Belief in The Resurrection - Faith, or Fact Based

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Belief in The Resurrection - Faith, or Fact Based

Post #1

Post by William »

Q: Is belief in The Resurrection based on fact or based on faith?

From a discussion in another thread;
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[Replying to Realworldjack in post #222]
Let us recall that it was you who stated,
that the stories of the empty tomb where anything other than given as hearsay and expected to be received in faith.
This is what I stated;

"What has been reported from the different sources do not altogether align - and one thing which does come across is that folk did not seem to recognize that the person claiming to have resurrected was the same person they had followed for all those months. I am happy to examine what you table as explanation for this phenomena."

I also stated;
I am not arguing that the stories themselves were or were not penned as true accounts of actual events by the very one(s) who experienced these things they claim to have experienced.
My argument is that we can only take their stories as hearsay, because we did not witness those events. What we each DO with the hearsay depends upon our faith in the stories being true, our faith that the stories being false, or in our lack of faith due to the nature of the evidence.

Are you saying, NONE of it aligns?
A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump.
Because you see, we have those who complain that much of the information is so closely the "aligned", they want to insist that there must, and had to be copying going on between the authors.
Apparently there are biblical scholars who accept that in those cases, copying may have occurred.
So then, exactly what would we expect? If they all report the same exact events, in the same exact way, I think we would have complaints that something would not be right here.
Yes - that it was unnecessary to have four exact copies of the same data.
If they report completely different, and contradictory information, then we would complain that something is not quite right.
Yes.
However, it seems to me we have exactly what we would expect.
Which still wouldn't do away with the idea that the stories were concocted by the priesthood...such would be intelligent enough to realize that to sell the story there needs to be more than one version, especially since there are no coinciding stories circulating outside of the religion.
For example - some believe that [historical] Jesus had scribes, but there is no evidence that anyone was recording his words and nothing of the sort has been found so far.
In other words, we have some events describe in almost the same way, while we have others who record events the others may leave out, and we have some who report the same events with differences in the story. So??????? What exactly would are you looking for?
I am looking for evidence to the claim that Jesus died. [and was thus resurrected.]
Would you want them to record the same exact stories, in the same exact way? Would you want them to tell completely different stories which would contradict each other? I mean, exactly what would you accept?
Based upon the stories regarding Jesus, I would expect that Jesus didn't really die.
First, your wording is sort of strange here? You seem to be saying, they did not recognize him as the same person as they had followed, as if they recognized him as someone else? However, this is not the way it is recorded. In Luke 24 we read,
"While they were talking and discussing, Jesus Himself approached and began traveling with them. But their eyes were kept from recognizing Him".
So here we see, it is not as though they recognize him as someone else, but rather, they simply were, "kept from recognizing him". However, as we move on a few verses later we read,
"And then their eyes were opened and they recognized Him".

Firstly they must have seen him as 'someone else' for them to recognize that 'someone else' had entered into their company.
But what we do not know [and thus cannot assume] is what the writer meant in the use of the words.
Does it mean that their minds were being played with in some unknown manner or does it mean that it was something else about the stranger suddenly in their company which lead them to conclude they were in the presence of someone who was so just like the Jesus they knew, that it must have been him, or was Jesus' body was capable of 'shape-shifting' [changing it's appearance.]

However, in relation to the story of the stranger in the company, we see that the story unfolds over the course of a whole day, with the stranger telling them all sorts of things so that the dots connected [starting out by calling them 'fools' for not being able to do this for themselves] and by the end of the day, we are informed that they had no choice but to accept the evidence that the stranger [who they did not recognize as Jesus because it was a different body] was the same person that they had followed all those previous months.

As soon as they came to that conclusion, the stranger then vanished. [became invisible to them/appeared to no longer be in their company.]
Okay, as we turn our attention to the incident with Mary Magdalene, what we see as recorded in John 20, is (Mary) "Thinking that He was the gardener". Notice, it does not say, "recognizing him as the gardener".
Why would Mary know what the gardener looked like? Clearly she assumes a stranger there with the two other strangers is the caretaker and clearly she is confused and distressed.
But most importantly, she does not recognize the stranger until he calls her by her name...so it must have been how the stranger had done this which convinced Mary that it was Jesus.
Well, the only other incident I know of would be at daybreak, with the disciples in a boat off shore, and see Jesus on shore, as they have been fishing through the night with no catch. Jesus instructs them where to cast the net, and of course they have a net so full, it is difficult to pull the net in, and it is at this point, one of the disciples, does not "recognize" (as if he can actually see him) this as Jesus, but simply says, "It is the Lord"! Once they were all on shore, as it is recorded, they all seem to recognize this person as Jesus.

These are the only events such as this I am aware of. The above would not be my "explanation for this phenomena" because I have no explanation. Rather, this is the way it is recorded.
So we have hearsay [the stories] and within that, we have incidences which align and form an image of someone who has a distinctly different body than the normal Human form as it appears to be able to do things which normal human forms are not seen to be capable of doing.

But overall, there is nothing about the story of the resurrection [The Subject] which can be pointed to as factual [rather than hearsay] and thus, to believe in said story - one has to do so on faith.

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Re: Belief in The Resurrection - Faith, or Fact Based

Post #611

Post by JoeyKnothead »

brunumb wrote: Thu Oct 21, 2021 8:23 pm
Noose001 wrote: Thu Oct 21, 2021 11:50 am Time is everything; if time stops everything disappears, this means that physical reality (materials) is an illusion and that there's an underlying reality that creates the illusion called physical reality because time itself is not physical or material.
Please demonstrate that time can be stopped or that if time could be stopped then everything would disappear. Failing that all we have is unsupported speculation bordering on woo.
"Woo" :lol:

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Re: Belief in The Resurrection - Faith, or Fact Based

Post #612

Post by Noose001 »

Difflugia wrote: Thu Oct 21, 2021 2:43 pm
And this lays bare the type of equivocation that's been behind most of your arguments, whether you're aware of it or not. The subjectivity of perception may render "time" as not "real" in some sense, but since wavelengths and frequencies can be measured in an absolutely consistent way in comparison to each other, then "time" is "real" in another sense. You are now just saying the same thing that TRANSPONDER was saying, that perception is subjective, but equivocating on words that we use slightly differently in both subjective and objective contexts to draw invalid conclusions in one context based on otherwise unrelated concepts from another.
You are assuming reality. Just because you can measure and observe consistently doesn't make it real. Measurement and observation are dependent on the mind and it's the mind that gives 'subjective perception' again.

Have you ever imagined what would happen if Time stops? Why should everything disappear if time stops. Why should my house (a solid thing that i consider to be real) disppear if time stops?

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Re: Belief in The Resurrection - Faith, or Fact Based

Post #613

Post by Noose001 »

William wrote: Thu Oct 21, 2021 2:48 pm
This is way off topic but something I focus attention on every day, so even that it is off-topic I have this to add;

Time is a construct created through necessity, and thus best represents the mother aspect even though she is Father Time.

The Wavelength is what moves around in Time and also creates the Time by that motion.

The Wavelength is the real deal in that regard.

The Wavelength brings the quantum strings to life through vibration, but this movement is mistaken for being 'alive' by the very act of its movement.

That is the Illusion.

The Reality is the source of the movement, and thus the real life.

When the Real Life enters into the creation The Wavelength creates, it becomes part of what The Wavelength made move, and inside the creation, experiences the movement of The Wavelength first hand in a second hand manner.

It participates in its own-made movement.

This far in, we experience our reality thinking the images are where The Life is - when in reality, WE are The Life therein...experiencing the movement of Time through the movement of Matter, and we are neither Time nor Matter.

We are that which made The Wavelength.
You assume that time is a property of energy/matter but this is not true. Energy/matter are a property of time.

A liitle thought; if time is emergent from matter/energy,
then time stoppage wont affect matter/energy. Butvit's true that time stoppage will make everything disappear this means that all things are a property of time.

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Re: Belief in The Resurrection - Faith, or Fact Based

Post #614

Post by Noose001 »

brunumb wrote: Thu Oct 21, 2021 8:13 pm
That pretty much fits with the imaginary as well. It can't be seen but can be regarded as something spiritual and its actual existence in reality relies on belief, aka faith.
True, faith applies to things that aren't observable but like i said, it is also a fact because we can reason out life after death; it makes more sense.

I'd given you a scenario (death in a restaurant).
The seat, the table, the cup will disappear. You'll to reach out your hand but it wont be there, you'll try to stand but your legs will be gone. You try to call people around you but your faclties of speech aren't there. Just darkness and silence.

This exactly what happens when time stops. So we do create reality by perceiving time.

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Re: Belief in The Resurrection - Faith, or Fact Based

Post #615

Post by Noose001 »

brunumb wrote: Thu Oct 21, 2021 8:23 pm
Please demonstrate that time can be stopped or that if time could be stopped then everything would disappear. Failing that all we have is unsupported speculation bordering on woo.
E = mc^2

c is time dependent, if T=0 then c=0 hence E=0. Zero E means m=0 and so nothing.

I never said time can be stopped but you cannot stop me from imagining 'time stop' and why not, if it started then it can stop.

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Re: Belief in The Resurrection - Faith, or Fact Based

Post #616

Post by TRANSPONDER »

We seem to have strayed way off the topic here, and are talking about Time in relation to reality. I'm sure I've heard the idea that time only has existence if there is the movement of matter/energy to measure, but what is the intent to show in respect of religious claims never mind the resurrection, specifically? Then at least we'd understand the relevance of all this.

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Re: Belief in The Resurrection - Faith, or Fact Based

Post #617

Post by Difflugia »

Noose001 wrote: Fri Oct 22, 2021 4:08 amYou are assuming reality.
Yes and, as far as I can tell, everyone else in the conversation is, too. If you're not, then you're not having the same conversation we are. If you knew you were going to shift the conversation to some weird set of nonstandard axioms, it would have been polite to let us know that when you joined the conversation. It reminds me of being fifteen minutes into a conversation with someone before they let on that they're a presuppositionalist apologist.
Noose001 wrote: Fri Oct 22, 2021 4:08 amJust because you can measure and observe consistently doesn't make it real.
Not in some absolute sense, no, but it's as strong as evidence gets. If you don't accept the value of evidence, then again, you're having a different conversation than the rest of us.
Noose001 wrote: Fri Oct 22, 2021 4:08 amMeasurement and observation are dependent on the mind and it's the mind that gives 'subjective perception' again.
If you want to argue pop epistemology, maybe start a different topic.
Noose001 wrote: Fri Oct 22, 2021 4:08 amHave you ever imagined what would happen if Time stops?
Yes.
Noose001 wrote: Fri Oct 22, 2021 4:08 amWhy should everything disappear if time stops.
I give up. Why?
Noose001 wrote: Fri Oct 22, 2021 4:08 amWhy should my house (a solid thing that i consider to be real) disppear if time stops?
Again, I've no idea. Please tell us.
My pronouns are he, him, and his.

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Re: Belief in The Resurrection - Faith, or Fact Based

Post #618

Post by Difflugia »

Noose001 wrote: Fri Oct 22, 2021 4:41 amc is time dependent
No. You're equivocating again and (probably) don't realize it.

In that equation, c is not the average measured round-trip speed of some photon, but is the upper bound of the speed of any possible photon (or anything else). At t=0, assuming the rest of physics is correct, c=299792458 m/s even if no photon has yet to move. If you're asserting that physics isn't correct, then again, you're not having the same conversation as the rest of us.
My pronouns are he, him, and his.

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Re: Belief in The Resurrection - Faith, or Fact Based

Post #619

Post by Noose001 »

Difflugia wrote: Fri Oct 22, 2021 6:18 am
Noose001 wrote: Fri Oct 22, 2021 4:08 amWhy should everything disappear if time stops.
I give up. Why?
Noose001 wrote: Fri Oct 22, 2021 4:08 amWhy should my house (a solid thing that i consider to be real) disppear if time stops?
Again, I've no idea. Please tell us.
Yeah, this is where the argument is.

Time is everything but time is not real, so nothing is real. Simple.

Because time is not a property of anything but all things are a property of time.

E=mc^2 is all you need. If there's no T, c and R becomes zero and so will m. That is disappearance.

Now you need to show how time is real. Why do you think time is a thing outside the mind?

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Re: Belief in The Resurrection - Faith, or Fact Based

Post #620

Post by Noose001 »

Difflugia wrote: Fri Oct 22, 2021 6:32 am
Noose001 wrote: Fri Oct 22, 2021 4:41 amc is time dependent
No. You're equivocating again and (probably) don't realize it.

In that equation, c is not the average measured round-trip speed of some photon, but is the upper bound of the speed of any possible photon (or anything else). At t=0, assuming the rest of physics is correct, c=299792458 m/s even if no photon has yet to move. If you're asserting that physics isn't correct, then again, you're not having the same conversation as the rest of us.
What is a possible photon? C is a real constant, if t=0, there'l be no photon or possible photon.

299792458 m/s imagine s=0 here.

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