TRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Thu Aug 01, 2024 2:25 amIf I followed the flying postman point correctly, it seems a problem with burden of proof again. When the norm is that people don't fly (unless with technical assistance of course) the burden of proof falls on the one who suggests there might be one or two who do. That is, we don't believe that claim until they verify it. This simple logic seems impossible for Theist apologists to grasp.
That's exactly what JW was saying, actually. I'm pushing back because yes, we all know postmen probably can't fly. Nobody has seen it, nobody has recorded it, it's quite reasonable at this point to say postmen can't fly. BUT...! This, "everybody makes mistakes" thing is only the norm in that people all seem to believe it and say it. I've seen people who I've observed for a long time and they never made a significant mistake (not like, a typo, like an error in judgment) in my observation. And this, also, is exactly like the flying postman. After observing something for a long time, and it never does that thing, we are justified in assuming it doesn't do that thing.
And "everybody makes mistakes" really pisses me off because it's an example of a religious idea that everybody just accepts and nobody questions, even if they claim to be reasoned, skeptical, thinking atheists. Atheism is gaining traction but at the same time, the better ideas that have led people to become atheists (before it was so popular) are losing traction. Never before has society claimed so strongly that it is reasoned, and been so far from it.
The idea that one should question what one is told was never championed for its own sake, but only because it was convenient, to get rid of the old moral establishment and install a new one, which of course now can't be questioned either.
What I was getting round to, though, is that the idea that everyone makes mistakes is absolutely necessary for Christians to believe or their worldview would fall apart: People should forgive others because they themselves need forgiveness, and hypothetically if someone never made a mistake, and didn't need to be forgiven, it would be totally righteous for them to be an absolute ogre to everyone else. What an awful idea; I reject it. If you're going to forgive someone, it should be because they need it, not because you do. It's not right to grab another slave and shake him for fifty cents, regardless of whether you owe your master fifty dollars or not.
TRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Thu Aug 01, 2024 3:01 amJust because we can fly to the moon now does not verify old stories of a man carried to the moon in a blanket held by a team of swans.
I know, but I don't want anyone to feel I'm moving the bar. So I'm never going to hang my hat on, "That was never observed," especially if I think it'll be observed in the near future. I don't even think it's the resurrection or the superpowers that poke any holes in Christianity. It's God's behaviour that does.