second thought on reading the thread title was, "
Why list exactly ten arguments?"
A single,
good argument is often enough to establish the probability of something, let alone make the case for its truth. While more than one good argument
can reinforce a case through a cumulative effect, I still find the request for exactly ten arguments to be interestingly arbitrary.
My third thought was that an argument must be first shown to be
valid, before it can be shown to be
sound. Again, I find it surprising that a person with a background in science would be careless with terminology.
Finally: please do not respond (like some of your possibly less-educated peers in this thread), that there is "deafening silence" or some such vacuous, triumphalist nonsense. I am
happy to advance arguments; I am
happy to debate you; but in a formal setting minus the white noise of other discussions and posts.