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If God manifested himself, how would you know that it was God?

variant

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I have given you a criterion, unfortunately the above is nowhere convincing evidence that God does not exist because:

As stated I have no ability to show evidence that God does not exist, as that would be asking me to prove a negative on an unfalsifiable theory.

Thus my position is that God is not in evidence.

1) Earth is the only planet in the entire cosmos consisting of billions of stars known to hold and support large amounts of complex life forms, both in terms of the number of species as well as quantity. To claim this as rare is a gross understatement.

The universe is estimated to have a septillion stars 10 with 24 zeros.

The amount we have "explored" for life is so insignificant it may as well be zero.

So, we can call your ideas on the likelihood of life premature.

2) It has not been proven by any scientist that conditions necessary for life on Earth could be replicated in some other systems and neither had any scientist found evidences of replications of Earth-like conditions in other systems.

We actually have found plenty of interesting prospects. The issue would be actually exploring them for life.

Earth-like exoplanets: Planets like ours may be very common.

3) Even the fact that Earth like conditions could remain static for thousands of years despite a universe that could have supernovas and other changes happening every second should be enough to leave people in awe and unbelief.

Billions of years. The earth has been relatively stable for billions, not thousands of years.

Planets that have the correct conditions are also going to have the ability to be very long lived.

Tell me how the scenarios described above can happen if God does not exist.

I have the impression that you simply don't understand the scope of the issue you are discussing.

Try to think about it this way though.

A We don't know how likely life is but we know it can exist.
B We don't know how many planets there are like earth but we know earth is possible.
C We know there are so many stars in the universe that it is hard to contemplate how many tries the universe had to get the conditions right.

Does it follow that:

D Life on earth is so unlikely God is the only explanation?

The answer is no.
 
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WoundedDeep

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The anthropomorphic principle in a nutshell: Imagine I've laid thousands and thousands of shot glasses on the ground on a football field. Heck, make it millions of glasses in a massive field. I then fly over the field and throw a marble out the window. That marble will land in a glass. If the marble could talk, it might be tempted to say "How on earth did I end up in this glass? There's no way I just landed here -- what are the odds of that?!"

In other words, we are clearly the exception. Whether there is life elsewhere or not, I do not know. But I do know that, because we are the exception, whatever placed us here faced long odds in doing so.

So in your scenario, you are the agent for making the incident happen, am I right?

So is it preposterous to say we are here on Earth, uniquely placed, due to an External Agent, whom Christians acknowledge as God? If your answer is no, then my point is proven.
 
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Conscious Z

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So in your scenario, you are the agent for making the incident happen, am I right?

So is it preposterous to say we are here on Earth, uniquely placed, due to an External Agent, whom Christians acknowledge as God? If your answer is no, then my point is proven.

My scenario says nothing about what the specific cause of a "longshot" is, only that the recipient of a longshot should expect that his or her scenario came about as the product of an unlikely set of events. The big bang and evolution are consistent with this, and the fact that the earth exhibits "fine tuning" or that the formation of organic compounds on early earth seems unlikely are not arguments against the big bang or evolution because they are consistent with us being the exception.
 
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WoundedDeep

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The universe is estimated to have a septillion stars 10 with 24 zeros.

The amount we have "explored" for life is so insignificant it may as well be zero.

So, we can call your ideas on the likelihood of life premature.

I don't know where you read that the universe had septillion stars, but assuming that's true, all the more it is an understatement to say Earth is only a rare planet.

We actually have found plenty of interesting prospects. The issue would be actually exploring them for life.

Earth-like exoplanets: Planets like ours may be very common.

How are prospects supposed to be concrete evidence? Furthermore, even if planets like Earth could be found (and the chances are already small compared to the actual number of star systems), what are the odds of discovering large amounts of different complex life on a Earth-like planet? Slim to none. My scenario could very well remain as I described.

Billions of years. The earth has been relatively stable for billions, not thousands of years.

And do you not wonder how this can happen despite the general volatility of the universe?

Planets that have the correct conditions are also going to have the ability to be very long lived.

What evidence gave you that conclusion? The universe is known to be dynamic, not static. There is no reason why planets should remain static unless something or Someone makes it so.

I have the impression that you simply don't understand the scope of the issue you are discussing.

Try to think about it this way though.

A We don't know how likely life is but we know it can exist.
B We don't know how many planets there are like earth but we know earth is possible.
C We know there are so many stars in the universe that it is hard to contemplate how many tries the universe had to get the conditions right.

Does it follow that:

D Life on earth is so unlikely God is the only explanation?

The answer is no.

I am getting wearied by your reasonings and active denial to be frank.

Option D should be rephrased to say "Given the uniqueness of Earth in all the scenarios described above, there ought to be some careful design in place for them to occur. Therefore, a Designer is needed."
 
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WoundedDeep

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As stated I have no ability to show evidence that God does not exist, as that would be asking me to prove a negative on an unfalsifiable theory.

So what is the motivation for all the argument against God's existence anyway? What do you and the rest seek to achieve or prove when you yourself acknowledge you can't prove your own beliefs? Its baffling, really.
 
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WoundedDeep

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My scenario says nothing about what the specific cause of a "longshot" is, only that the recipient of a longshot should expect that his or her scenario came about as the product of an unlikely set of events. The big bang and evolution are consistent with this, and the fact that the earth exhibits "fine tuning" or that the formation of organic compounds on early earth seems unlikely are not arguments against the big bang or evolution because they are consistent with us being the exception.

But the fact is, the unlikely set of events cannot happen unless someone started the chain of events. Can the marble land on a random plate of glass if you did not first kick it? No, therefore my point remains that an external agent is needed.
 
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Roonwit

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The claim of God is basically a claim of a being that exists that can do anything.

With such an extreme claim you shouldn't be surprised that the evidence required for such a claim would also be fairly difficult.

The theist likes to pretend that the atheist is just intransigent because the claims they make are very difficult to evidence and often nebulously defined in an unfalsifiable manner.
I'll second variant on this: it makes sense that we would need greater proof for a being like god's existence than we would for the existence of a previously-unknown animal species....or really, just about anything else. The existence of an immaterial god who is omnipotent is quite a grand claim, whereas the existence of a new animal species really isn't contrary to anything in our everyday experience.
Wow, there were a lot of posts in three hours. I want to pick up on these two responses to mine, and in doing so also make reference to the points on falsifiability and burden of proof.

Although it is being claimed that claims made for belief in God are unfalsifiable, the atheist position is equally unfalsifiable. For most of their proponents on both sides, these beliefs are ultimately faith positions that are not falsifiable (ie. there is no evidence that could ever be put forward to make the person change their mind).

Falsifiability is about setting out reasonable criteria that give us the best chance of arriving at the right conclusion - ie. in this case, that if God exists then our line of argument will probably lead us to conclude that he does, and that if he does not then our line of argument will probably lead us to conclude that he does not. It is very important not to set a burden of proof so high that, in one direction or the other, it can never reasonably be met.

It is also important to consider all the evidence, and not only the strands of it that suit our viewpoint. For example, it is relevant evidence that a very large proportion of people through the ages and still today, including many who are phenomenally intelligent, have believed in God. This sets belief in God apart from belief in fairies or the Great Pumpkin. It is false reasoning to claim an equivalence between these different beliefs.

It is also unreasonable to make demands of God that he should not be expected to make, which I think is where Variant's first point was headed. I had a friend at university who said, "If God will come and sit on my bed and talk to me in person, then I'll believe in him." To which I responded, "Why should God do that? It's you who need him, not he who needs you." My friend was trying to make God into this kind of genie in a lamp who jumps at our beck and call; but such a being is not the God of the Bible, and therefore to require this of God in order to believe is not reasonable. It would be like me saying, "No, I'm just not going to obey the law unless the Prime Minister comes and explains it to me in person." Why should he do that? That isn't what the Prime Minister does or should be expected to do.

I think most of the philosophical and seemingly scientific arguments that try to prove or disprove God don't lead very far. The design arguments that have been discussed a little on this thread are ultimately unconvincing, because they depend too much on certain knowledge of things we just don't know, so they are only really convincing to people who are already theists. (That's not to say I think that the argument that it all came about by chance is convincing - just that there are too many unknowns to be able to say with any certainty that it didn't.) The arguments about why God allows suffering in the world that are the main argument put forward against belief in God are also unconvincing; there are many ways that these questions can be answered if you are so inclined that are perfectly logical; but equally, a person who is minded to disbelieve can easily persuade themselves that the questions have not been answered.

However, I do think the evidence around the resurrection of Jesus is very much worth dealing carefully with. It is the closest we can get to a falsifiability criterion. Paul writes that if the resurrection didn't happen then Christian faith is worthless (1 Cor 15:17). On the other hand, if it did happen, it is a very serious blow for atheism. I would recommend anyone who is genuinely interested in truth to examine this closely.

Again, we need to be careful not to set the bar for acceptance or rejection so high that we can never be convinced. We wouldn't do that with other beliefs, so why with this one. A lot of Christian arguments often come down to "The Bible says so so it must be true", which is not a falsifiable position. However, atheist arguments seek to turn every small area for doubt into a major challenge, which is also disingenuous.

I am not going to wade into all the arguments about who first arrived at the tomb on the Sunday morning and about whether the angels appeared to the women before or after Peter got there. That is the kind of detail we can't expect nor do we need historical certainty on. Neither is it reasonable to exclude the Bible or other Christian witnesses from consideration; it is hardly surprising that all the people who believe in the resurrection are Christians: if you become convinced of it then of course you will become a Christian. And the Bible, even if you regard it as no better than other historical sources, should also not be regarded as worse than other historical sources. In fact, secular historians generally rate its reliability pretty highly. Note also that, as a historical source, it is not a single book but is a collection of books from different authors as well. So it is not just one witness's account, but several.

The detailed questions of exactly what happened on that Sunday morning are largely unimportant for our study. However, the broader question of how early Christianity got started at all unless Jesus actually rose from the dead is not dependent on any one account or detail. There are strong traditions that all the disciples except possibly John were persecuted and killed for their claim that they had seen Jesus after he had risen from the dead. That makes their testimony pretty credible, because they were not dying just for their unsubstantiated belief in something, as modern Christians or Muslims or people of any faith persuasion might do, but for things that they had personally seen, and that if they were not true then they knew they were not true. Generally, people may die for things they believe in, but they don't die for things they know to be false.

Paul, writing probably less than 20 years after the events in question, writes of things that were passed on to him as tradition (and therefore have a very early origin), and he also writes of more than 500 witnesses who saw Jesus after he had risen, most of whom were still alive at the time of writing. Now, if he were writing this in a book that was being published to convince a sceptical audience then we might have reason to question his motive in writing it. But he is writing to people who already believe, mentioning the fact almost in passing as a clarification of a point that his hearers had misunderstood. There is no reason to suppose he expected this writing to be published any wider than to the church he was writing to. So his claim here is worthy taking seriously.

Of the various explanations for how the story of Jesus' resurrection got started, the one that is far and away the most plausible is that he actually rose from the dead. Claims of a stolen body raise the question of who. And in any case, if Jesus remained dead, whoever took the body, why would the disciples die for their claim that they had seen him risen? Claims that Jesus didn't really die are pretty implausible; even more implausible are the claims that he never even lived. Claims of hallucinations might be plausible if just one or two people had them, but if so many did, and were sufficiently convincing to be able to get people to risk social ostracism, persecution and even death on the basis of their claims, then this is stretching the boundaries of plausibility to past breaking point.

The resurrection accounts, then, I submit, provide our best candidates for falsifiable evidence, that really deserve close scrutiny. For anyone who genuinely wants to claim that they have carefully considered the question of God's existence and rejected it, they have to come up with a credible account of the rise of early Christianity aside from Jesus actually having risen from the dead. If they don't want to do this, their disbelief is every bit as much an unsubstantiated, unfalsifiable, irrational position as they claim of any religious viewpoint.

Roonwit
 
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Chris12

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I disagree! If God knows all things; he will know what it will take to convince an atheist, a skeptic, or any doubter of who he is. If he is unable to do that; why call him God???

K

I once saw heaven. I could feel the presence of God, but I could not see HIM, too far away I was. People (angels?) all clothed in white - millions perhaps? I don't know.. I was just another being there, one of so many.

Light was so bright, but it was the feeling. I could not stand. I could not stand. I was on my face worshiping the God I could only feel, not even see, just felt HIM.. and I NEVER wanted to stop, and NEVER wanted to leave.

Stick a fork in me and be done. Let me stay there, basking in more peace, more love, more power, more Glory than you can imagine..

I could NOT stand.. I was on my face and I could not stand. I was sent back, it was not my time HE said.. but I felt HIM.

Everyone will KNOW.. there is nothing to not know.. you know.
 
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variant

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So what is the motivation for all the argument against God's existence anyway? What do you and the rest seek to achieve or prove when you yourself acknowledge you can't prove your own beliefs? Its baffling, really.

Because I don't think God is in evidence because I don't think It exists.

You don't understand how deeply I disagree with you because I think the following:

I don't think believers have defined God in a comprehensible manner where it could actually be known or unknown.

The very concept of God is so ambiguous in terms of observations we can actually make as to be useless as an explanation.
 
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Chris12

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Because I don't think God is in evidence because I don't think It exists.

You don't understand how deeply I disagree with you because I think the following:

I don't think believers have defined God in a comprehensible manner where it could actually be known or unknown.

The very concept of God is so ambiguous in terms of observations we can actually make as to be useless as an explanation.

This will one day change. But you will see HIM, only in HIS people. Someday soon, they will become more apparent.
 
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variant

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This will one day change. But you will see HIM, only in HIS people. Someday soon, they will become more apparent.

Doubtful. I see a lot of braggadocio out of religious people but few if any comprehensive definitions or evidence of any of their claims.
 
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WoundedDeep

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Because I don't think God is in evidence because I don't think It exists.

You don't understand how deeply I disagree with you because I think the following:

I don't think believers have defined God in a comprehensible manner where it could actually be known or unknown.

The very concept of God is so ambiguous in terms of observations we can actually make as to be useless as an explanation.

God cannot be defined by humans or even the physical universe because He is invisible and is of a different nature from the universe you see. Does it make sense for you to define things of different nature using the same set of criteria? Obviously not.

But the universe, by the fact that it is subject to patterns and laws, shows that it is designed and created. This is a logical reasoning if you look at human inventions. Codes and patterns and commands are put into place by human intelligence, similarly gravity and other patterns we observe in the universe requires an intelligent Designer.

I gave you scenarios according to your request that clearly explain that Earth and complex life forms could not exist by chance or randomness. If you contrast how Earth had remained life supporting for long periods of time with the volatility of the universe, it is all the more conclusive that Earth is designed in a special way to remain so.

Nothing in this universe is therefore by chance or we would not be able to predict how the universe works. Things only become predictable because they are designed in a specific way. In light of such glaring evidences, what is the logic for saying "God is not in evidence"?
 
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bhsmte

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God cannot be defined by humans or even the physical universe because He is invisible and is of a different nature from the universe you see. Does it make sense for you to define things of different nature using the same set of criteria? Obviously not.

But the universe, by the fact that it is subject to patterns and laws, shows that it is designed and created. This is a logical reasoning if you look at human inventions. Codes and patterns and commands are put into place by human intelligence, similarly gravity and other patterns we observe in the universe requires an intelligent Designer.

I gave you scenarios according to your request that clearly explain that Earth and complex life forms could not exist by chance or randomness. If you contrast how Earth had remained life supporting for long periods of time with the volatility of the universe, it is all the more conclusive that Earth is designed in a special way to remain so.

Nothing in this universe is therefore by chance or we would not be able to predict how the universe works. Things only become predictable because they are designed in a specific way. In light of such glaring evidences, what is the logic for saying "God is not in evidence"?

Can you show us the falsifiable test you utilize to determine whether something is designed or not?
 
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WoundedDeep

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Can you show us the falsifiable test you utilize to determine whether something is designed or not?

For something to be designed, it must be subjected to a set of commands or processes or laws that can be observed, described and predicted. Gravity is one such example of a set of commands the universe is subjected to.
 
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bhsmte

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For something to be designed, it must be subjected to a set of commands or processes or laws that can be observed, described and predicted. Gravity is one such example of a set of commands the universe is subjected to.

I will ask again; what is the falsifiable test you utilize, to determine if design is present or not?
 
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WoundedDeep

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Show me the results when you're test is applied and how it is falsifiable?

I honestly have no idea what results you are asking. I already told you that the universe is subjected to various processes and patterns, this shows that there is a design process involved. Therefore the universe is designed by a Creator. Is this explanation something beyond logic?
 
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bhsmte

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I honestly have no idea what results you are asking. I already told you that the universe is subjected to various processes and patterns, this shows that there is a design process involved. Therefore the universe is designed by a Creator. Is this explanation something beyond logic?

That's what I thought. Thanks anyway.
 
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variant

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Although it is being claimed that claims made for belief in God are unfalsifiable, the atheist position is equally unfalsifiable. For most of their proponents on both sides, these beliefs are ultimately faith positions that are not falsifiable (ie. there is no evidence that could ever be put forward to make the person change their mind).

No, the atheist position is falsified by evidence of God.

Barring direct experience/evidence, If you wish to present evidence for God, first you have to define it in such a way that there are observations that you would predict to happen if God exists and that could not happen if it does not.

If we lack both direct experience with a phenomena the concept describes and and don't have any expected observations if the concept is true or false, then the concept is just vacuous.

Falsifiability is about setting out reasonable criteria that give us the best chance of arriving at the right conclusion - ie. in this case, that if God exists then our line of argument will probably lead us to conclude that he does, and that if he does not then our line of argument will probably lead us to conclude that he does not. It is very important not to set a burden of proof so high that, in one direction or the other, it can never reasonably be met.

No, falcefiability has to do with whether our claims are in any way shape or form testable.

We must be able to distinguish what we would observe in conditions where A (claim is true) and ~A (claim is false) .

If there aren't any such conditions the claim isn't falsifiable.

If you don't lay out such conditions then you don't get to complain when people aren't taking your claims seriously, you haven't even defined your claims in such a circumstance and the burden of proof is absolutely on you to do so.

It is also important to consider all the evidence, and not only the strands of it that suit our viewpoint. For example, it is relevant evidence that a very large proportion of people through the ages and still today, including many who are phenomenally intelligent, have believed in God. This sets belief in God apart from belief in fairies or the Great Pumpkin. It is false reasoning to claim an equivalence between these different beliefs.

Appeals to popularity are fallacious because people will use fallacious reasoning to believe in things (like appeals to popularity).

Popularity in and of itself does not increase the validity of claims.

It is also unreasonable to make demands of God that he should not be expected to make, which I think is where Variant's first point was headed.

It was a direct response to a direct question of the thread.

God is proposed as a being that should have the power to convince me.

I say I would be convinced of a God willing to demonstrate itself almost by definition.

I had a friend at university who said, "If God will come and sit on my bed and talk to me in person, then I'll believe in him." To which I responded, "Why should God do that? It's you who need him, not he who needs you."

Unsupported question begging.

Your scenario relies on the premise "God exists" which is not in evidence (and what you are arguing for), so whether I have need of one seems immaterial to whether it may or may not exist.

My friend was trying to make God into this kind of genie in a lamp who jumps at our beck and call; but such a being is not the God of the Bible, and therefore to require this of God in order to believe is not reasonable. It would be like me saying, "No, I'm just not going to obey the law unless the Prime Minister comes and explains it to me in person." Why should he do that? That isn't what the Prime Minister does or should be expected to do.

The Prime Minister in this scenario unquestioningly exists.

So, again it's question begging to compare the idea of God to a how we interact with a tangible authority figure.

We learn about "God's wishes" only through intermediaries claiming that it exists. The problem is that the intermediary don't have solid evidence that they have any authority to speak for the divine.

I think most of the philosophical and seemingly scientific arguments that try to prove or disprove God don't lead very far. The design arguments that have been discussed a little on this thread are ultimately unconvincing, because they depend too much on certain knowledge of things we just don't know, so they are only really convincing to people who are already theists. (That's not to say I think that the argument that it all came about by chance is convincing - just that there are too many unknowns to be able to say with any certainty that it didn't.) The arguments about why God allows suffering in the world that are the main argument put forward against belief in God are also unconvincing; there are many ways that these questions can be answered if you are so inclined that are perfectly logical; but equally, a person who is minded to disbelieve can easily persuade themselves that the questions have not been answered.

This is because God is so ill defined and lacking in tangible evidence.

If any God exists it obviously doesn't want to be evident.

However, I do think the evidence around the resurrection of Jesus is very much worth dealing carefully with. It is the closest we can get to a falsifiability criterion. Paul writes that if the resurrection didn't happen then Christian faith is worthless (1 Cor 15:17). On the other hand, if it did happen, it is a very serious blow for atheism. I would recommend anyone who is genuinely interested in truth to examine this closely.

The documents claiming the resurrection come to me from 2000 years ago, and contain claims that I would seriously doubt if someone told me today on the street (I would want some more tangible evidence if someone came to me with the same sort of claims as the Gospel today).

Again, we need to be careful not to set the bar for acceptance or rejection so high that we can never be convinced. We wouldn't do that with other beliefs, so why with this one. A lot of Christian arguments often come down to "The Bible says so so it must be true", which is not a falsifiable position. However, atheist arguments seek to turn every small area for doubt into a major challenge, which is also disingenuous.

If we believed the stories we wouldn't be atheists.

I am not going to wade into all the arguments about who first arrived at the tomb on the Sunday morning and about whether the angels appeared to the women before or after Peter got there. That is the kind of detail we can't expect nor do we need historical certainty on. Neither is it reasonable to exclude the Bible or other Christian witnesses from consideration; it is hardly surprising that all the people who believe in the resurrection are Christians: if you become convinced of it then of course you will become a Christian. And the Bible, even if you regard it as no better than other historical sources, should also not be regarded as worse than other historical sources. In fact, secular historians generally rate its reliability pretty highly. Note also that, as a historical source, it is not a single book but is a collection of books from different authors as well. So it is not just one witness's account, but several.

I exclude the testimony of miracles from 2000 years ago the same way as I exclude the idea that the Buddah walked on water...

There is in my experience, no way to treat all claims equally and be a religious person.

To the rest of your post, no, there is no way to falcefy even false testimony from 2000 years ago if we don't have enough info on the event to go on, and to suggest that the Bible and related works we have from the period could not exist if Christianity weren't basically true is simply incorrect.

I don't generally trust religious testimony of what happened two days ago, let alone two millinia.
 
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