AB,
I have thought long and hard how to reply to the many points you bring up on your reply 48811
Good. I look forward to the results of that long and hard thinking…
I could give detailed replies to every one of your points, but I have no doubt that you will once more demonstrate your God given freedom to think up reasons to reject every one of my explanations in order to continue belief in your materialistic scenario.
Well, there’s the first trap you’ve fallen into. My “points” explain to you how you go wrong by making false arguments, and you’ve just done that once again – in this case a fallacy called begging the question. You’re being invited to produce a logically sound argument to justify your claim “god”. Just asserting instead a “God given freedom” is hopeless for that purpose.
0/10 so far. Try again.
So rather than continue the fruitless dialog I will highlight the evidence which you continue to ignore or try to dismiss.
And there’s another fallacy – this once call poisoning the well. I don’t “ignore or try to dismiss” anything. What I actually do is
falsify the arguments you attempt to justify your faith claim “god” – so far without rebuttal.
Still 0/10. Try again.
There is ample historical evidence for the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
No there isn’t. There’s a story written long after the episode by people who weren’t there that could also readily be explained with various non-miraculous causes that you have no means to exclude.
0/10 still.
There are many reasons why the books of the Christian bible, and in particular the New Testament can be considered to be divinely inpired rather than man made.
That’s just an unqualified assertion. If you think there are such “many reasons” you need to tell us what they are, not just assert their existence.
0/10 still.
There are hundreds of personal witness stories of a miraculous nature which are hard to dismiss without calling the witness a liar - here is just one:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cd7Uukone7c&lc=UgxAAh_NVw9gNJLKuqJ4AaABAg
No there aren’t. There are hundreds (or more likely thousands) of claims of supposed miracles from multiple faith traditions that collapse as soon as their rationales are examined. “Miracle” is a positive claim – “I don’t know how X could have happened naturally, therefore miracle” doesn’t come close to justifying the claim.
0/10 still.
Recently there have been many accounts of Muslims having encountered visions of Jesus in their dreams - hard to dismiss when three members of the same family had identical visions:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-7bR-1W9c9s
And doubtless there are accounts of Christians “encountering” Allah too. All these accounts though involve a supposed god with which the claimants are culturally familiar. What you never find though are accounts of remote tribespeople never before contacted by Christians/ muslims/whatever who unilaterally have also “encountered” their various deities.
Why do you suppose that is?
0/10 still.
Despite your considerable ability to deliberately choose to seek reasons not to believe, you continue to claim that your freedom to do so is "just the way it seems" without any feasible explanation for how such reasoned arguments can emerge from physically controlled material reactions beyond your conscious control.
1. You have it backwards again. It’s not about “deliberately choose to seek reasons not to believe” – the burden of proof is for the claimant to find justifications for their beliefs. All I do is to find those justification to be wrong – a trivially simple thing to do, just as you'd find my justifications for my claim “leprechauns” to be false. Do you “deliberately choose to seek reasons not to believe” that claim too?
Why not?
2. “...freedom to do so”
must be “just the way it seems” because the alternative you cling to as a man clings to a concrete lifebelt is logically impossible. Your distaste for what that implies is neither here nor there for epistemological purposes.
3. The “feasible explanation” is that there’s a perfectly well-understood phenomenon called emergence – essentially “the sum is greater than its parts” – it's seen pretty much everywhere in nature, and that there’s no good reason to dismiss as an explanation for consciousness too. In any case though, even if that wasn’t the case all you’d have is a “don’t know” – which is no justification at all for the logically impossible “it’s magic innit” alternative you peddle here with no hint at all of a method to support it.
If you want to claim magic as your alternative, then justify it – don’t just assert it.
You’re now in worse than 0/10 territory. You’re not just wrong – you’re not
even wrong.
You opened your eructation in place or argument with a claim to have thought long and hard about this. Unwittingly all you told us instead is that you’re incapable of thinking long and hard about anything.
Why not try at least to prove me wrong by producing some fruits of your thinking that aren’t either logically hopeless or absent entirely?