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Opdrey

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I totally "get" that you have experience of God. Do you think that everyone does and that some of us are just too stupid/blind/less-than-you that we missed them?

I'm not saying your experience of God is somehow flawed. Just that it seems that the only way you can deal with people who have sought but failed to find God is to just repeat your chants as if that will change something. Almost as if you don't believe others can have a different experience from you.
 
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Opdrey

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Which camp is Jesus in?

I don't know what to do with this question. Was Jesus real? If so was he actually the Son of God and homoousios with God?

The more I think about it the more fascinating your question becomes. Because it rests on an assumption that, as in all things in faith, requires faith that it is what it claims to be. What happens if the single most important being to EVER trod the planet earth left no real trace of his physical presence? No contemporary writings about him, nothing?

Thomas was allowed a touch to confirm his doubts. Was Thomas damned to hell for doubting? Did God not realize that the world has a LOT of Thomases? Given that we are forbade any wound to touch are we thus damned?

You are fortunate because you "believe". How hard was it for you? Don't tell me about your misspent youth and how you stumbled on the truth of God and found peace. No, once you learned about God how hard was it to believe so perfectly that your faith in unshakable?

For a lot of people it is automatic.

Does God simply want people like me who fail to "feel his presence" to just pray anyway? Should I create a potemkin faith so that I dot all the "i's" and cross all the "t's"? Is that something that God would like very much?
 
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TLK Valentine

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Indeed -- Theistic people have their little experiences and choose to attribute those experiences to a god; Christians go a step further and attribute it to the Judeo-Christian "God."

But that is still a choice -- you can I could have similar if not identical experiences; you call it "God,"and I call it "luck." What do you call that choice if not "belief"?
 
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Opdrey

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Are you refering to the Eucharistic Miracle in Poland (Sokolka)? HERE

(You know you could just have said "Sokolka Miracle" and I could look it up.)
 
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NBB

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You don't know what i experienced, and you are assuming things with your atheistic perspective.
 
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Mountainmike

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The APPEARANCE to an observer could be local.
And if it simply the appearance of movement of the sun it would be easily explained as an error by the observer.

if you actually studied Fatima
( I own at least ten books, including several that have hundreds of eye witness statements , in native Portuguese and English, several in English and Portuguese)

you would know that lazy tropes in place of research do not confirm that hypothesis. The number, nature of observers, geographic distribution , and independence of observers show that is not true. The physical effects cannot be explained by “observation error” . Two people viewing a rainbow see it in a different place. Which one in your view made an “ observation error? “

I did suggest you study it before comment. Apparently being “ a chemist “ precludes the need to study. It is hard to know what I have said on which you disagree because of that?

But if you prefer your opinion as someone who was not there , to the 70000 observers, hundreds of reports, many sceptic journalists and so on , including the outcome of an enquiry, then be my guest.

I had hoped we could talk about evidence. What possible purpose is served by me giving links , if you prefer your opinion on Fatima to the evidence, and you insult me twice in succeeding posts?

You are new to these threads, I have referred readers to various websites, videos, statements of pathologists, eg the book on tixtla of which the back half is forensic reports, probably 60 pages. I do not refuse, or dodge, i am simply becoming cynical about the value of doing so. You will note nobody here is interested in other than what skepdic or skeptoid has to say.

I have also suggested people buy the books. But apparently, where I have to pay for access to many journals, those on this site refuse to pay. Alas knowledge is not free. My books onthe shroud probably cost several hundred which is why I know most of what there is to know about it. Books and videos on Eucharistic miracles a couple of hundred too.

But Yet again I will oblige - you will find a précis on “ therealpresence.org” for each of Buenos airies , sokolka, tixtla, legnica.

I told you the statement by pathologist Lawrence “ convincing evidence of creation...the formation of human heart tissue from an inanimate wafer”

Follow the videos eg blood of Christ from tesoriero and willesee, who spent 20 years investigating.

The best book is newly released “ my human heart “ tesoriero.
Castarnons book on tixtla is worthwhile. As indeed the book on lanciano as an introduction.
 
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Mountainmike

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Are you refering to the Eucharistic Miracle in Poland (Sokolka)? HERE

(You know you could just have said "Sokolka Miracle" and I could look it up.)
I did. I referred to Buenos airies , tixtla , sokolka , legnica
Many times across these threads. See my previous post.
 
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Opdrey

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if you actually studied Fatima

Only just a little bit. Given that I don't believe in the Ganesha Milk Miracle of 1995 I similarly don't really believe the Fatima Miracle.

This is not to say that I would 100% say it didn't happen. Just that I have no real reason to believe it did. Otherwise I'd have to be any number of faiths because so many faiths have miracles.

I did suggest you study it before comment. Apparently being “ a chemist “ precludes the need to study.

No, it just means that if you want to have a conversation about the science of analytical chemistry we can do so.

I had hoped we could talk about evidence.

I would gladly. But you'd need to actually be willing to discuss it as well.

What possible purpose is served by me giving links , if you prefer your opinion on Fatima

It's called "supporting your own argument" which is something people who actually believe their own arguments are often willing to do.


You have spent a LOT of time now telling us about your library and its monetary value. Kudso.

But Yet again I will oblige - you will find a précis on “ therealpresence.org” for each of Buenos airies , sokolka, tixtla, legnica.

OK, so not a scientific or even remotely unbiased source. Got it. Thanks.
 
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Opdrey

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I did. I referred to Buenos airies , tixtla , sokolka , legnica
Many times across these threads. See my previous post.

Yeah, thanks.

Is there a reason you never capitalize proper nouns?
 
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TLK Valentine

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Are you refering to the Eucharistic Miracle in Poland (Sokolka)? HERE

(You know you could just have said "Sokolka Miracle" and I could look it up.)

But obfuscation to create the illusion of profundity is half the fun!
 
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Opdrey

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But obfuscation to create the illusion of profundity is half the fun!

I can't really fault Mountain, I've had times when I've gone over a point so many times it just gets boring going over it again for a n00b. It just would have helped in the clouds of words he threw up if he had taken just a second to at least give more than vague indications of which specific miracle he was talking about.
 
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TLK Valentine

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You don't know what i experienced, and you are assuming things with your atheistic perspective.

And you don't know what I have experienced, and are assuming things through your Christian perspective.

Which is why I specified that IF we had had similar or identical experiences, we might interpret them differently... our interpretations are "belief."

The Bible is, among numerous other things, a written record of a culture's experiences, assumed through their Hebrew perspective.
 
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TLK Valentine

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I would agree, but at this point, I'm fairly certain he's doing it on purpose.
 
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Mountainmike

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2 straw men.
1 non sequitur
1 utter irrelevance
1 ad hominem.

0 discussion of evidence
When you want to discuss evidence, using critical thinking, not apriori opinions of Fatima let me know.



 
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Mountainmike

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I have had the chance to witness many responses to evidence of possible miracles.

Here is the sceptic faith line of defence( adherence to which demands never looking at the evidence )

1/ to suggest clever analytical people often have blind spots to even consider such things.
2/ to attack the poster with a series of illinformed ad hominems eg they can’t be scientists to consider it
3/ to use a set of straw men, eg comparing with other known frauds, when there is nothing in common
4/ to use a series of sceptic tropes eg “pious fraud” “ psychosomatic” when it has nothing in common with the phenomenon
5/ to even descend to looking at skepdic or skeptoid for arguments against , when they will only accept peer reviewed journals they say! Hypocrites the lot of them.
6/ when all else fails ,they change to other ground , like try to deviate to the ark.. or similar, where they think their arguments are stronger.

A scientist would look at the evidence before 1-6

The oddity is after all the usual lines of defence , and a few ad hominems fail, some then expect cooperation with evidence. Why would I bother?

Despite all the blather the evidence of
Eucharistic miracles, defies explanation for all who dare look.
Not one of 1-6 changes the facts.

Every now and then a few pick up the ball run with it, and are gobsmacked about the truth when they find it, the one or two make it all worthwhile.
 
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FrumiousBandersnatch

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That is exactly your position, not mine.
If the forensic reports of Eucharistic miracles said “ fraud” I would be happy to believe it. They didn’t. So you invent any old sophistry to ignore a clear pattern.
But it isn't clear, is it? You were unable to answer questions about your assertions or provide verifiable evidence for them. Just repeating them more energetically is not adequate - as I suspect you realise but can't admit.
 
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FrumiousBandersnatch

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All points already addressed. As before, unless you know something about a topic, you will look foolish trying to criticise it, the argument from incredulity is a fallacy of ignorance, and simply repeating unsubstantiated claims doesn't amount to evidence.
 
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Mountainmike

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But it isn't clear, is it? You were unable to answer questions about your assertions or provide verifiable evidence for them. Just repeating them more energetically is not adequate - as I suspect you realise but can't admit.
You used a series of generic tropes that failed to address the specifics in the hope enough smoke equated to fire.

In at least 3 of the cases I cite - the pathologist took their own samples.

So chain of custody was an irrelevance, and even if it mattered:
there is no known means of falsifying them certainly by a priest!
You cannot take heart samples whose DNA does not sequences or take samples that have white cells in vitro for more than hours.
Robert Lawrence used the words “ compelling evidence of creation … of heart tissue from a wafer”

You haven’t contested it , and so I still take the pathologists view, until you have a compelling narrative to disregard it, you don’t.

What I accuse you of most is intellectual laziness, driven by confirmation bias. You want to dismiss them so look for the easiest argument you can find, regardless of whether it is relevant. And even use skepdic as a source knowing it is unreliable.
 
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Mountainmike

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Show me 1/ the structure of the first conjectured cell.
2/ The inert process by which it happened from non living constituents. ( the abiogenesis step).
3/ What structure of genome it had?
4/ The pathway from that cell to present cells
Till you have 2 you no have no potential experiment therefore no hypothesis that confirms abiogenesis.

You have nothing except a few plausibility arguments that miss the hardest puzzle of all. Oh… and literally a library of failed attempts at answering the above. A poor return for billions.

if you do have a structure, show me, I’m fascinated.
But then since the experiment if successful would be in every newspaper in the western world I doubt it!.
 
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FrumiousBandersnatch

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Well, you've confirmed what I said earlier - you will only find evidence that supports your position credible and you react badly to any questioning of that evidence. I notice you make no attempt to rebut the arguments presented.

For my part, I don't know exactly what happened at Fatima, but I give the claimed miracle extremely low credibility, particularly in view of the contradictory eyewitness accounts consistent with the more plausible alternatives involving demonstrably unreliable human perception, memory, and group psychology.

ISTM that, if reports of an event can be explained by well-established phenomena, there is no advantage to be gained by invoking the supernatural.
 
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