Lillefix
I'm serious. You can.
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2003
- Messages
- 5,699
So if you compare eye-witnessing something vs reading it in a book (by whom actually?) - I'm sure you'd prefer the witnesses.
Absolutely. So where can I talk to these witnesses?
So if you compare eye-witnessing something vs reading it in a book (by whom actually?) - I'm sure you'd prefer the witnesses.
So, either prove me wrong (with actual facts, not insults like "primitive people" - who built PYRAMIDS, yeah???) or just actually give some thought to what I say.
the tradition is exactly what I say: the preserver of the past events in their TRUE form.
As of Hinduism, I did say that I see no EVENT there to be the SOURCE (beginning point) of tradition.
A BOOK is not such a point - unless maybe for Jedism.![]()
Not gonna repeat myself.
Also, archeology and paleontology are both too subjective to be decisive in such big-scale topics.
Simple question that no one ever answered me:
WHEN and WHO "invented" the Torah - and the ENTIRE Jewish nation took it for granted???
(Not those outdated "theories" of compilation - tell me EXACTLY who and when forced the entire nation to believe in its history the way it WASN'T, according to you.)
Tell me THAT - then we'll might discuss it.
All other stuff is bound to be "maybe"s.
So, either prove me wrong
I took the test and am a pretty hard core theist:Since you make this last claim, I invite you and any one else to take this quiz, and address any apparent hits you and they receive: http://www.philosophersnet.com/games/god.php
Any true hit is a contradiction, which in my eyes would make your view point impossible. Similarly biting the bullet and claiming uncommon ideas to be true is a sign of error. However the quiz may be wrong.
Tasted fine to me.You have been awarded the TPM medal of distinction! This is our second highest award for outstanding service on the intellectual battleground.
The fact that you progressed through this activity without being hit and biting only one bullet suggests that your beliefs about God are internally consistent and well thought out.
A direct hit would have occurred had you answered in a way that implied a logical contradiction. The bitten bullet occurred because you responded in a way that required that you held a view that most people would have found strange, incredible or unpalatable. However, because you bit only one bullet and avoided direct hits completely you still qualify for our second highest award. A good achievement!
3 million people standing shoulder to shoulder cover about 70 acres of flat land. Throw in animals, tents, food latrines etc., it would get much larger. Waste disposal would be a serious problem. How many gallons of urine and pounds of feces would be "dumped" every 24 hours? It seems like way too many people for the very severe conditions posed by the Sinai.What I was referring to - was the EVENT of Sinai revelation, with 3 million people PRESENT there.
(the text you are responding to)[/_quote]. (without the _ between [/ and quote obviously). It would make it much easier to understand what exactly you are responding to and makes your posts easier to read.
You know, there is such a thing as a quote function. You can use it by going quote(the text you are responding to)/_quote. (without the _ between / and quote obviously). It would make it much easier to understand what exactly you are responding to and makes your posts easier to read.
Well, I did say it was an event that involved lots of people vs other stories that involved just few.
The credence of thousands is far higher than dozens.
See above.Even the idea of the various religions effectively disproves the notion of such an appeal, since we have multiple historical traditions that contradict each other; therefore an appeal to historical tradition is NOT proof of truth.
They still do.Fact 1: people in the past believed wrong things
I could probably expand this to "people believe wrong things". Regardless, the fact is that people back in the ages when these stories started being passed down generations, believed numerous false things. For example, in the past, we've had humanity believe that the Earth is flat - yet that is demonstrably wrong.
Suuure, like you WERE there to know.As such, any claims by these "3 million Jews" that they "experienced God" is without basis. It is not credible, and definitely is NOT proof of the truth of the Torah.
Whereas my great...........grandpa/ma definitely WERE, and then told their children who..... who told me.
Yeah, you can always play the trump of "hallucinations" - regardless that it's millions of people and FORTY years (MANNA, people tend to forget about it; oh, and it WASN'T the way the "scientists" want it to be - the many details of it would NOT apply to a simple bush or whatever).
Unless WRITTEN in a BOOK.
Exactly my point - double-checking by BOTH tradition AND books.
Maybe so for Hinduism (just guessing, don't care much) - not so for the nation that held its scholars in highest esteem while most of the nation being learned at least to read it.
Maybe.
But some are too "big" to be just a "chance".
What about next 500 years???If I were to predict the weather for the next 5 days, and by random chance get it right, this does not mean that anything I speak of is the truth.
"This can't be true cause I don't want it to be true."
EVENT. WITNESSES. TRADITION.
How is that compared to Earth being flat or not???
Not my main point anyways.The fact that the Torah is an extremely old religion does NOT prove that it is true.
I don't need to prove it to MYSELF.Logical Fallacy 4: burden of proof
It is not necessary to disprove a claim; it is only necessary to show that the claim has insufficient proof. For example, if I were to claim "there are invisible unicorns on our planet", you would not be able to disprove that. You should not believe it as true just because you can't disprove it. We could easily construct statements that lack proof, prompting us to believe contradictory things simply because we cannot disprove either.
Neither did my parents, their parents..... back to the very EVENT which you DISREGARD.
Well, I actually PROVE it by saying that IGNORED thing about tradition.Therefore, the fact that the Bible or the Torah or the claim "there are invisible unicorns" cannot be disproved, does NOT prove that it is true, and in fact prompts us to disbelieve.
you said:The reason I believe the Torah is this.
(I'm not leaving the thread - I'm leaving this branch of discussion.)
Graffito
What that has to do with me?![]()
I meant - why would _I_ care???
That teasing is pretty pointless, dude.![]()