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I accept Burden of Proof, but only because I choose to.

Paulomycin

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It's not a rule-in-itself. It's only necessary to determine who goes first in a debate; that's all.

Taken from the article, "You Can Prove A Negative," by Stephen Law Ph.D.

 
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Mark Quayle

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What bothers me is how slippery that word, "reasonable", is! Thank God for debate, and the occasional eye-opening undeniable discovery.

But to apply the point of your post, are the Atheists simply intellectually lazy, and it's a cop-out, to say it is not that they deny the existence of God but that the existence of God has not been proven them beyond reasonable doubt? Or is there something else going on there? After all, surely it is not up to them to prove his non-existence! So are they stretching the meaning of 'reasonable' to suit their proclivities? To talk to them, their reaction to the notion of the existence of God is usually far more virulent than suits their supposed mere lack of belief.
 
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Paulomycin

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What bothers me is how slippery that word, "reasonable", is!

YES! Is it referring to subjective reasonableness, or objective reason? If "subjective," then one can claim the license to "flat-earth" any evidence they just don't like.

But to apply the point of your post, are the Atheists simply intellectually lazy, and it's a cop-out, to say it is not that they deny the existence of God but that the existence of God has not been proven them beyond reasonable doubt?

I really do think they're coming from a position of, "If I can force subjective doubt upon evidence, then it's not good evidence." As-if forced incredulity were a fair substitute for evidence to the contrary.

But anyone can do that with pretty much anything that exists. It's not difficult. You just have to "nuh-uh" more than your opponent.
 
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Mark Quayle

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More often than I'd like to say, I force incredulity on the news I hear, knowing full well, that so far every such claim of theirs is in some way misrepresenting the facts.

So I wonder if the God that Christendom has proffered just hasn't given them anything to believe in. That's why I keep going back to First Cause, and Omniptence, and why they keep returning to their second string, "Well, that still doesn't prove the Gods of religions exist"
 
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Mark Quayle

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"
But anyone can do that with pretty much anything that exists. It's not difficult. You just have to "nuh-uh" more than your opponent.
"Nuh-uh, INFINITY!"
 
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Mark Quayle

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I think the persuasive burden rests on whoever wants to persuade. If atheists...err... I mean...non stamp collectors want to remain unpersuasive, thats fine by me.
Yet, if they want to engage in debate, shouldn't they have a stand besides, "persuade me."?
 
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Paulomycin

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Yet, if they want to engage in debate, shouldn't they have a stand besides, "persuade me."?

You're right. That should be the audience's position; not the position of the debater.
 
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Lion IRC

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Sure. It's a contest of ideas.
If you don't compete, you can hardly claim victory.

Vocal atheists dont like being called proselytizers or counter-apologists because that implies a burden of proof expectation. (Why should I think atheism is true? How did the universe get here? Isnt atheism just wishful thinking? etc. etc.)

What bothers me is when the atheist claims their worldview to be the default truth position.

Or when the atheist tells me that I have to disprove every other religion, when that's the atheist's job. Not mine.
 
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Paulomycin

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Or when the atheist tells me that I have to disprove every other religion, when that's the atheist's job. Not mine.

It's shockingly easy though: Simply apply omnipotence as a litmus test for all religious claims.

For example, take Thor:

Thor is the son of Odin. <-- Whoops! That means there was a time when Thor was non-existent. That's not omnipotent. Thor is then quickly eliminated.

What about Odin? Well, Odin's the son of Bor, so same thing. Odin's not omnipotent.

What about Bor? Well, same as Odin, and on and on. . .until their lineage goes all the way back to a celestial cow.

"Cow," when consistently and honestly applied, is always limited to the form-designation of "cow." A cow can never be anything other than "cow." So, the cow is not omnipotent either.

It's a fun little game to play. You can take out all pantheons with it.

To be fair, even a few interpretations of "the big three" in monotheism.
 
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Mark Quayle

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I agree wholeheartedly. I like to use the fact that they esteem the notion that Atheism is the default as being an altogether trustworthy fact, as evidence of how lousy their logic is. They really have no reason for claiming such a thing --just, "it seems to me...".

Also, their very arrogance is often based on their mere esteem of their own thinking, and they like to claim 'SCIENCE!' as though anything they might conceive of was thus somehow justified, by virtue of the "fact that religion is faulty and unscientific"!
 
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Mark Quayle

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Yes, it is predictable and almost tiresome (but still, entertaining, haha), how quickly they run full circle from your claim of 'Omnipotence' (or what I like to use --'First Cause'-- as necessary in all considerations concerning God, back to their protest, "Even if you were right, it doesn't prove that the 'Christian god' exists!" THIS, they consider debate! --No! Worse! They consider it a win!
 
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cloudyday2

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It seems to me that beliefs should come from a practical evaluation of evidence. The evidence should first inspire a hypothesis, and then that hypothesis should be tested against evidence that was not used to inspire it. The process should be repeated until the best hypothesis is discovered.

So there needs to be a clearly stated hypothesis to challenge. There is frustration in trying to cast doubt on "Christianity" when every Christian believes something different, and this might explain the "you can't prove a negative" gripe often heard from atheists. What they really mean to say is: "you can't debate with people who can't or won't tell you what they believe".
 
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Mark Quayle

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I suppose that is reasonable enough for some to use as a rule But, I'm not so sure your (apparently) scientific method is necessary for good thinking.

I would note, however, that nobody who believes something as remarkable as God Causing, sees that remarkable thing quite the same way as anyone else. SO MUCH --all of life, in fact-- hinges on this notion in every related thought, that nobody even concentrates on any one thing quite exactly the same way that anybody else does. Disparate views are inevitable. We are finite beings trying to put a handle on the infinite.

Furthermore, and there is truth to it, the educated (modern) people tend to reject religion, and (not going into the causes there) are usually more vocal and capable of saying things in a way that can be understood rather clearly, at least to some degree. (This does not mean what they believe is more valid.) On the opposition, believers who are unable to explain what they believe, if they are vocal, tend to be simply noisy or antagonistic, and avoid references to clear logic drawn on presuppositions common to both parties.

There is another obstruction which no doubt is hard for you to swallow, and I don't doubt you have heard it before, but the fact that the unbeliever, as Scripture says, is unable to understand Spiritual things, does not mean the true believer has become a glassy-eyed Zombie and no longer has need of logic or presuppositions (Lol, pardon the hyperbole --I find it hard sometimes to get a point across without it). Yet his mind is no longer the same, nor are his desires and intentions any longer quite the same, as they once were. This I say to denigrate neither side --just to point it out. The believer experiences, not through reason, but empirically, what the unbeliever cannot experience empirically, and it cannot be related, what the Bible calls 'the evidence of what is not seen'. It may not be tangible, but it is nevertheless truly experiential. THIS IS NOT IRRATIONAL, however; the fact it does not come to through mere reason does not mean it has no reason, nor that reason does not arrive at the same conclusion, for the believer.

The unbeliever may well be convinced of the logical necessity for First Cause, but not understand the logical implications of it, perhaps by 'not going there', or by simple habit of incredulity / skepticism; but the hard thing is, we really don't know how much or little our motivations cause us to ignore the implication --particularly-- of submission of the Created to the Creator. I hope that doesn't just sound like word salad to you.

One of the principles taught in good science is the peril of first believing something, then going about proving it. Yet that is what we do even when presupposing. In spite of ourselves, what we like or don't like makes all the difference between what we pursue in our 'proving'. It is simply the nature of proving. As you are no doubt aware, it is in recognizing this foible of humanity that false effects of it can best be mitigated. Sadly (and I include myself) Christians WAY too often do not realize they do that.

There's a lot more, but I'm running way long already. Thanks for your patience.
 
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cloudyday2

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Another one of my pet peeves about apologetics debates is the lack of discussion of contemporary evidence. Christian apologists typically don't go beyond arguing for the existence of a creator God, but Christianity claims that God is very active in the lives of ordinary Christians today. Some of God's activity might be subtle like gradually improved personalities, but other activity might be less subtle like claimed miracles.

I have felt that I experienced answers to prayers and other supernatural interventions in my life, and yet there seems to be no evidence in general for anything supernatural. How can that be? Is there something about the scientific method that makes it blind to potentially supernatural causes?

But I think this is what atheists mean when they ask for evidence.
 
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Mark Quayle

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Yes, they want mundane but irrefutable evidence of supernaturalism. They have it in front of their faces daily, but according to Scripture, they are unable to see it, according to their corrupt will.

The tools of science are unable to assess the supernatural. You cannot, for example, prove math. The best you can do in showing that 2 + 2 = 4 is circular statements, restating what you already asserted. We only know it works, and that it makes perfect sense.

The lost "will not be convinced even if someone rises from the dead." It takes a change of heart.
 
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Tinker Grey

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This is why in the thread on miracles (and on other threads I don't remember any more) that I ask for evidence of miracles in the here and now. If you can't demonstrate the supernatural or the spiritual (for some more religious than just emotion), then all apologetics explaining why it must is useless. Why it must be? Well, as far as I can tell, it don't be.
 
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Mark Quayle

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And so we go on our merry ways. Sadly enough. Once again, convincing is not the same as evidence.

Edit: I guess I should have said, convincing is not the same thing as proving.
 
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Tinker Grey

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And so we go on our merry ways. Sadly enough. Once again, convincing is not the same as evidence.

Edit: I guess I should have said, convincing is not the same thing as proving.
Here, do a miracle. You've got 30 minutes to tell me my in-real-life middle name. Can you do it?

Of course not. Pray that I grow 6 inches taller. Can you do it? Go to your hospital and heal everybody. I'm sure it'll be in my evening news. Jesus supposedly could. Can you?

If the apologist can demonstrate the supernatural, why should anyone believe it. There is simply no reason to believe any story that includes the supernatural.
 
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cloudyday2

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The difficulty with using reports of miracles as evidence for supernatural is that in most cases the miracle is in the way a NATURAL occurrence satisfies some need at just the right time. For example, there was a ghost story where a person did not have money to buy cigarettes but in stopping the car a bunch of old coins came sliding out of the headliner into his lap which allowed him to buy the cigarettes. If the coins had simply slid out of the headliner at some random time and without a need for coins then it would have seemed more mundane. Although that example is a ghost story, Christian reports of miracles are often the same - natural occurrences that satisfy some need at just the right time and often after requesting help from God. It seems that these types of miracles are very hard to confirm as supernatural.

However, there are reports of miracles that would seem supernatural. For example, there are ghost stories where objects such as cutlery fly across the room and are witnessed by multiple people. Similarly there is at least one story of a Christian in Africa returning to life after being dead for several days. Why is there never any evidence for these things? Or maybe there is evidence, but we simply prefer to ignore it because it makes us uncomfortable to take these reports seriously?

A final factor is psychology. Some people imagine things or hallucinate things. Then there are unscrupulous people who exaggerate reports to make the books they write sell better. Or similarly preachers who want to whip their parish into a frenzy of tithing with some uplifting story of a miracle. Hate to be cynical, but it almost seems that nobody takes contemporary reports of miracles and supernatural seriously enough to investigate carefully. Why? Do we subconsciously know they are all bunk or do we subconsciously worry that they might overturn our comfortable ideas about reality? I think a lot of Christians are just as skeptical as atheists when the topic is contemporary reports of miracles and supernatural. They believe Moses parted the Red Sea, but they don't believe God does things like that today. That is why they always want to talk about philosophy and cosmology instead of an active God today. (Sorry for the rant LOL)
 
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