2PhiloVoid, I will try to fill in voids I see in your argument.
Alright. Thank you for your assistance.
Understood. In court the jury is instructed to consider the credibility of the witnesses. One juror may find a particular witness credible, but another may see reasons to doubt. But that does not mean every trial ends in a hung jury. It is possible to discuss the credibility of the various witnesses, and come to agreement. That is what we are looking to do here. Although the evaluation is subjective, we are trying to see if the overall witness is credible.
But, to come to an agreement on whether the witnesses are credible or not, wouldn't we also have to have a prior agreement as to what actually counts for "credibility"? Otherwise, if we can't agree on the defining conceptual framework by which we will evaluate the witnesses, then it's unlikely we'll be able to come to much in the way of any kind of agreement about their validity. It seems to me there remains a prior problem regarding the subjectivity of the very criteria by which we will attempt to conjointly evaluate the witnesses of the resurrection. And in my estimation, this has to be resolved first—if it's even possible to do so--before we can assess much of anything metaphysical; and this doesn't even touch upon other problems I could bring into the conversation here, such as those associated with one's personal 'philosophy of history,' or with one's view of how various epistemological structures and functions actually deal with evaluations and justifications.
That certainly is an option, to believe in spite of credible witnesses, just as a Mormon or Muslim could choose to believe a different faith without credible witnesses. If one is in that situation, then he should be honest. He should admit that the evidence he has is not convincing, but he chooses to believe anyway.
Actually, I'm not saying a person should be able to believe despite the presence of credible witnesses; I'm saying that even the presence of credible witnesses guarantees little to nothing on an epistemological level. It's an existential and epistemological set of problems that usually gets ignored. (It's kind of like wanting to drive your car, but neglecting to air up the tires sufficiently.)
For the most part, I'm suggesting that belief about the resurrection can also emerge out of a conglomeration of personal considerations coming out of the totality of one's (constructed) understanding of existence and reality—and obviously, this in itself is problematic right from the start because worldviews and working paradigms will vary from person to person. I'm also suggesting that belief is not merely derived by building some kind of Foundational style structure of justification … which is the usual epistemological “go to,” one that I don't subscribe too.
If there are credible witnesses, it would convince many of us.
I'd have to disagree that anyone is really fully convinced merely by the perception that the New Testament contains credible witnesses. I say this because we are talking about placing faith in a transcendent being who has supposedly broken into the natural events of human history, a very unusual thing; we're not simply trying to decide whether or not Johnny Joe actually murdered his neighbor and is thus subject to a collective judgment of guilt or innocence.
In addition to the possibility of valid witnesses, I think our individual perception of any supposed credibility in the New Testaments texts would also need to include our individual recognition and acceptance of any ethical and metaphysical claims which may be embedded within the content of the New Testament texts themselves. If we only come to a place where we think some writer in the New Testament really saw and experienced the resurrection of Jesus, I don't think we will automatically conclude that God is good, God is great, and thank Him daily for our fate, and thereby become pious Christian men and women.
Your job is to make the credible case.
Is it "my job" to make it credible? All I can do is offer you considerations about the resurrection emerging out of my respective worldview, your own acceptance of which will depend on various factors within your psychological structure.
That is an ad hominem attack. It is an attack on the person. It is saying that the other person is wrong because he is closed minded. Please refrain from attacking the person.
I'm not presenting an
ad hominem attack since I'm not saying that you simply have decided not to believe. Nor am I saying you lack belief due to some "deficiency" of your mind or in your character. No, I'm saying that, despite your claim to the contrary, the presence of "credible witnesses" won't necessarily evoke faith in your mind, Merle, regardless of any kind of epistemological structure you subscribe too.
There are probably many open minded people reading this. Your job is to make your case convincing to those that are open minded, not to attack the readers as being closed minded.
I'm making no evaluations as to just how open or closed minded you may be. So far, I have no idea about any of that, and it remains to be seen.
Obviously it would take very good witnesses to convince most unbiased people that a person rose from the dead. No matter how strong the witnesses, there is always the possibility that the witnesses were mistaken for one of the reasons I have mentioned. Nevertheless, if there was strong witness that the body was indeed dead, that the body was clearly missing, and that the person was clearly interacted with in a physical form, that would be something worth considering.
Yes, it would be worth considering, but consideration alone isn't necessarily going to bring about belief; this isn't science, this is religion, and I have yet to see anyone assert that there is a precise “method” or a “formula” for arriving at Christian belief, even as it pertains to the resurrection of Jesus.
Do we have that kind of witness?
Maybe … in minute amounts. But, again, we're not trying to build belief in a theory and an application that will help us construct a spaceship and landing mode which will get us to and from Mars. No, we're trying to enter into a mental position where we can value Jesus as a historical and metaphysical entity via the sublime concept of His resurrection, along with other historical, epistemological, metaphysical, ethical, experiential and various personal considerations.
Paul is credible in that he wrote around the time of Christ, and appears to be telling us what he sees. However, he arguably has nothing to say about an empty tomb or a resurrected Jesus walking around on earth after the resurrection.
I'd like to suggest that perhaps you don't think Paul is credible because you want to see (or be able to cite) certain kinds of historical and empirical statements in his texts, and it may just be that Paul simply didn't deem it necessary to articulate the earthly qualities about Jesus' life, death, and resurrection in the ways that would jive with empirical expectations and thus provide epistemic gratification for those with such expectations, let alone gratify scientific mindsets more appropriate to the 21st century. So, a claim to whether Paul qualifies as “credible” or not is contingent on how one conceives the requirements of credibility.
Understood. You can choose to base your faith on something other than evidence. The question here is, for those who choose to trust evidence, is the evidence there?
No one gets to just proffer that an “evidentialist” perspective is the key to belief, especially without first entering the rabbit-hole of prior justification for that in itself … Shall we take W. K. Clifford to task...first? Or, how about Peter Boghossian's subscription to Foundationalism? Shall we take his view to task … first? And even if we do all that, will it enable us to surmount the distance of Lessing's Ditch?
Peace,
2PhiloVoid