Someone claimed to have had such experience. I can't disprove it so, I'll just accept it as it is. Subjective experience
Sounds like you are dimissing it. As you are using the term,
all evidence is "subjective". That is, what we personally experience.
The concept is always there, you just have to be born in this society. By the age of 5, at the latest, a child has that concept well known, even if they come from a family of atheists and if they themselves are atheist.
Which shows that having the concept doesn't equate to putting experience into that concept.
Why? Why are they not wrong when they accept it as divine? How do you know?
That wasn't quite your claim. What you claimed was that they would not accept it as
anyting other than divine. That part isn't true. The reason they accept it as divine is the same reason science accepts theories: they falsified every other alternative they could think of. You are thinking theists don't test their experience to see if it could be something else. That's the part that isn't born out by the evidence. Many have come to the experience very skeptical, thinking it must be anything
but divine.
There are
lots of concepts out there. So you can't say the people that concluded the experience was of deity did so because they had the concept.
Now,
could all those experiences be wrong? Yes. That's one reason it's faith. Could all the atheists be wrong? Yes. That's one reason it is a faith.
Yes, kids can find logical flaws in the blink of an eye...
But there aren't many logical things in faith, are there?
Oh, there can be. Just because it is "faith" doesn't exempt you from reason. It may be counter to what you have accepted as "normal" or "common sense", but then so are of the discoveries of science.
Just because some people do become atheists, doesn't mean that there aren't others who keep their faith just because they've gotten used to it. I'm not saying ALL, I'm saying "some people". Human psychology is a tricky business, there is never a "one size fits all" rule.
But now you are in a position that you can't use this to deny the validity of the personal experience as evidence.
I sure hope you see where you mistake a concept of the divine for a belief system.
And where do you think I did that? I was commenting on logical flaws in atheism. How did you make the jump to this?
Nowhere have I said that everyone having personal experience of deity was Christian. Or Jewish. Or Muslim. Or Hindu. I said there were commonalities about the experience, not that the experience resulted in the individual belonging to a particular religion.
Well then, Buddhists experience something completely different and Egyptians experienced something else for over 4 millennia...
That isn't what I said nor is it implied. I said the experiences were not consistent with the tenets of the religions. But then again, there is no reason
every religion has to reflect the personal experience of deity.
I will say I must retract my statements about Buddhism. Looking into Buddhism more carefully, the experiences described would fit within that particular belief system. Buddhists do have room for the divine, but not identical with the concept of the Abrahamic religions.
The argument stands: it's a matter of interpretation (considering the experiences are all of similar origin and nature).
You just negated your own argument. It's may be a matter of interpretation of what
religion you belong to, but it is evidence of deity.
remember how all other religions were wrong?
I shoudl ask: how do
you know? "In my father's mansion are many rooms ..."
Well then, somewhere people have (have had and I assume will continue to have) experiences which are not compatible with the monotheist god of love and compassion, and yet are experiences of the "spirit realm".
Sorry, but the evidence is against you. That Egyptians constructed a particular religion does not say the underlying experiences were different. After all, Christians have constructed some forms of Christianity inconsistent with the experiences, too.
If all others are wrong, then I'd only ask: what makes your experiences so right?
You haven't shown that there are distinctly different experiences. All you've shown are different religions. There is no requirement for each and every religion to be based on personal experience of deity.
Yes, well... we all know how astrophysicists get their guesses... pi ~ 3
If there is more dark mater than hydrogen+hellium, there goes that 98% as well.
But this is of no interest to the thread.
I think it is. It shows how ready you are to dimiss any evidence that disagrees with you, no matter the source. It also shows you are willing to use the fallacies of ad hominem, ridicule, and poisoning the well. The figure 98% refers to what you were referring to: hydrogen and helium compared to the other
elements. You thought it was "knowledge", not a "guess". You were just wrong. BTW, whatever dark matter is, it's not any of the elements. Why not, you ask? Because the elements have specific frequencies of light that they absor when light hits them. They show up as dark lines on a spectrum. Dark matter has none of those absorption lines.
And it is permissible why? because no suitable theory ever stood up to any scrutiny.
Nope. Two reasons:
1. For everything after that we have "natural" causes which are sufficient and therefore it is not permissible to hypothesize
direct action by God. That direct action would be another "natural" cause. So direct action by God is permissible in science only a) as cause of the universe and b) as explanation why the universe has this order instead of some other order.
2. Theologically, hypothesizing God in a direct role for some continuing part of the existing universe would be god-of-the-gaps.
In science, hypotheses/theories remain possible unless and until they are falsified. If you deny this, then science stops.
Some 500 years ago, the same could be said of lightning. We had no decent explanation for the phenomenon, so god did it. Turns out that NO he has nothing to do with lightning.
What you are stating here is god-of-the-gaps. According to Judeo-Christian
theology, this was
never permissible. It was J-C that convinced science that there had to be a "natural" cause.
Now, the statement ""he [God] has nothing to do with lightning" is not a valid scientific statement. "God did not do it" is not a valid scientific statement. There you are stating the basic atheist statement of faith: natural = without God. We are going to have to talk about Methodological Naturalism. For now, I'll let you read this statement and see if you can tell me how you
know it is wrong:
"The only distinct meaning of the word 'natural' is
stated, fixed, or settled; since what is natural as much requires and presupposes an intelligent agent to render it so, i.e., to effect it continually or at stated times, as what is supernatural or miraculous does to effect it for once." Butler: Analogy of Revealed Religion.
I just extrapolate from previous godly claims which fell.... this too shall probably fall.
But you base that extrapolation on 1) faulty science, 2) invalid theology, and 3) an unproven statement of faith. So the extrapolation is worthless. If that is your reason for atheism, then you need to rethink your commitment to it.
how what?
This here universe has 4 dimensions, ok. We can't have more around here.. string theory says we can on some ultra-nanoscopic way, but lets forget about that, since you said string theory is going through a bit of bad weather.
The reason String Theory is in trouble is that those extra dimensions have a limit on how small they can be. Yes, they are "compacted", but they can only be compacted so far. The problem is that the effects those compacted dimensions should have are not there.
On that "outside" of our Universe you so correctly pointed to me earlier, it is conceivable that one can find some sort of Universe where the norm is10, 20, 30, 40, millions of dimensions... mathematically, it is possible (notice, I didn't use physically).
See above. You can't compact those extra dimensions far enough. Even by the math, much less the observations, they can't exist.
Science can tell me that god is not required to explain the physical events which happen in this Universe. And if life was simply a chemical event, then no god s required also, since chemistry is a branch of physics (although chemists won't admit it).
But science can't tell you that "life was simply a chemical event". Why did the chemistry happen? Does the chemistry require God to will the chemical reactions to happen? And by "chemical reactions" I mean
every chemical reaction
every time.
Here we have a limitation of science and the mistake of saying a statement of faith is true without evidence. You are obviously working on god-of-the-gaps. But what if God is
not found in the gaps? What if
every process found by science also requires God for it to happen?
You haven't thought it thru. I'm a theist, remember? Yet I'm the one that told you about life arising by chemistry. Didn't it occur to you that, if such a thing really did falsify theism, that I would not be a theist?
I was just trying to be succint when telling that tale.
You were also stating a very common misconception of evolution. You still seem to have some:
. There was (and is) no purpose behind it, except survival. Evolution was (and is) not a conscious undertaking.
The first part is wrong. There is very definitely a
short term purpose behind natural selection. That purpose is to design the population for the particular environment in the present.
You can't say, by science, "there was no purpose
behind it". What we can say is that natural selection has no long-term purpose. But that isn't the same as "no purpose behind it". You can't eliminate that God used evolution for His purpose. You canj't even eliminate that God has influenced evolution over those years. There are,
at least, 2 methods by which God can/could influence evolution that would be undetectable by science.
Now, natural selection is an unintelligent process to get design. That is a
good thing for Judeo-Christianity in particular and theism in general.
I just care that "no god is required" for it to work.
And once again, you have the statement contrary to science.
If the bible is inspired by god and he wouldn't allow errors in it, then he did control those people's minds.
Notice the "ifs". As it turns out, scripture itself tells us there are errors in scripture. Mark 10 and Matthew 14. So the second "if" is gone. You are basing your argument on Fundamentalism.
You're right... it's the whole town that stones him to death... at the request of the parents?!?!?!
Yep. Of course, today the whole town throws his ass in jail, because not listening to your parents probably means committing a crime. If the crime is severe enough, we will execute the child. So, are we really so far from that?
O god gave us those rules, or men made such rules as they pleased. God's existence being disputed, I choose the option where men made the rules.
It could easily be a mixture of both. Jesus said it was. However, you never disputed the point that,
for the time, the rules were liberal.
Actually, you're the one who called it premise first!
And apparently I labeled it correctly. So why the razz? Do you always razz people when they are correct.
Indoctrination plays a large role, yes.
I falsified that and you admitted that above when you retreated to just "some" people.
Belief comes from first knowing that there is something we call god and it can be described as such and such. Then, you experience something which sort of fits this description, but fits nowhere else that you're aware of.... so, logically, god exists (for you).
Read about the personal experience again. Even
if people had not had the label "god" to put on it, they would still have 1) an entity they were mentally talking to, 2) an entity that can do things people can't, 3) and entity whose love and forgiveness know no bounds, 4) an entity who intervenes in their life. Whether or not they have the word "god" or concept of "god", they would have invented a word and concept to describe what they have.
You are thinking the concept makes the experience. Instead, the experience makes the concept. Let's take an example. Jump off a step. you fall. Drop an apple. It falls. Do you interpret these experiences as "gravity"
only because you have heard of such a concept? NO. The experiences lead you to the concept. If there was no concept of "gravity", you would have to invent a word that would mean the same thing.
I.have.come.to.destroy.everything.
Prepare.to.be.terminated.
Argument from Ridicule. Doesn't negate my claim. Try again.
Actually, the concept of evolution already existed, It just hadn't been applied to the animal kingdom.
Wrong again.
In quantum physics, the atom was first described much like a planetary system, nucleus in the middle, electrons in orbits around it. Then the concept was refined to clouds of electrons around the nucleus, the orbitals. Quantum physics was so mathematical at first that this "borrowing of familiar concepts" was required to understand the complete novelty of the thing.
By your logic, however, the limitation of concept would
prevent the novelty. The physicists would have had to interpret the evidence to fit in a concept they already had. Thank you for providing another refutation of your claim.