Dubious wrote: ↑Tue Jun 23, 2020 6:55 am
...you have to believe the human to whom god allegedly spoke to believe in its veracity...
No, actually, you don't. You needn't take what he says blindly.
Instead, you can hear what he says, compare it to what happens, what you discover comes, what the ensuing data shows, and know whether the man spoke truth or not. And then you can decide how far you're going to trust anything further. That's precisely what people do, in fact, do with all situations involving a person testifying to something...whether in a law court, a science lab, a classroom, or a claimed prophetic saying. The character of the speaker is decided on the correctness of his utterances.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 3:05 pmTheir truthfulness would be a separate question: your question only asks why the mediating agencies are what they are, not whether or not the message they contain is true. It does not follow that if a man says X, then X is automatically false.
If something cannot be proven, and especially for anything so incapable of proof, it cannot be considered true under any circumstance whether or not automatically denoted false which by then would be superfluous to assert as a next or final step.
There are few things that are actually incapable of proof. The existence of God is certainly not one of them. But one act of revelation, one miracle, one prophet, one incarnation, one manifestation of divine power -- even one Creation -- would be sufficient to prove His existence. The question is only whether or not any such has every occurred.
- Where and when was any such being reported in all of history other than through hearsay which does not equate to proof or probability even in law.
This has been demonstrated untrue, actually. There are plenty of books around that summon the relevant legal methods to assess the believability of religious claims. That's exactly the approach used by somebody like Josh McDowell, in "Evidence That Demands A Verdict."
- Science sees no necessity for a creator as a conscious being to exist.
"Science" has no such opinion, actually. Science is a methodology, not a set of fact-claims. And the method was invented by Francis Bacon, who was not only one of the most famous scientists in history for doing so, but was also an ardent theologian. Bacon invented a method of detecting order in nature because he expected to find order in nature; and he expected it because he believed in a God of order. That's how it actually happened.
God’s “Let There Be” command explains nothing except to prior periods that had no idea how things came to be.
I think you're channelling the Beatles there.
...what is certifiable historically is how god(s) were created and developed through purely human motives.
"Certifiable historically"? Heh.

No, it's not. It's a speculation only. It's always been that, because it's actually not historically verified. And it takes a form of the genetic fallacy to believe it, as well.
There are alternate accounts of how religion came to be, ones that are at least equally plausible. One is that the need for "religion" is deeply imbedded in the human psyche -- and that's a better hypothesis, because the religious impulse seems as good a candidate for a universal inclination as one can get. If so, it could well be the case that "religion" is mankind's attempt to reach understanding of God -- the existence or non-existence of the same not being established by how the beliefs in question originated.
But let's pretend to take the hypothesis seriously, and see where that leads us. Let us suppose that we found that one "religion" were created in that way, "by human motives." Does that tell us anything about the next "religion"? No. Does it tell us that ALL "religions" were constructed that way? No, nothing close, actually. But let's suppose that we find that nearly all "religions" were constructed in that way? Does that give us reason to say we know that one was not? That there could be no one "religion" that contained the truth? No, of course not.
Not least if what men say can be true or false then THAT would be a non-sequitur to think that man could EVER speak for god in the first place except by subterfuge or hallucination.
That doesn't seem apparent. IF God spoke, is your supposition that no man could pass on what He said? There's no logic to suggest that.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 3:05 pmWell, what makes us reject the claim of Mohammed? The answer is remarkably similar for Jews, Christians and Atheists. It's that the Koran fails basic tests of truthfulness, such as correspondence to reality, accuracy to its own claims, empirical and historical facts, and rational coherence. So Jews, Christians and Atheists are on good grounds when saying, "If there is a revelation of God, that one isn't it."
To atheists the same can be said of Christianity regarding accuracy, empirical or historical fact.
Well, they have a go at that, to be sure. Guys like Dawkins want to argue it's all a "delusion." But in actual fact, a great case can be made FOR the Biblical narrative, and as I pointed out above, such cases have indeed been made.
..and let's not forget that the Jews rejected Christianity from the very beginning.
The Jewish rejection of Christianity did not come from conflicts with the Old Testament, which Christians also accept as canonical, but over the question of whether or not Jesus is the predicted Messiah of the Old Testament. Outside of that question, Jews and Christians are actually in agreement about the status of Scripture.
Mohammed and Paul both had visions
That's like saying, "John Doe and Einstein both had theories." True enough; but go and look at what they said, and you'll see the distinction instantly.
Religion is collapsing
Statistically, it's not. What's collapsing are merely the conventional, institutional religions, and especially Western institutional religions in the Developed World. But worldwide, belief systems are expanding rapidly, and especially the pietistic and experiential ones. Even in the Developed World, where institutional religions are shrinking, there is an explosion and proliferation of "new" religions and ideologies, such as Gnosticism, Techophilia and Utopian Socialism. It doesn't look at all like the religious impulse is going away.
However, whether a religion is expanding or contracting numerically has nothing whatsoever to do with its truth or falsehood, obviously. That's a
non-sequitur, too. To think that would be merely the old
ad populum fallacy, the naive belief that numerical popularity proves truth. Of course, it doesn't.