benchwarmer wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 9:20 am
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
Dear Benchwarmer, it is a pleasure to interact with you, despite having different views. You think about matters to some depth and I appreciate that, I would like you to know. I decided to answer in one block instead of piece by piece which does get tiresome.
Dear Mae, it is also a pleasure to interact with you. This is a debate environment, so we should all be expecting opposing views and not getting personal about it. If we didn't have any opposition, there would be no debate and this site wouldn't exist. So please don't think that because I'm disagreeing with you that I don't like you or anything of that sort. We are (or should be) debating ideas only.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
Starting backwards, gravity is not a matter of believing. What alternative is there? We do not believe in gravity same as we do not merely believe we need to eat and sleep. That is not a matter one believes but instead knows. It requires no explanation (which is good because even Newton could not explain what gravity is.)
I disagree. Are you saying you know for a fact what gravity is because you personally did all the research to confirm it? Or have you perhaps simply learned about gravity in science class and done some simple experiments to prove to yourself that it seems to be real?
I work in science and we do not reinvent the wheel every generation but instead stand on the shoulders of those who did. No one publishes papers on the reality of gravity. Knowing it functions doesn’t require hours of research same as we don’t keep discovering penicillin. It is called the advancement of knowledge.
Now it’s an interesting challenge because I wager you didn’t yourself conduct any experiments establishing your position on evolution. You simply believed what others told you. Yet you ask me if I did.Do you see two different measures here?
My point here is that you believe in the God of the Bible. Perhaps this God is the one that pushes objects around in a way that appears to be gravity i.e. instead of matter having some intrinsic property that interacts with other matter, it's actually your God doing all this and perhaps there is some point where 'gravity' would break down because God decides He doesn't want to push something one day.
No, He made the natural world to function under laws. Your suggestion is the view that everyone but christians had which prevented everyone else from advancing. Only christians thought the was a LAW Giver and so the natural world functioned under law, not luck.
I realize I may appear to be splitting hairs here, but we have to be careful in debate so that we are clear what we mean.
I know I just saw a ball fall to the ground. I observed it. I believe it was the effect of gravity (attraction of large bodies of matter with other matter). I don't believe it was fairies, gods, invisible goblins, or anything else. I don't know this beyond all doubt, but I'm reasonably confident in my belief (99.99999% confident, but if we scientifically observed 'gravity fairies' then science would change and so would my beliefs).
But it won’t because there’s a law giver and that’s a law.
We are getting into the area of blind faith and beliefs based on evidence, but that's another discusssion.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
Regarding God healing, if one asks God to heal and healing occurs, seems logical to assume He had a hand in it.
Ummm, no. How many children have asked Santa for a toy and then got that exact toy on Christmas morning?
Since they are taught to write Santa and Mom “delivers” those letters, it’s not even close.
People of all cultures and religions pray to their favorite dieties and witness what appear to be miraculous healings. Are you saying now that all these gods are real based on this?
You’re making that up. They don’t, How many obvious healings did your church see?
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
If a dead person rises and walks around, definately.
Definitely what? I will agree that something happened, but claiming this or that god did it is pure guess work unless you observe this or that god actually doing it.
You don’t work in science I take it. In science we don’t generate a hypothesis, test it, find out it is true and decide it’s not true because we didn’t see the atoms or cells actually do what was postulated, we just saw the outcome. In science you only need the outcome. If your Mom brought in a cake, you wouldn’t say she didn’t bake it (even though she says she did) because you weren’t in the kitchen. What you demand of God or other's reports of Him, you don’t demand in your own life.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
Same as someone lame who suddenly walks. Is there any other logical conclusion?
Yes. The logical conclusion is that something happened to cause this 'miracle'. Jumping to your favorite deity is NOT logical given we have no observable evidence of any gods (if we did religion wouldn't be religion, it would be science).
Again, working in science has been a tremendous asset in understanding God. I don’t refuse the obvious. When God is asked and the asked for occurs, the logical conclusion is He had a hand in it. You allow yourself to consider something totally out of the initial step.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
And I work in medicine, and even doctors do not always how how someone ill is no longer ill. Sometimes they know and often they guess and sometimes they do not know at all. Doesn't make them doubt the sick person is now well.
Agreed! People recover for unknown reasons all the time. Maybe it was Vishnu. If someone prayed to Vishnu right before it happened would you convert on the spot? Be honest.
He doesn’t do that and adherents don’t say he does. You need to limit your answers to the beliefs of those who know about Hinduism. They don’t say that.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
You are still divorcing the process of coming to believe something is true from the conclusion although you do see that this process is a choice. Why then is the concluding process not a choice for you?
No, we are still not understanding each other clearly.
It is a choice to read this or that.
It is a choice to listen to this or that.
I believe something is true because I am currently convinced by x, y, z. i.e. I find x, y, and z convincing. I likely find these convincing based on all of my previous lived experience.
Now, I cannot just say to myself "You know what, even though I find this completely convincing, I'm going to simply choose to ignore all that and believe the opposite because Mae told me I could".
I think we both know this is not how it works. I already proved this in my first reply to you. You cannot simply choose to believe Santa is God. Therefore belief is not a simple choice. Belief is an accumulation of convincing (to the person in question) evidence.
I really feel like we are going in circles here, but it's important to understanding each other. I did not wake up one day and simply start not believing in Bible God. It was an accumulation of convincing (to me) evidence that slowly eroded the belief until one day (and I can't even remember the exact time/day) the last straw finally broke the camel's back and it all fell apart.
It was a much longer process, but the analogy is that one day I found my "presents from Santa" under Mom and Dad's bed a week before Christmas. The evidence against overrode any previous convincing evidence for. A belief was changed.
Yes I agree and, believe it it not, I find your thought processes interesting. Fascinating is a better word.
Now, WHAT you read and believed that spoke against the faith was your choice you admit.That is where the choosing occurs. That is where the responsibility lies. Yes, of course, once you go steadily down the path of reading what those who do not see the claims of Christ as valid, you become like them. That choice to continue was where you chose.
Now I was premed so took a great deal of biology etc courses. And I’ve read quite a bit on evolution and also the various arguments against the belief in God. We could discuss this on a different thread. But I’ve found that one needs to think and educate oneself deeper than the evolutionary theory to come to the truth. If one reads only the atheist one, of course one becomes an atheist and one is not innocent of that outcome.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
Ten or more people can hear the exact same evidence and some believe and some do not. How is this possible if there is no choice?
Easy. Each of these 10 people have completely different lived experiences, education, etc. One piece of evidence may be convincing to person A because they understand what that evidence means, while person B is not convinced because they have no clue what the evidence really means.
That evaluation is way too narrow. You lay all the weight on knowing good evidence or not. People are more complex than that. And you assume no choice is involved. It absolutely choice to evaluate the evidence. That’s why they can be pursued ed to change their vote. If it were no choice and all dependent upon factors you name, no change would be possible.
We see this in the evolution debate. Person A has no clue about the science behind all of it and just reads apologetic materials from people they trust. Person B is a trained biologist and knows what the evidence says and what it doesn't. Person A is not going to choose to believe in evolution based on apologetic materials and person B is not going to choose to reject evolution based on DNA evidence (at least not supporting DNA evidence - if it was refuting they would be salivating at a possible Nobel).
And then there’s the untrained atheist who blindly believes all they read that agrees with their chosen position. They avoid the highly trained scientists who reject the tenets of evolution. This is very common among atheists. I know because when I challenge the science (easy), they just get mad and call me names. Some send a link. But They cannot defend their view. They swallowed the view and don’t or can’t think about the holes.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
Some people choose to believe lies and some choose to believe the truth.
Completely disagree and I think this is unfair to people in general.
Your position is no one ever believes lies? How do scams work? And you think i on ever rejects truth? Really? How come people disagree?
Though you and I disagree, I don't think you are just purposely choosing to disagree with me because you choose to believe in lies.
And I don’t think you’re purposely disagreeing with me because you refuse to believe the truth.
I think everyone believes they are choosing the truth. It may not be the actual truth, but I like to think most people are not simply choosing to believe what they believe are lies just for giggles.
It’s but at all uncommon to hear people say that they just something wasn’t true but believed and acted on it anyway and now regret ignoring their gut feeling. So no, people sometimes suspect they’re believing a lie.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
It is possible because some believe the obvious conclusion of the evidence and some do not choose to believe the logical conclusion of the evidence.
Same as above.
To me the obvious conclusion to the evidence is that the Bible was written by men. Just look at all the ridiculous laws that don't comport with a loving God.
Like do not steal, do not lie about others, do not betray your spouse? There are atheists who’ve read those laws and believed there is a God based on their justice. He saw justice.
On the other hand, the obvious conclusion to you is that the Bible is the inspired word of the one true God.
Neither of us are choosing to lie and just pick one or the other because we feel like it. What is obvious and logical to one person is clearly not to the other. That is why we are here debating right?
Correct
Or do you think so highly of yourself that you can never be wrong and will always choose the actual truth?
The as hominem attack. You are unworthy of this so common from atheists approach.
I certainly don't believe that of myself and am quite willing to admit when I'm wrong. I had to do it when I became an atheist after being a devout Christian.
The assumption that I believe as I do because of a character flaw is common from atheists although christians rarely accuse the atheist of such.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
Can you see that your divorcing this choosing to believe the evidence from choosing does not work in real life? I think if someone you know decided to believe lies about you, you would not conclude that it was not their choice to believe lies about you. Do you see that your version does not work in real life?
See above.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
Now pigs do not fly and pigs do not have wings.
What? Really???? C'mon, are you really going to die on this hill? My entire point was to come up with something you don't currently believe. It's called a thought experiment. Surely you've heard of those?
I am a scientist and do not consider the LAWS of nature malleable or able to be completely suspended. I love truth too much to entertain what I KNOW are lies. I derive no pleasure from considering lies. Truth is just too delightful.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
I am trained in science and do not use my imagination to come to understand matters presented to me in life
If you are trained in science then surely you've heard of a hypothesis? If you saw 'something' (clearly flying pigs are really not working for you) you had never seen before, how do you process it? God did it? Maybe there is a natural explanation? Remember your science training. Does God show up in any science textbooks (reputable ones anyways)?
Science does not pursue known lies. You need to deal with this.
Mae von H wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 2:46 am
, but one thing that seems to be the case and that is, you did not walk with God.
Sigh.... We were doing so well, but I guess I can take this as the first sign of 'a win'. The good old ad hominem and one of the favorite things to lash out with at former Christians. The "You were never a true Christian!". If this makes you feel better then you go with that. It's so funny watching people toss this out and then see some of them on the other side years later.
That is NOT what I said. I know men and women who were as true a christian as anyone but left the faith. Not being a “true christian” was not the reason. Please don’t change what I wrote. I said you never knew Him. Do you deny this? You don’t even think He’s there.
I would love to keep it cordial if you can steer away from what just happened above. It's ok though, I forgive you. You believe 1 John 2:19 is true and that's where you are coming from. I can't fault you for sticking to your Bible while you are "a true Christian". Just realize that it may not be the actual truth at the end of the day. Please at least be that humble.
Please try not to change the things I write into something else. The humble and truthful answer from you would have been, “I guess you can say I never knew Him but frankly speaking I don’t think anyone is there to know.”
See the difference?