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Why no proof?

oi_antz

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Okay, so if valid means "fair", which is how I am defining it, then yes. Assuming "no" is more valid because it allows other viewpoints to prove themselves. Assuming "yes" is unfair, because it does not allow another viewpoint to ever be proven. Everyone seems to think I am so stubborn and that I won't accept clear evidence forgets that I will happily accept a 50-foot tall being in my back yard as reasonable proof. Even if I believe that it is likely that science will eventually explain things, there is always the possibility that something truly inexplicable can happen to change that viewpoint. It isn't "fair" to make an assumption that makes it impossible to view it any other way.

If valid means "reasonable" then there isn't really a way to answer that question. I mean, there are times when the probability of something is so small, that it would be unreasonable to expect it to be true. For instance, the chances of winning the lottery are very low, but you can assume that you will win. If you assume you will win, and then you do, then was it reasonable to expect to win in the first place? That may be a bad example, because I'm not trying to compare the likelihood of God's existence to anything, I consider that incalculable. But the point remains that you can have an unreasonable assumption, and then the assumption comes true.

If I'm still not answering, define valid, because I found out that faith doesn't mean what I think it does either.


I don't know.

https://www.google.co.nz/?gfe_rd=cr&ei=N7F4VfmSAumumQWrnoKoBw&gws_rd=ssl#q=define+valid
* (of an argument or point) having a sound basis in logic or fact; reasonable or cogent.
* legally or officially acceptable.

Therefore, is it valid to believe God is not real? Is it valid to believe God is real? Is one more valid than the other?

If you were to believe that God is real, is it possible to have a sound basis in logic or fact; reasonable or cogent?
If you were to believe that God is not real, is it possible to have a sound basis in logic or fact; reasonable or cogent?

Is the belief that God is real legally or officially acceptable?
Is the belief that God is not real legally or officially acceptable?

.. I just think that whatever we choose as our basic assumption then goes ahead to convince us that the opposite assumption is less valid. But I am not sure if that is really acknowledging the truth. What do you think about that?
 
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Moral Orel

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Therefore, is it valid to believe God is not real? Is it valid to believe God is real? Is one more valid than the other?

If you were to believe that God is real, is it possible to have a sound basis in logic or fact; reasonable or cogent?
If you were to believe that God is not real, is it possible to have a sound basis in logic or fact; reasonable or cogent?

Is the belief that God is real legally or officially acceptable?
Is the belief that God is not real legally or officially acceptable?

.. I just think that whatever we choose as our basic assumption then goes ahead to convince us that the opposite assumption is less valid. But I am not sure if that is really acknowledging the truth. What do you think about that?

Okay, then yes. Not believing in God is more valid because I can reason, based on logic and facts, that he is not real. I won't rule it out completely, because if he exists, then there are far more facts than we could ever know.

Ask yourself this, how do you reason that anything exists that you know exists? Is it not reasoning to say, "I can see a rock, therefore a rock exists, but I cannot see a fairy, so a fairy does not exist"? Is it not reasoning to say, "I can see how a person's actions are influenced by their current stated emotion and I can see how my actions and the actions of others are similarly influenced by the same emotion, therefore emotions are real." Am I reasoning wrong?
 
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oi_antz

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Okay, then yes. Not believing in God is more valid because I can reason, based on logic and facts, that he is not real. I won't rule it out completely, because if he exists, then there are far more facts than we could ever know.

Ask yourself this, how do you reason that anything exists that you know exists? Is it not reasoning to say, "I can see a rock, therefore a rock exists, but I cannot see a fairy, so a fairy does not exist"? Is it not reasoning to say, "I can see how a person's actions are influenced by their current stated emotion and I can see how my actions and the actions of others are similarly influenced by the same emotion, therefore emotions are real." Am I reasoning wrong?
You are reasoning ok, but resisting the correct conclusion. I would say it is no less valid to believe that God is real simply because you believe you cannot perceive Him. There can be different reasons for that, which are valid. Eg you might be denying it. He might be choosing to not be obvious enough. He might appear different than you expect. You might even be observing Him, knowing Him, and yet not recognising Him.

But here you have said something strange: "based on logic and facts, that he is not real". Here is a fact I would like to ask of you, how does your logic lead you to conclude that God is not real?

https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Exodus+3&version=NLT

God appears to Moses.
 
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Moral Orel

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But here you have said something strange: "based on logic and facts, that he is not real". Here is a fact I would like to ask of you, how does your logic lead you to conclude that God is not real?
Again, I decide that a rock is real because I can perceive it, therefore if I cannot perceive something, it does not exist.

There are many ways to perceive something, not just actually seeing it in person. I acknowledge that. And there are things that I have not perceived yet. I acknowledge that too. But if I don't reason that way, then I should reason that everything exists simultaneously, which creates contradictions such as my examples of the different religions having different gods that are all mutually exclusive.
 
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oi_antz

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Again, I decide that a rock is real because I can perceive it, therefore if I cannot perceive something, it does not exist.

There are many ways to perceive something, not just actually seeing it in person. I acknowledge that. And there are things that I have not perceived yet. I acknowledge that too. But if I don't reason that way, then I should reason that everything exists simultaneously, which creates contradictions such as my examples of the different religions having different gods that are all mutually exclusive.
This is that disrespectful thing I mentioned. I asked you a question, but you are here to justify your position and not interested to go anywhere meaningful. I will leave this thread now, you might be welcome to engage like that with other people.
 
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Moral Orel

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This is that disrespectful thing I mentioned. I asked you a question, but you are here to justify your position and not interested to go anywhere meaningful. I will leave this thread now, you might be welcome to engage like that with other people.
You may read this, you may not. I don't know how to answer your questions without explaining how I justify my current position. You ask why I do things, so to explain why I do things, I have to justify them.

I started this thread to ask "why there is no proof?". The answer I got was, "there is proof". And the general consensus is that if I already believed in Christianity, then I would have proof. No one seems to want to offer me any proof for the non-believer, or even examples of evidence, except for maybe Aiki and the "where did everything come from" argument we have going on.
 
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aiki

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The universe is not everything that ever was or ever will be in the case of a multiverse, and I know the Boltzmann brain thing, I'll get to that. The universe is just all the stuff and energy we see, the time that has elapsed, and the space it sits in. Now you can contend that there aren't more of these, but we can agree that our universe consists of these things. If there were a multiverse, then there would be other stuff, and energy, and time, and space, etc. So in the case of the multiverse, there is more to the universe that you described.

You realize, I hope, that you are talking sheer speculation here. None of what you say in the above paragraph has an iota of concrete evidence in support of it (except that our universe consists of matter, space and energy). So, why are you bringing the multiverse into a discussion of the nature of the universe and its beginning as though it does? You seem to be extrapolating from a hypothetical to the actual, which is rather the opposite of how reasonable thought proceeds.

Firstly, he bases his theory on the anthropoid-whatever principle...

It's called the Anthropic Principle (which I have the feeling you actually know but chose purposely to misname here). In any case, the idea of Boltzmann Brains defeats the Anthropic Principle, which atheists like to use as grounds for why we see the universe around us that we do and from which they then try to argue for a multiverse. The AP is not the basis for Boltzmann's theory.

Here's the main point of contention. His theory is still based on probabilities, which the multiverse answers.

I don't think you yet understand why the BB theory defeats the multiverse theory. If the multiverse were true, we would see - and even likely be - Boltzmann Brains. Such a situation would be vastly more probable than a finely-tuned universe like ours ever randomly coming into existence. Instead, we see only our universe.

And if for some reason these Boltzmann brains are supposed to exist in our universe right in front of us, then maybe that's what dark matter is. We can't see it or touch it, but it exists somehow and we can detect it. How is my theory unprovable? Same goes for God. The difference is that I am attempting to use Ockham's razor and only attributing the qualities I really need to explain something, whereas defining God the way that people do, makes sure that they cover all their bases at once.

A Boltzmann Brain is not dark matter. It is a way of talking about probabilities. If they did actually exist, they would be as material as you or I. You would realize, if you understood the idea of a Boltzmann Brain better, that the theory you just put forward about them doesn't need to be disproved because it fundamentally misunderstands the nature of what a Boltzmann Brain is.

Christians do not argue for God the way you have here. Among thoughtful and philosophically/theologically-careful Christians there is no fundamental confusion about the nature of what they believe and argue for as theists.

To be clear, I don't believe in the multiverse as much as I do in gravity or modern medicine. I think it would be awesome if it was true, so I hope someone is looking into proving it, but I use it as an example to show that theories invented by humans can always reach a point of "you can't prove it's not true" and even to a point that you can't calculate the probability of it, just like God.

The theory of the multiverse didn't reach a point of "you can't prove it's not true," it began at that point!

The situation concerning belief in God is not as simple as Christians asserting an unfalsifiable theory of the supernatural and divine. Much of what prompts Christian belief is deductive, arising from evidence, not simply asserted in a total vacuum of evidence as the multiverse theory is. This is what the Kalam Cosmological Argument and the Moral Argument (and a host of other such arguments) demonstrate.

The whole point of this thread was, "Why no proof?". Now I'm arguing theories that are all impossible to prove or disprove.

No, you are seeing that the perspective you've had on the discussion between theists and atheists is too simple and uninformed. You have been trying to assert that Christians are arguing without a shred of evidence for their theistic position and I have shown you that you are mistaken. Unfortunately, you don't seem able to take this in. You are just going 'round and 'round repeating the same charge in different ways even though it's been shown that you are mistaken.

So if it helps gets things back on track, people tell me God shouldn't have to embarrass himself by being on Earth, so what about angels? One guy wrestled with one in the Bible, why not let them fly around proving the supernatural as they defy the laws of physics?

God has, on occasion, sent His angels to Earth. But why should He do as you describe here? Apart from satisfying your own personal need for a particular kind of proof, why should God send His angels to "defy the law of physics"? God has done physics-defying things many times in the past, but most people still refuse to accept He exists. I don't see that God is in any way obliged to do more.

You say that I give too much credit to science. And that science has a terrible history of being incorrect, but that is only because it tries. Leaving the explaining of things to religion, we wouldn't have travelled to the Americas. We would think that rainbows are all signs from God, we would think that the sky is solid and holds back waters, etc... Following religion does not lead to a better understanding of the world around you. You may find it more valuable to better understand the other world and how to get there, but that's only if it exists.

I'm afraid what you've shown here is both profound ignorance and bias, not reason. Some of the greatest scientists of human history were believers in God: Johannes Keppler, Gregor Mendel, Blaise Pascal, Michael Faraday, and so on. They believed that the God who gave us reason and the capacity to investigate our environment created a universe that could be researched and understood. They believed coming to understand the universe better was a means of increasing our understanding of God Himself. Out of this belief science was born. So the exact opposite of what you say religion would produce has occurred. Now, some religions I think do have a stultifying effect on the study of God's Creation, but Christianity is certainly not one of them.

A few hundred years from now and maybe your ideas will look like nonsense, or Jesus will come back and mine will, who knows? Point is, I give so much credit to science, because things usually end up getting explained. Conversations about God always end in, "he works in mysterious ways" or "he's beyond the rules we use to govern everything else and we just can't understand that".

Science doesn't do anything; scientists do. And some of the greatest of them have been theists whose belief in God was the very reason they worked to "explain things." So, no, conversations about God do not always end in the way you describe here. That is the way atheists like to say things go, but that is so they can paint Christians as idiots and justify to themselves their antagonism toward theism.

You mentioned things that can't be measured, like emotions, but they can. Do they have mass? No. But they have electrical signals and chemicals that can be measured. We can't measure the heat from the Sun with a scale either, we have to use different tools to measure different things. You listed "integrity" with your list of emotions, which I thought was strange, because of course you can measure lies witnessed to truths witnessed.

No, love is not an electrical signal or a chemical. That is the functioning of the brain you're describing, not the essential nature of thing we call love. Love is immaterial, so are numbers, and bravery, and perseverance and many other such things. You seem to think the brain and the mind are one and the same thing, but that is akin to confusing an engine with the energy it produces. Certainly, there is a strong interrelationship between the brain and the mind, but it seems very clear to me that they are not identical. And it is in the immaterial mind that things like love, and integrity, and joy are encountered.

Integrity is not an emotion. It is a commitment to honest, sincere, conduct. Integrity does not exist in any physical locale. Integrity has no weight, or smell, or sound. You can't nibble on a bit of integrity or cook it in the oven. The idea of measuring integrity by measuring lies mistakes fundamentally what integrity is.

Did you really use the lack of transitional fossils as evidence that evolution isn't real? Do you see the irony of that argument? Absence of proof does not prove absence. And we aren't even talking about real absence. We're talking about a few gaps, not like there's no such thing as fossils.

Do you not understand that if evolution is true there ought to be millions upon millions of transitional fossils in the geologic column? Instead, we have a only a handful of such fossils, all of which are far from being clearly transitional. It is I, then, who find your objection to this fact surprising. And I notice you did not give any comment to the other issues I noted.

"Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence" does not always apply in every case. If you tell me the milk is in the fridge, and I look in the fridge and see it is not there, telling me that the absence of the milk from the fridge is not evidence that it is not in the fridge would be silly. But that is what you're trying to do with the matter of the missing transitional fossils in the geologic column! What's more, there aren't merely "a few gaps" in the fossil record but such an enormous absence of transitional fossils that on this basis alone the ToE looks patently false (punctuated equilibrium notwithstanding). This isn't the only serious flaw with which the ToE has to contend. As I pointed out, there are other very major problems with the theory that have not been overcome.

But if we're talking about lack of evidence, I can't find any information about archaeology finding evidence that the Jews were ever enslaved in Egypt, or that they travelled through the desert. In fact, the archaeology I was able to find shows them for the first time coming out of Canaanite lands. I actually find it kind of strange that there isn't a good amount of evidence of them being in Egypt considering how much of Egypt we have dug up.

What was that you were saying about absence of evidence? Anyway, you might want to look up the number of times the Bible has seemed to be in error in its historical facts only to be vindicated eventually by archaeology. The Hittites are an excellent example. And there are dozens of other such instances you could consider as well. In light of this, I don't feel much concern over there not being more archaeological evidence for the Hebrew captivity in Egypt. Certainly, the "lack of evidence" issue is not a particularly compelling one in regards to the historical veracity of the Bible.

Let's move on to morals. You asked how I get to define morals the way I do, I ask how you define morals. Actually, it doesn't really matter what your definition is.

I think you'd have a very different perspective if you were, say, boiling away in a cannibal's stewpot! The cannibal's definition of morality - especially regarding eating people - would matter a great deal to you!

The point is that you have to define the qualifications to determine whether it is objective in the first place. If you don't define how to determine morals, you can't define if something is moral.

This is silly. One of the central points of the Moral Argument - to which you freely agreed in your last post to me - is that we all share an objective morality that doesn't require determining "how to determine morals." We seem to possess this sense of right and wrong innately, quite apart from moral philosophizing.

I define it my way, and you define it your way, and maybe that makes it subjective. Maybe if being good in general is the concern of anyone philosophizing then everyone comes to the same conclusion. Thing is, I can come up with what is moral all on my own without any help from God.

There is no "maybe" about it; every one doing what is right in his own eyes is a subjective ground for morality.

What does "being good" mean? Who gets to decide what "good" is? A Muslim man thinks honor killing is good. I don't. Who is right? How do we decide? Without an objective, authoritative source for our morality, human morality amounts to one human telling another what to do, which inevitably degenerates into "might makes right."

And the proof of that is that I can decide what is moral and immoral even when it contradicts the Bible, and you do it too. If objective morality really came from God, he would have put it in the Bible. The Jews could have been the first nation on Earth to outlaw slavery and they would be famous for it. Same goes for women's rights, since the Bible doesn't have a very positive stance on that either.

"I do it too"? How so?

God did put His moral law in His Word, the Bible. Surely you've heard of the Ten Commandments, and/or the Sermon on the Mount, and/or the Golden Rule?

The Israelites in the OT were remarkable and unique in their attitude toward slavery. They may not have abolished slavery outright for enemies taken captive, but among their own the Israelites had a system of indentured servitude (NOT slavery) that was unparalleled in the other nations of the time.

As for women's rights, I should like you to show how the Bible takes a non-positive stance toward them. Please be careful not to confuse description with prescription.

You talked about the Old Testament wrath and how I'm probably misunderstanding it, but I assure you I am not. When I say God commanded genocide, I mean that he specifically stated to kill children and infants. When you talk about them claiming to "annihilate" and whatnot, you're forgetting about how David specifically killed everyone in an entire city so that they couldn't warn neighboring towns. That isn't just hyperbole, that is action with intent and purpose.

Context? Under what circumstances were these commands issued? Were they just arbitrary? I don't think so.

Let's talk about slavery. For about 1800 odd years after Jesus, people were totally justified in their religion to own another human being here in the United States.

The United States has not existed for 1800 years. And under what conditions did people during these 1800 years feel slavery was "totally justified"?

Jesus said that Christians can own slaves, so what makes it immoral now?

Oh? Quotation, please. I've been reading the Bible for forty years or so now and I've never come across Jesus saying, "Christians can own slaves."

And please don't play the indentured servant card because that isn't how Mosaic law describes it.

Among the Israelites themselves that is exactly how it is described.

People like to say that God works within that culture's history, but if we're weighing probabilities, wouldn't it be more probable that people describe their God believing the same things they do?

No. The God of the Israelites was utterly unlike any god worshiped anywhere. What is far more likely is that, if He was simply the product of human imagination, that He would be of a kind with the other gods of the time and cater to the desires and philosophies of the humans who created Him. Quite the opposite, however, is true.

You also talked about the benefits of slavery to the slave owners while ignoring the unknown benefits of freedom. People discovering things by being free. What if Einstein was a slave, or Alexander Fleming, etc... How long till someone else came along with the right kind of brain or the right accident to discover the things that they did?

You have completely misunderstood the point of my comments. I was speaking solely to the matter of efficiency and speed. Please re-read my comments.

Selah.
 
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Moral Orel

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Oh? Quotation, please. I've been reading the Bible for forty years or so now and I've never come across Jesus saying, "Christians can own slaves."
I don't have time to do the whole thing right now, but I will over time. Here are the quick easy to reference ones.
I did make one mistake, it wasn't Jesus who said it, but it is in the Bible. Does that make it less valid?
All who are under the yoke of slavery should consider their masters worthy of full respect, so that God’s name and our teaching may not be slandered. Those who have believing masters should not show them disrespect just because they are fellow believers. Instead, they should serve them even better because their masters are dear to them as fellow believers and are devoted to the welfare of their slaves. 1 Timothy 6:1-2​

Among the Israelites themselves that is exactly how it is described.
Now what you're saying, I believe, is how Israelites can only be indentured servants, but people of other races can be bought and sold and inherited as property, right? I don't see how race is an okay exception to begin with, but let's look at how you get yourself a permanent Israelite slave:
If you buy a Hebrew servant, he is to serve you for six years. But in the seventh year, he shall go free, without paying anything. If he comes alone, he is to go free alone; but if he has a wife when he comes, she is to go with him. If his master gives him a wife and she bears him sons or daughters, the woman and her children shall belong to her master, and only the man shall go free. “But if the servant declares, ‘I love my master and my wife and children and do not want to go free,’ then his master must take him before the judges. He shall take him to the door or the doorpost and pierce his ear with an awl. Then he will be his servant for life. Exodus 21:2-6​
You see? All you have to do is give your Israelite indentured servant a wife, whom you can purchase, and then give her to your indentured servant. Then she and her children belong to you forever, and if you hold them hostage, you can encourage the original Hebrew servant to become your slave forever. So, here is the Bible describing how to breed Israelite slaves and to go beyond the whole "indentured servitude" argument.

Would you describe these things as objectively moral? Is there some reason that slavery of this kind or any kind needed to exist that God shouldn't have just abolished because it should be considered objectively moral that no human being should ever own another human being?

We need to be careful not to turn this into a "general apologetics" thread though. I saw another thread almost get shut down over it. I hope that this is just an instance to show a lack of objective morality, and not a case for us to go back and forth justifying parts of the Bible. Not that I don't want you to reply to this, just that we ought to be cautious in how we proceed.
 
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MishSill

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I don't have time to do the whole thing right now, but I will over time.

I didn't quote the whole last post becuase its quite large.

Genesis 9:25-27 this is about "servant" rather than slave. It refers to Canaan who you were talking about in the other thread re the KKK foundation justification. Servants were not treated as slaves. Yes they worked to assist their masters but were treated well. They were of lower standing in terms of poverty.

The horrible slavery that was abolished in recent times could not be compared to biblical servanthood.

But I'll do some further reading on it.
 
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Moral Orel

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Servants were not treated as slaves. Yes they worked to assist their masters but were treated well. They were of lower standing in terms of poverty.
Okay, I'll give you that one. But you still get to own an Israelite for life, even if you don't beat them like you are allowed to do to slaves that are not Israelites. So in reality, isn't it a lot like slavery in America? Only whites are given the right to not be slaves, but they can (and did) become indentured servants. The Old Testament says you can't kill your slaves, so that might be a little better, but you can still physically abuse them.
 
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MishSill

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Okay, I'll give you that one. But you still get to own an Israelite for life, even if you don't beat them like you are allowed to do to slaves that are not Israelites. So in reality, isn't it a lot like slavery in America? Only whites are given the right to not be slaves, but they can (and did) become indentured servants. The Old Testament says you can't kill your slaves, so that might be a little better, but you can still physically abuse them.

I think you will find this interesting reading:
https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Judaism/slavery.html

You may be getting slaves in Judaism mixed up with the Jewish slaves in Egypt which were treated very differently.

It is light reading. The most pertinant points is that slaves "or servants in hebrew" consisted of criminals who could not make restitution for their crimes, aliens travelling to their country, daughters sold for purposes of making house and marriage, and debtors being the main examples.

This site also makes mention that Hebrew slaves served six years and were released in the seventh year.

I think it was rather different though for the Jewish slaves in Egypt but I'll have a look at that too.
 
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Moral Orel

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You may be getting slaves in Judaism mixed up with the Jewish slaves in Egypt which were treated very differently.
Actually I'm talking about this one:
Anyone who beats their male or female slave with a rod must be punished if the slave dies as a direct result,but they are not to be punished if the slave recovers after a day or two, since the slave is their property. Exodus 21:20-21​
You can beat them so bad that it takes days to recover. Other parts of the Bible restrict permanently maiming them like gouging out their eye or knocking out teeth, but it seems acceptable to hit them in the chest, arms, and back with a rod. There were also some parts in your link that stated they weren't to be humiliated either, so again, a little better than American slavery, but the setup is still the same premise, like it says in your next quote...

...aliens travelling to their country...
The foreigners (essentially anyone who is non-Jewish) can be bought and owned forever.
 
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MishSill

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Actually I'm talking about this one:
Anyone who beats their male or female slave with a rod must be punished if the slave dies as a direct result,but they are not to be punished if the slave recovers after a day or two, since the slave is their property. Exodus 21:20-21​
You can beat them so bad that it takes days to recover.

Not that I'm personally for beating anyone, when you read exodus 21 in its entirety you will see that the same principle applies to what is the modern equivalent of two mates having a biff like the one punch knock outs. If the person recovers in 1 to 2 days the person who struck the other shall be acquitted. I note it is 1 to 2 days. I think that limits what kind of punishment a master could impose on a servant.

Not sure I can find the biblical scriptures about owning foreigners long term?

In verses 4-6 if a servant is given in marriage by the master, only the servant may go free but if the servant chooses to remain for life with the master, his wife and children, then he is taken to the Judges and his ear is pierced with an awl indicating that he is a servant for life.
 
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Moral Orel

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Not sure I can find the biblical scriptures about owning foreigners long term?
Right here:
Your male and female slaves are to come from the nations around you; from them you may buy slaves. You may also buy some of the temporary residents living among you and members of their clans born in your country, and they will become your property. You can bequeath them to your children as inherited property and can make them slaves for life, but you must not rule over your fellow Israelites ruthlessly. Leviticus 25:44-46​
Inheriting them to your children seems pretty long term. But don't forget the passage I already showed that you can breed Hebrew slaves and own them forever.
 
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MishSill

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Right here:
Your male and female slaves are to come from the nations around you; from them you may buy slaves. You may also buy some of the temporary residents living among you and members of their clans born in your country, and they will become your property. You can bequeath them to your children as inherited property and can make them slaves for life, but you must not rule over your fellow Israelites ruthlessly. Leviticus 25:44-46​
Inheriting them to your children seems pretty long term. But don't forget the passage I already showed that you can breed Hebrew slaves and own them forever.

From what I could see, it appears the foreigners are prisoners of war (even though they could be bought).

When you look at the person's circumstances, eg. a person falling on hard times, committing crimes and making restitution etc. this was the primary purpose of servants.

I don't think that this can be compared to slavery in the 17th and 18th century americas.
 
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Moral Orel

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From what I could see, it appears the foreigners are prisoners of war (even though they could be bought).
When you look at the person's circumstances, eg. a person falling on hard times, committing crimes and making restitution etc. this was the primary purpose of servants.

I don't think that this can be compared to slavery in the 17th and 18th century americas.
Let's say it is not comparable, it doesn't really matter to the purpose of this argument. Is it morally acceptable today? Should we force people into servitude of other people because they have too much debt or because of a crime? What about if we go to war? Should we keep POWs and give them out to the population to serve them and call them property? It is still a bad thing to do. Perhaps you can justify why it was okay for them and not okay for us, but what it shows is subjective morality, as approved by the Bible, instead of the objective morality that is supposed to be proof of God's existence. You jumped in to this argument a ways in, MishSill, so I don't know how far you read through our posts, but it isn't a general, "slavery wasn't that bad in the Bible". It clearly wasn't voluntary, and it was immoral compared to today's standards.
 
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Moral Orel

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I'm afraid what you've shown here is both profound ignorance and bias, not reason. Some of the greatest scientists of human history were believers in God: Johannes Keppler, Gregor Mendel, Blaise Pascal, Michael Faraday, and so on. They believed that the God who gave us reason and the capacity to investigate our environment created a universe that could be researched and understood. They believed coming to understand the universe better was a means of increasing our understanding of God Himself. Out of this belief science was born. So the exact opposite of what you say religion would produce has occurred. Now, some religions I think do have a stultifying effect on the study of God's Creation, but Christianity is certainly not one of them.
And did what did they use to discover these things? Science. What would happen if they turned to religion to answer these questions? Nothing. That was the point. You pointing out that even Christians turn to science to explain things doesn't help your case. So when we talk about finding evidence of something, even Christians will turn to science to find proof, because they can't use the Bible to prove something empirically.

Science doesn't do anything; scientists do. And some of the greatest of them have been theists whose belief in God was the very reason they worked to "explain things." So, no, conversations about God do not always end in the way you describe here. That is the way atheists like to say things go, but that is so they can paint Christians as idiots and justify to themselves their antagonism toward theism.
I asked the question, "why no proof" in this thread. Look at the answers I got. Did you read other people's posts? Because I got a lot of, "there's plenty of proof" and "he doesn't owe you anything" like you have said more than once. You at least offered some logical arguments which may make God more likely given our limited knowledge of the universe, but no proof, and no reason for proof other than "he proved it before and it wasn't good enough then". Now I can't understand how anything less than the proof that rocks exist is still somehow proof. Evidence isn't proof. I can't say things the way that I want to out of respect, but there is not good proof. If there was good proof then everyone would believe in God. Some folks wouldn't do what they are supposed to, but everyone would know he at least exists. There is always some doubt, so there is no proof.

No, love is not an electrical signal or a chemical. That is the functioning of the brain you're describing, not the essential nature of thing we call love. Love is immaterial, so are numbers, and bravery, and perseverance and many other such things. You seem to think the brain and the mind are one and the same thing, but that is akin to confusing an engine with the energy it produces. Certainly, there is a strong interrelationship between the brain and the mind, but it seems very clear to me that they are not identical. And it is in the immaterial mind that things like love, and integrity, and joy are encountered.

Integrity is not an emotion. It is a commitment to honest, sincere, conduct. Integrity does not exist in any physical locale. Integrity has no weight, or smell, or sound. You can't nibble on a bit of integrity or cook it in the oven. The idea of measuring integrity by measuring lies mistakes fundamentally what integrity is.
Now you're just philosophizing. Emotions can be measured in how much electrical charge they put out in what area of the brain. So even if it exists in some other metaphysical sense, it can be proven and measured. Integrity, bravery, and perseverance are learned behaviors. We can accurately predict that most people given a certain stimulus and education and experiences during their upbringing will learn these behaviors and exhibit them. Again, metaphysical parts aside, the predictive power of science proves them.
Can we add someone's lies in a lab? No. But we can make a judgement about how much integrity a person has based on how many times we catch them lying, and to what degree they lie. It isn't terribly accurate, but it is a measurement that I will bet you have used at some point in your life. Have you ever uttered the words, out loud or in your head, "he has no integrity". Have you ever made that judgement call about someone? If you have, you measured how much lying vs. truth telling a person has done.

Do you not understand that if evolution is true there ought to be millions upon millions of transitional fossils in the geologic column? Instead, we have a only a handful of such fossils, all of which are far from being clearly transitional. It is I, then, who find your objection to this fact surprising. And I notice you did not give any comment to the other issues I noted.

"Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence" does not always apply in every case. If you tell me the milk is in the fridge, and I look in the fridge and see it is not there, telling me that the absence of the milk from the fridge is not evidence that it is not in the fridge would be silly. But that is what you're trying to do with the matter of the missing transitional fossils in the geologic column! What's more, there aren't merely "a few gaps" in the fossil record but such an enormous absence of transitional fossils that on this basis alone the ToE looks patently false (punctuated equilibrium notwithstanding). This isn't the only serious flaw with which the ToE has to contend. As I pointed out, there are other very major problems with the theory that have not been overcome.
Stuff gets destroyed over time. You can't compare something that should exist fresh in the here and now (milk) with some fossil, somewhere in the world, buried some depth in the ground, under some amount of rock, that happened millions of years ago and left to be destroyed in any number of other ways.

What was that you were saying about absence of evidence? Anyway, you might want to look up the number of times the Bible has seemed to be in error in its historical facts only to be vindicated eventually by archaeology. The Hittites are an excellent example. And there are dozens of other such instances you could consider as well. In light of this, I don't feel much concern over there not being more archaeological evidence for the Hebrew captivity in Egypt. Certainly, the "lack of evidence" issue is not a particularly compelling one in regards to the historical veracity of the Bible.
I only brought it up to prove a point. We aren't to the point of proving the Christian Bible is true, you're still stuck on the idea that you can prove God exists at all. The point was that absence of proof isn't proof of absence. You can't say my argument is wrong, and your argument is right. Either we're both right, or we're both wrong, based on the evidence purported in that argument.
Your argument that the Bible proves itself gradually over time is my argument about science, don't forget. Science proves itself over time, so there's no reason to think that given enough time we can't answer the problems you've listed with what we know right now.

This is silly. One of the central points of the Moral Argument - to which you freely agreed in your last post to me - is that we all share an objective morality that doesn't require determining "how to determine morals." We seem to possess this sense of right and wrong innately, quite apart from moral philosophizing.
No, not innately. We have to reason them. To reason them we have to start with some definition. My definition is the most benefit, the least cost. I count the things like important discoveries as a benefit that are difficult to measure. If those are a benefit then things like genocide and slavery are immoral because they might stop someone from discovering something with an enormous benefit. I arrived at that conclusion through reason. I didn't just feel like genocide and slavery are wrong. If I went with innate feelings, I might go with my gut first which usually drives me from a point of justice. For instance, after 911 I might have thought that dropping a nuke on Afghanistan would have been a good idea. But only after contemplation and reasoning do I come to the conclusion that it doesn't matter how many people in an area are the enemy, it is never all of them.

As for women's rights, I should like you to show how the Bible takes a non-positive stance toward them. Please be careful not to confuse description with prescription.
Women should remain silent in the churches. They are not allowed to speak, but must be in submission, as the law says. If they want to inquire about something, they should ask their own husbands at home; for it is disgraceful for a woman to speak in the church. Or did the word of God originate with you? Or are you the only people it has reached? If anyone thinks they are a prophet or otherwise gifted by the Spirit, let them acknowledge that what I am writing to you is the Lord’s command. 1 Corinthians 14:34-37
A woman should learn in quietness and full submission. I do not permit a woman to teach or to assume authority over a man; she must be quiet. For Adam was formed first, then Eve. And Adam was not the one deceived; it was the woman who was deceived and became a sinner. But women will be saved through childbearing—if they continue in faith, love and holiness with propriety. 1 Timothy 2:11-15​
Not just a description of the way things were back then but commands.

Context? Under what circumstances were these commands issued? Were they just arbitrary? I don't think so.
I know I'm going to far with all the negative Bible quoting and this is going to get moderated soon. I don't want to keep pointing out all the bad stuff I can find, since this isn't supposed to be for general apologetics. So let me ask you this, under what circumstances is it okay to stab babies with swords, and if it is okay sometimes, does it make it a subjective moral or an objective moral?
 
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Let's say it is not comparable, it doesn't really matter to the purpose of this argument. Is it morally acceptable today? Should we force people into servitude of other people because they have too much debt or because of a crime? What about if we go to war? Should we keep POWs and give them out to the population to serve them and call them property? It is still a bad thing to do. Perhaps you can justify why it was okay for them and not okay for us, but what it shows is subjective morality, as approved by the Bible, instead of the objective morality that is supposed to be proof of God's existence. You jumped in to this argument a ways in, MishSill, so I don't know how far you read through our posts, but it isn't a general, "slavery wasn't that bad in the Bible". It clearly wasn't voluntary, and it was immoral compared to today's standards.

Now that's an interesting point.

How about we compare past time servanthood/slavery to today's modern times by looking at same scenarios.

Lets start with those suffering hardship (this applies in Australia...perhaps you can share what applies in your country). We have a welfare system but a massive queue for housing so if someone is suffering hardship eg. not working they can get what's called centrelink benefits here for unemployment but only in the form of money. There are people who can't sustain a roof over their heads due to their hardship. Servants/slaves who suffered hardship served under a master for 6 years always had a roof over their head and were well provided for with food and essentials.

A person who commits a criminal offence here depending on its seriousness can be incarcerated... eg. robbery max. penalty 15 years. The servant/slave still serves 6 years and is released on the 7th.

Foreigners asylum seekers are put in detention centres, often taking I believe 3 years to fully process them and that is due to the people concerned remaining silent. Conditions we are being told in the media are quite horrific. Yes it is unjust to hold anyone for life but I'm banking on foreign slaves getting a better deal in their time considering money didn't exist.
 
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Moral Orel

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Lets start with those suffering hardship (this applies in Australia...perhaps you can share what applies in your country). We have a welfare system but a massive queue for housing so if someone is suffering hardship eg. not working they can get what's called centrelink benefits here for unemployment but only in the form of money. There are people who can't sustain a roof over their heads due to their hardship. Servants/slaves who suffered hardship served under a master for 6 years always had a roof over their head and were well provided for with food and essentials.
So the only solutions to poverty are either leave them on the street or make them slaves? You are simplifying poverty too much.

A person who commits a criminal offence here depending on its seriousness can be incarcerated... eg. robbery max. penalty 15 years. The servant/slave still serves 6 years and is released on the 7th.
Most crimes in the Old Testament involved the death penalty. Not really comparable. And if we were to instill laws that made them slaves, then things would just get abused and innocent people would start getting locked up because it's profitable.

Foreigners asylum seekers are put in detention centres, often taking I believe 3 years to fully process them and that is due to the people concerned remaining silent. Conditions we are being told in the media are quite horrific. Yes it is unjust to hold anyone for life but I'm banking on foreign slaves getting a better deal in their time considering money didn't exist.
I don't really have anything about this to draw reference to. But just like the first point, there are more solutions than slavery.
 
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MishSill

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So the only solutions to poverty are either leave them on the street or make them slaves? You are simplifying poverty too much.


Most crimes in the Old Testament involved the death penalty. Not really comparable. And if we were to instill laws that made them slaves, then things would just get abused and innocent people would start getting locked up because it's profitable.


I don't really have anything about this to draw reference to. But just like the first point, there are more solutions than slavery.

My apologies I had forgotten about the death penalty.

What about people in third world countries starving? This really shouldn't be happening today but it sadly is.

Given what the term slavery means these days, no I absolutely do not want to see poverty stricken people sold into slavery. The system that existed back in the OT I believe was designed to prevent poverty, keep people accountable in terms of debts and keep criminals in line.

Have you ever been to Africa? I haven't but read an excellent book by someone who had. All his stuff was stolen within the first few days he was staying over there. Apparently that's quite normal over there. That's what desperate people do.

Its quite normal for Islamists to subdue their women. Women do not have a voice in Islam. Some Aussie guys actually relish this idea of putting us gals in our place. Of course Aussie women are protected under our law but it doesn't stop Islamists from shunning that law and still oppressing their women living in our country.

Aliens journeying to Israel would of course have no idea of God's law. I can only imagine that they would have done a lot of stuff that was very offensive to God's law...eg. practicising witchraft.

One of the most important things the tribes of Israel had to maintain was holiness for God. If they let the slaves practise as they wished, witchraft would have spread like wildfire into the tribal communities. This I'm guessing may have been the reason for beatings, as well as for stealing, getting violent etc.

Sadly, slavery is very much alive today. Teenage girls being kidnapped and sold as sex slaves. Young kids being sold online to pedophiles. It sickens me.

This is absolutely nothing like servants in Old Testament times.

Its quite normal for a person to work for a wage. If I had a farm and there were people about me who were poverty stricken, I would provide a roof over their head, a nice place to sleep and food on the table in exchange for some help around the farm to keep it productive. Some people may call that slavery but I see it as a win/win.
 
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