Seth wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:
I've explained that the Vatican, or anyone asserting the god-claim, has not produced evidence. They haven't. You've called the Bible "evidence" of the god-claim, and I've explained why it isn't and why I don't consider it evidence at all.
You're not the arbiter of "evidence" or how it is defined. The dictionary is.
Very true:
dictionary.com
Evidence: that which tends to prove or disprove something.
The Bible doesn't tend to prove anything.
A copy of a copy of a 1900 year old document, written by someone other than the purported narrator, claiming to make a statement of fact, is not evidence of that fact, because it does not tend to prove that fact. Just as Homer's Iliad does not tend to prove anything said or done by Achilles. It only proves that someone in the past ASSERTED that Achilles said or did something. It can be offered to prove that the assertion was made, not that the assertion is true.
Seth wrote:
It's merely a statement of the claim.
And yet you admit that it contains historical facts, but you only admit this because those facts have been independently verified. But verification is not the metric for evidence. Evidence is, as I quoted from the dictionary, "that which tends to prove or disprove something." Verification goes to the truth-value of the evidence, not towards it's nature as evidence.
In science, documents are not evidence. The observations, tests, etc. described in the documents are evidence.
In a courtroom, the document is inadmissible hearsay within hearsay.
And, it doesn't tend to prove anything.
Seth wrote:
It is nothing more than Homer's Iliad and Oddysey, and like Homer's works, it is not evidence of god claims. It is the assertion of god claims. A written assertion doesn't become evidence with time.
No, an assertion doesn't "become evidence" it IS evidence,
No, an assertion is not evidence in science.
In a courtroom, an assertion may be evidence, but it isn't admissible if the declarant is not there. Now, if Mark were here, we could cross examine him and expose his bogus claim. But, since we can't, a third party can't introduce Mark's assertion as evidence of anything, except the limited purpose of demonstrating that the statement was made or exists. It is not evidence of the truth of the claim.
Seth wrote:
if it's an assertion of an observation of an actual event. You disbelieve that certain claims of actual events are factual, but you cannot provide any countervailing evidence to prove that Jesus did not exist or that he did not perform the acts which the observers recording the acts claim. You know full well that written accounts of observations of events are without any question held to be evidence of those events. Whether they are true accounts is another matter, but they are absolutely evidence that the events written of occurred.
In science? No, not evidence of the truth value of scientific claims.
In law? No, not admissible to prove the truth of the matter asserted.
You lose.
Seth wrote:
I have no obligation to present evidence to "counter" a specific claim not made. It is not incumbent upon me or anyone else to glean what part of the Bible you are asserting is backed by evidence and what is not.
You do if you assert that "there is no evidence."
No. If you say "there is life on the Moon" and I say "no, there is no evidence of life on the Moon," then I am not required to produce evidence of the lack of evidence. That's nonsensical. You need to prove that there is evidence of life on the Moon. If you don't, then there isn't any evidence. If evidence is discovered later, then there will be evidence. But, right now, there isn't any.
That would only be true if you had knowledge that I had never gone to the moon. If I had gone to the moon and made the statement, it would be evidence of life on the moon because it would be the recording of my observation of life on the moon. You might continue to disbelieve my statement because you don't like the degree to which my statement can be verified, but that doesn't change the nature of my statement as evidence of facts.[/quote]
But, we know you haven't gone to the moon, so we know you have no evidence.
Moreover, if you went to the Moon and came back with your report, it would be evidence. But, if you wrote down a diary claiming you went to the moon, and it was discovered long after your death, copied, altered, recopied, the originals lost. The copies of lost copies of a dead man's statement would not, in fact, be evidence of anything.
Seth wrote:
In the same way, the documentary evidence that exists in the Bible of events which were observed by the original authors is indeed evidence of the events that occurred. That you cannot verify them to your satisfaction does not change their status or nature. And absent any countervailing evidence from you that shows that the observations of events so recorded are false or incorrect, or merely incomplete, the weight of evidence lies with the observational claims.
I've already addressed this. You're wrong.
The weight of the evidence is not with the writer of Beowulf that Grendel and his Mother really existed. I won't explain it again. You're just wrong.
Seth wrote:
So, where's your countervailing evidence that the claimed observations of events found in the Bible are either false or incorrect? Your skepticism does not qualify as countervailing evidence I'm afraid, so you'll have to do better than that.
Under your logic, my own writings here on Rationalia are sufficient countervailing evidence.
A subsequent writer's writing, setting forth what he says Mark, or Matthew, or Luke's statements were have no greater value than mine, do they? On what basis would you rank their writings above mine?
Seth wrote:
No, what you are calling "evidence" is an assertion. Assertions aren't evidence. That's the silliness of your argument. You're suggesting that because Matthew or Mark "asserted" that Jesus was the Son of God, risen from the dead, etc., that there is "evidence" for that proposition. No. Writing down the thing at issue doesn't make it "evidence." It makes it a written assertion, and in this case that assertion is ancient hearsay within hearsay within hearsay.
It ain't evidence. It's a hearsay assertion or declaration.
Hearsay evidence is still evidence. It's excluded in some courtrooms because as hearsay it is less reliable (the truth value is reduced) than original testimonial evidence and it's important in a criminal proceeding that the accused have the opportunity to face his accusers directly.
Not just criminal proceedings. All proceedings. The Bible is admissible. Moreover, The Bible has an authentication problem too. It's not even evidence because it can't be authenticated. To satisfy the requirement of authenticating or identifying an item of evidence, the proponent must produce evidence sufficient to support a finding that the item is what the proponent claims it is. This is done with the testimony that an item is what it is claimed to be. Nobody can testify to that about the Bible. You need a witness.
Seth wrote:
However, hearsay evidence is allowed in other court venues, as is documentary evidence. A scrawl in blood on the floor next to the murder victim in his own hand that "Jim kilt me" is direct documentary evidence of a claim of factual events observed by the victim. The statement of a detective on the stand saying "I saw a scrawl in blood in the hand of the victim saying "Jim kilt me"" is indirect evidence of the written statement of a factual event observed by the victim. The detective's written report, in which he writes "On the floor next to the victim was written, in the victim's blood, the words "Jim kilt me." is documentary evidence of a direct observation of factual events by the detective, from which it may be rationally inferred that the victim wrote "Jim kilt me" in blood before he died. The truth value of that bloody scrawl is another thing entirely, but all the above are absolutely and unequivocally "evidence" of the events and observations.
The Bible is not a dying declaration. You lose. Excluded.
You don't have a witness to authenticate it.
Seth wrote:
And it doesn't matter if the documentary recording of the observation of events took place 10 minutes or 2000 years ago, it's all still evidence.
No, it does matter. A dying declaration of the "Jim Killed Me" kind MUST be made right when the person is dying. It's also a silly exception to the hearsay rule, because it's based on the notion that people are afraid to die with a "lie on their lips" and go to hell for an unforgiven sin.
Seth wrote:
You just want to call it an "assertion" because you disbelieve the nature of the recorded observation and its truth value. But again, your skepticism doesn't change the actual nature of the writings as evidence.
In science, documents are not evidence.
In courtrooms, you have no witness to authenticate the document, and it's inadmissible hearsay. And, it also has zero probative value because it doesn't tend to prove anything at all, and is therefore not evidence.