I wrote:
Quote:
My point is that Hume's theory, which McCulloch was kind enough to present in full, is flawed from the very beginning. I showed how in post 8. Basically Hume's theory rests on the assumption that we do not see things occur which violate natural law. Yet there are many occurances per year that do violate what is understood. Furthermore, if you extend these events back to a time when science was non-existent, then the lack of understanding only increases exponentially.
With these facts, Hume's theory (which is totally accepted by individuals like Mack and Crossan) that these miracles were totally invented and never took place, is no longer the most likely option. The most likely option now is that these events did happen, but no one understood how
You countered:
An event can violate our understanding of natural law, but it can never violate the natural law(s) themselves.
Hume is right, because not a single one of us have ever witnessed an event that violates natural law. An event which violates natural principles would be known as a miracle, the existence of which you claim to deny.
There is often a great disparity between reality and our understanding of reality, but a violation of the later does not equate a violation of the former. Underneath all our disparate, often erroneous perceptions of reality, there is one true reality- absolute natural principles that make the world tick. These cannot be violated.
I hope you realize that you are arguing in a circle here. Basically you go from the assumption that miracles can't exist to the conclusion that miracles can't exist. However, this blantently disregards the circumstances and coincidences that have been documented and found through history and archeology. But this once again is not my point here. You keep jumping the gun and creating a strawman to attack even after I pulled out 3 quotes that show I am not trying to prove this (or anything) was in fact a divine miracle. You are getting to far ahead PP and You need to focus on what point I am making, not where you think I am going to go with it. So far you havn't addressed my main point so I'll get it to you straight. . . .
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The fact that there are circumstances which science has in the past been able to explain and now it can not, gives plausibility to the stories in the bible being actual events (even if they were nothing more than illusionist tricks or a great misunderstanding) rather than them being made up entirely as Mack, Hume and other non-theists claim they were.
Is this statement both true and logical? Yes or no and why.
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No more escaping the main point by veering off onto a side debate about adding divine nature to events. Answer one question at a time.
Beyond that, I still feel that I was correct in equating your argumentation as affirming the existence of miracles. You are using this woman's story to defend the viability of the miracles in the New Testament. Essentially, you follow up by saying that just as we do not understand how this woman survived, Jesus' followers did not understand how he walked on water or rose from the dead. You are claiming that there these odd occurances are in line with natural principles, but the only aspect missing is the observer's understanding of those principles (correct?).
Actually I was simply talking about the plausibility of events occuring whatever the cause. I was temporarily de-deifying these events to try and look at them without the blinders that non-theists put on whenever asked to examine events of supernatural origin. Trying to convince them of the whole package at once is like running my head into a wall over and over. So I am trying to go one step at a time.
YOU are the one who continues to attempt to add deification to these events. WHY?? Are you afraid to admit that these events which are unexplained does in fact invalidate Hume's first premise? The premise was that we do not see things occur which violate natural order. Yet here are events which not only violate what would happen 999,999 times out of 1,000,000, but furthermore they can not be explained by science. This is FURTHER compounded by the fact that science
has been able to understand these exact circumstance millions of times before in every homicide that occurs with these conditions. Why is science baffeled now?
Now removing all the supernatural elements from both the current events and the ancient accounts, are they not similar? Quick and unexplainable healings? This is almost a carbon copy from one time to another. The only difference is that this time the person healing is not starting a movement. Once the blinders of deification are removed, these events can easily overlap and THAT is the point. This shows that it is not only plausible but in fact probable that the events in question did occur and were not later inventions. The why's of these events is a very seperate issue right now. I am not discussing the why. I am starting WAAAAY back at Mack's ideas that they were obvious inventions because Hume said so.
BTW - did you ever read that satire I posted written while Napoleon was alive which used Hume's logic to prove Napoleon never even existed? It is really quite good. I will try and find it again. But this is more evidence that Hume's theories leave a lot to be desired. My evidence simply shows his faults more clearly and more importantly, they are
documented events.
Ah in the next two sections you do a textbook pleading the question along with a strawman attack. VERY very well done indeed.
You write: (strawman)
What you fail to consider is that the miracles in the new testament are touted as just that: miracles. When Jesus cured people of diseases, he explicitly described his action as a miracle; a phenomena defying the natural laws of physics.
Joh 4:54
This was the second miracle that Jesus performed after he had come back from Judea to Galilee.
Act 4:22
(The man who was healed by this miracle was over 40 years old.)
Joh 12:18
Because the crowd heard that Jesus had performed this miracle, they came to meet him.
And then you continue on with begging the question. . .
Miracles are, by definition, impossible feats. To use the story of the Brazilian woman as justification for Jesus' miracles, you must be willing to make the claim that this woman defied the laws of physics by surviving from her wounds.
"I'm right because everyone knows I am right!!!"
And then you return to another strawman.
If you are not willing to claim that, then you have no point. As it stands, the only way to justify Jesus' miracles is to prove the existance of some supernatural force capable of making them.
On the contrary, I do have a point. You have simply been avoiding it this whole time in lieu of a straw man that you put up instead and then burn it down. But not this time. I have a point and I even off set it above so it is now really easy to find. >>>>
I wrote:
Quote:
You see science has the tools and ability to figure out the why behind this event. Only after science has come short (and shouldn't have) does this event begin to resemble other such occurances.
You reply:
How can you claim that scientists SHOULD have been able to figure it out? The interplay of factors and forces in this event were likely almost infinitely complex; apparently, more complex than our current technology can descipher.
How can I claim this? Because Mr. Plat, we have perfected the science of ballistics to the point where error is basically zero. In addition to this, simple physics is a very easy science to understand and employ.
Example: When you shoot a bullet out of gun X it travels at X feet per second. If item Y (skull) is impacted at R degrees, we can be sure that bullet X will penetrate item Y.
Why? Because physics has shown it to be true over, and over, and over, and over, and over, and over . . . . . . . Science, especailly in regards to police work and in this case the physics of ballistics, was not born yesterday. We have CENTURIES of data that has been collected from all over the world. And yes we know that when bullet X hits skull Y at R angle . . . it should have broken through and killed person G. Note this didn't happen once, twice, three times . . .
It happened 6 consecutive times. Hence, the scientists say, they can not explain it.
KEY POINT HERE!!
Why can't they explain it? Because they don't have the scientific tools to understand what happened? No. They can't explain it because
it violates their understanding of science which has remained perfectly constant for as long as they have been taking records.
Thank you Mr. Hume, your first premise was just thrown out.
There is still much discovery to be made in the field of physics. Scientists could not determine why this woman survived because the forces at play were either (1) completely unknown to modern science, or (2) far too complex for a modern human mind to decipher.
Umm. PP you are grasping at straws. We don't understand mechanical physics? I'm not sure what you background with physics is but physics (mechanical) is understood and applied everday. If you don't think physics has been thuroughly researched then I advise you to get out of your house (it may suddenly collapse), never drive again (what a disaster that could be) or even start to walk again. All of those things are explained by physics and they are always correct. Same with ballistics. Unless you think that humans are still in the dark ages then neither option 1 nor option 2 are valid. We understand the physics that should have occured and it is well within our purview to conceptualize these factors.
Even amoung simple scenarios such as these, there are possibly billions of factors at play. An unlikely (yet possible) combination of these factors leaves us with the phenomena of a woman being shot six times in the skull, and getting up to see another day.
So you do admit that natural law (what should occur according to nature) does not always bring about the result that we see all the time? Careful here. . . .

It is a first class human tragedy that people of the earth who claim to believe in the message of Jesus, whom they describe as the Prince of Peace, show little of that belief in actual practice.