Bruce Burleson wrote:I had bowed out of this thread, which I started, but now that Duckphup has made his appearance, I'm interested again. I understand why he says that he would not believe it if someone else told him a story similar to his own. That is Hume's influence on rational thought - it's more likely that a report of a "miracle" is mistaken than it is that it is true. That idea usually goes unchallenged, but it does have some underlying assumptions that might not be valid."
Bullshit. It IS more likely that a report of a 'miracle' is mistaken (more likely, fraudulent) than it is to be true. You say "... that has some underlying assumptions that might not be valid". To that, I add another bullshit. Tell me, please... how many reports of 'miracles' have been credibly certified to be genuine? What are they? Where is the corroborating evidence? (If you see those questions as an excuse and justification to present bible bullshit, or Fatima, please don't bother. That's been done to death.) And
WHAT "underlying assumptions [...] might not be valid?"
In one of your posts on this thread, you said that I don't like you. You're right... I don't. I have encountered you on the internet off-and-on for about six years now, give or take... and I've
always found you to be both a dishonest, disingenuous interlocutor, and incapable of critical thinking. That paragraph, and this whole post, for that matter, attest to that... and
both of those attributes get right up my nose. Early-on, I formed the opinion that you were
EITHER stubbornly enamored with the challenge of clinging to your delusions in the face of knowledge, logic, reason, rationality, and critical thinking...
OR were a professional (although amateurish in execution) LFJ™ (Liar For Jesus). I
DO NOT regard that as a 'false dichotomy'. I don't regard that as an either/or thing anymore, though... but I'll just just keep the outcome to myself.
Bruce Burleson wrote:The fact is that we do not know everything and we do not understand how everything works. The instantaneous transmission and reception of knowledge might have an explanation in terms of the laws of physics, if we knew what all those laws were. So might healings and resurrections. So instead of automatically rejecting reports of such events, the proper rational response is to keep an open mind, and wait for further evidence.
Oh, twaddle. For one thing, you are confusing 'knowledge' with 'information; they
are NOT synonymous... and that
is NOT just a semantic quibble. Then, you're committing the logical fallacy (flaw in thinking) known as 'category error'. You want to lump together everything that 'seems like a miracle to the ordinary moron', and then you're taking the leap that if
any kind of 'miraculous' event is 'possible', then we should consider that
all claimed 'miraculous' events should be considered 'possible', and potentially explainable by the laws of physics. For one thing, you fail to consider that what I have described
might not even be an "instantaneous transmission and reception of knowledge," except in the most abstract sense. Remember... I described it (as best as I
can describe it) as a sudden awareness that a connection I was not aware existed (or even knew was possible) was broken. I was not even capable of formulating that description until about 20-years later. And throughout it all, I have strived to relate to this as an
observer, attempting to describe the experience as objectively as I can,
without contaminating my report with 'interpretation'.
The proper 'rational response'
IS to reject such reports (they are distractions from real work), and perk-up and pay attention
only when such reports are accompanied by compelling, credible, corroborated evidence. Funny thing, though... they never are. Not even mine.
Bruce Burleson wrote:For the person who experiences the event, however, it appears to me to be perfectly rational to accept it. Duckphup is a non-believer, so he certainly is not attempting to use his experience as a basis for arguing that others should believe. In all my encounters with him, he has appeared perfectly rational and level-headed. He has simply had an experience that is currently not capable of being explained. He verified the experience and stands by it. I see no reason to reject his testimony. He has given some evidence of the instantaneous transmission of information. The laws of physics may have to be revisited to make room for this evidence.
What I have presented does not stack up as compelling, credible 'evidence', and it should not be counted as such. It is nothing more than an anecdotal account. It might be a particularly compelling anecdotal account... but it is
still just an anecdotal account, nonetheless. You say that "... it appears to me to be perfectly rational to accept it"... but it
is NOT "... perfectly rational to accept it." At most...
IF you deem the account to be credible... you ought
only increase your perception that the probability that such things can happen is somewhat higher than ZERO. For
me... but only for me (in this specific case)... the probability is about 99.999%. I regard ALL other such accounts with skepticism... but
not with as much skepticism as I would have done
before it happened to me.
You said "I see no reason to reject his testimony." Well... you
should see
several reasons to reject my testimony... or at least, to not 'believe' it. 'Belief', in this context (and in the context of gods, religion and the supernatural), is the ILLUSION of knowledge. I might be lying (I'm not... but you can't 'know' that). I might be insane (I'm not... but you can't 'know' that).
Your statement that "The 'laws of physics' may have to be revisited to make room for this evidence" is ridiculous. For one thing, the 'laws of physics' refers to the cartesian/newtonian tick-tock cause-and-effect universe. Those 'laws' are nothing more than consistent mathematical relationships that we have been fortunate enough to 'notice', in nature. The explanation for my experience cannot lie in a tick-tock universe, so there is nothing to be 'revisited' there. Quantum physics? Perhaps. But quantum physics does not describe reality... it merely enables us to predict (with astonishing accuracy) how reality will respond, when we 'poke' it. Quantum theory constructs a model that endeavors to 'explain' what lies behind and beneath that... but there is still quite a lot to explain. Ideas about 'quantum entanglement' are the only things that I can
presently see that
might lead to some sort of a credible explanation... but how is that 'revisiting'? Or... maybe my experience was just an astonishing, unbelievable coincidence, with a possibility of 1 - in - 10
324 of happening, and there is
nothing to 'explain'? I don't think that's the case... but I
do think that it's a lot more probable than invisible, magical, all-powerful, supernatural sky-fairies.
Bruce Burleson wrote:From my perspective, experiences like these make the claims of the miraculous a little less....., well, miraculous. There's a lot of exotic stuff out there, and it is arrogant to scoff at the anecdotal evidence that exists. I wouldn't expect anyone to fall on his face before the altar and confess faith in Jesus. A little more humility about the possibility of divine existence and intervention would be refreshing, however.
So... you think this is 'miraculous'. I do not. I think it is just (presently) inexplicable. I have heard many accounts of similar experiences... and the sheer weight of anecdotal accounts suggests that there is something that ought to be explored. But the problem that I see is that
even if there is some credible explanation behind such experiences, it would
presently be a waste of time and resources to attempt to study it. I can conceive of no way to set up a controlled experiment to attempt to capture, analyze and explain such nebulous, ephemeral, transient and rare events.
"A little more humility about the possibility of divine essence and intervention"
would not be 'refreshing'... it would be toxically, droolingly, stupid. Why? Because
everything that we have discovered about nature points away from the idea of 'divine existence and intervention'. With respect to 'healings and ressurections', there are no compelling (or even credible) reasons to think that they are anything other than lies, hallucinations, delusions, or some other form of USDA Grade-A Prime horseshit.
Your post is a dishonest attempt to take an interesting (to some people) anecdote, and employ sophistry to link it to either your lies, or your delusions. Readers can take their pick.
Do not try to play your game with me, Bruce. I will pick you apart, every time. You may think your dishonesty is subtle... and to some people, it might be. But for others?... not so much.