Ah. Just as I thought. Nothing. Just vague impressions, probably garnered second-hand.Greta wrote: ↑Wed Aug 02, 2017 3:03 amToo much to list. To start, so-called "evil spirits" that were "treated" with exorcism turned out to be infections. It's a book of ancient myths - like all the others.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Aug 01, 2017 6:11 pmEvidence needs to be specific. You can't convince based on vague generalities like the above. Show your evidence, please.
Interesting that you consider that good enough to ground your (dis-)belief. If I offered you the same sort of vague response, I wonder if you'd accept it? I really doubt you would...or that you should.
Noah's ark. The Garden of Eden. Creation in six days. Jonah and the whale. Virgin birth. Resurrection. Walking on water. The feeding of the 4,000. Miracle healing. Evil (bacterial) spirits.
What's your evidence for disbelief of any of these in particular? For example, what reason would you give for disbelieving in the Resurrection? Or if we were to grant the possibility of God Incarnate, why would we have reason to deny the virgin birth, walking on water, or the feeding of the 5,000? In fact, if God were incarnated, what would give us reason to deny ANY miracle at all?
Yes. Without a meta-system, you've got nothing to tell you what "moral" means.G wrote:Who is proposing? I am observing. What I have observed is that pragmatic governance seems to be both more efficient and significantly more moral than the world's theocracies.Nope.Immanuel Can wrote:How do you know what "more moral" consists of? You can't use the "consensus" criterion to identify it, because if you do you've just created a circular argument that reads like, "That which is consensus is more moral, and I know because something is more moral if consensus."
Which societies? I doubt you're arguing that ISIL has a "hammered out" morality of the kind you're advocating. The Nazis took over what was certainly one of the most technologically-developed, sophisticated and academically high-achieving nations of the modern world...was their morality "hammered out"? How "hammered out" is the morality of North Korea? They're certainly availing themselves of modern means, but I'm not seeing it comes automatically bundled with virtue; are you?I am just pointing out the history. Morality has gradually been hammered out in different regions through the experience gained by those societies over time.
Meanwhile, I fear that"time" doesn't solve morality, even in modern societies. If it did, then fewer people would be dying or being exploited and abused today than a hundred years ago. But actually, it's worse than ever, on a global scale. Look at our immigration crisis, the mess in the Middle East, North Korea, Communist China, corrupt governments in Africa, the situation in Venezuela, gang rapes in Sweden and Germany, the economic collapse of Greece...with so much data against your assertion, you're going to need better evidence.
Wow. So today's world is better than it's been in past? 148 million killed in futile, secular wars in the last century, human trafficking and child exploitation at an all-time high, the Middle East a horror show, and you're still opting for The Myth of Automatic Moral Progress?Various ideas and systems come and go in a constant maturing and refining process.
And you think it takes faith to be a Theist? I'd say it's got nothing on the kind of blind optimism that sustaining belief in that myth requires.