NICK:
Fine, then post a sound, deductive argument that shows the existence of miracles.
P-DUNN
Here's an argument from Peter Kreeft:
1) A miracle is an event whose only adequate explanation is the extraordinary and direct intervention of God.
2) There are numerous well-attested miracles.
3) Therefore, there are numerous events whose only adequate explanation is the extraordinary and direct intervention of God.
4) Therefore God exists.
To support Premise Two, you can look at any of the 67 Lourdes miracles for yourself.
NICK:
Okay. I have to point out a few things that are problematic with your argument.
1. That was not a deductive argument, nor is it sound.
2. The conclusion is “god exists” not “miracles exist” so you have not proven what I challenged you to do; so let me say [type] it again. “Fine, post a sound, deductive argument that proves the existence of miracles.”
3. Now, that inductive probabilistic argument would probably “convince” a very gullible person.
4. Premise one is definitional.
5. Premise two is false.
6. Premise three is in effect “god did it” and begs the question of how god managed to do the “unexplainable.” To explain mystery with even greater mystery tells us nothing of substance.
7. The conclusion does not follow from the premises.
NICK:
Emphasis mine.
That is a non sequitur.
That there is a [miracle] does not prove the existence of a god(s).
P-DUNN
How's that, exactly? Especially considering the definition I just posted. "An event whose only adequate explanation is the [extraordinary] and direct intervention of God does not prove the existence of a god(s)" nick?
NICK:
Okay, I will show you how it is a non sequitur.
1. If even one miracle or any sort of spiritual experience is confirmed, then atheism is false.
2. even one or more miracle or any sort of spiritual experience is confirmed.
therefore
3. Atheism is false.
1. If the existence of a spirit that interacts with a person, and it is recorded and verified in a controlled environment and verified as a spiritual experience does not prove the existence of a god, then it does not follow that “If even one miracle or any sort of spiritual experience is confirmed, then atheism is false.” And as such the major premise of P-DUNN’S argument is a non- sequitur.
2. the existence of a spirit that interacts with a person, and it is recorded and verified in a controlled environment and verified as a spiritual experience does not prove the existence of a god
Therefore
3. it does not follow that “If even one miracle or any sort of spiritual experience is confirmed, then atheism is false.” And as such the major premise of P-DUNN’S argument is a non- sequitur.
That is a sound deductive argument.
P-DUNN:
Suppose a limb spontaneously regenerated after someone prayed. You're saying that this wouldn't prove God's existence? Oh, that's right, perhaps it's some undiscovered mutation that goes against all scientific documentation and genetic research.
NICK:
1. Yes, the person could have supernatural powers. As I said, your god would need to be here to take credit for such a thing.
Yes, “perhaps it's some undiscovered mutation that goes against all scientific documentation and genetic research.”
But if such a thing occurs, then I would be most interested in reading about it. Do you have any examples of such a thing?
*crickets chirping*
P-DUNN:
Suppose someone came to the Lourdes with heart disease unable to walk on their own, carried on a stretcher. Suppose they were dipped down into the water, and right after that, were able to walk again, completely free of their heart disease. This wouldn't prove the existence of God how?
NICK:
No. Suppose someone came to the Lourdes with heart disease unable to walk on their own, carried on a stretcher. Suppose they were dipped down into the water, and right after that, were carried away on a stretcher still unable to walk on their own, completely burdend of their heart disease.
A hundred thousand times compared to that one time. Coincidences to happen.
NICK:
Especially because without said” god" actually being there to take credit for it, we could ascribe the alleged supernatural event to a cornucopia of things.
P-DUNN:
Of course. Here's the typical atheist tactic of asserting that each supernatural entity has an equal amount of evidence. We don't have any more evidence for Yahweh than we do for Zeus or Santa Clause.
NICK:
R.O.F.L. Just because your god is popular right now does not mean “there is more evidence for him or her.”
AFAICT: there is more evidence for “RA” the sun god then yours. Why don’t you worship him? He could be the “sprit” of the sun.
Well?
P-DUNN:
Yet such a statement is false. That discussion is for another thread, but if it can be reasonably demonstrated that there is more evidence for Yahweh than for Zeus, then it makes more sense to ascribe the supernatural event to Yahweh rather than "a cornucopia of things."
NICK:
Fine. Start a thread. I will assert the following:
“There is more evidence for the existence of the sun god RA, then the Jewish Christian God, Yahweh”
Will you take that. I’ll even take it to the gym debate.
P-DUNN:
Someone claiming to be a "Reasonist," making such a lazy, red herring response is rather revealing.
NICK:
That was a sophomoric response and doesn’t really merit discussion.
NICK:
Secondly, even if JC did a bunch of magic tricks,
P-DUNN:
Ah yes. Healing someone of blindness is a "magic trick."
NICK:
Yes, it is a magic trick. Can you tell me how your would be god managed to heal someone of blindness?
“It was a miracle, Jesus miraculously did it” =“It was magic, Jesus magically did it”
NICK:
he could have been an alien. It is much more [probable] that he was an [alien] then he was the creator of a universe over 26 billion light years across and over 12 billion years old.
P-DUNN:
Funny that you resort to any possibility that you can think of so you don't have to admit the supernatural.
NICK:
Funny, that you can’t define the “supernatural” out side of something like “I don’t know what caused x
therefore x is supernatural”
P-DUNN:
And it's also funny that positing Jesus as an "alien" doesn't solve your problem at all; it merely moves it somewhere else. How are these aliens able to perform "supernatural" [occurrences] if there was no God?
NICK:
Yes, they do “solve the problem”
What you do not seem to realize is that advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. What if I were to travel back to 33 CE and fly an Apache Helicopter over Jerusalem? What do you think the locals would have thought of computers?
The answer to your question is easy. There need not be a god. It was magic.
NICK:
Magic tricks don't prove the existence of a god.
Sorry.
Nick
P-DUNN:
I take it that spontaneous remission of heart disease is what you'd call a magic trick, then?
NICK:
Rheumatic Heart Disease Statistics
• Rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease killed 3,248 people in the United States in 2004.
• 2004 mortality: male deaths — 1,022 (31.5 percent of total deaths from rheumatic fever/rheumatic heart disease); female deaths — 2,226 (69.6 percent).
• Modern antibiotic therapy has sharply reduced mortality. In 1950, about 15,000 people in the United States died of these diseases.
• From 1994 to 2004 the death rate from rheumatic fever/rheumatic heart disease fell 50.0 percent. Actual deaths declined 40 percent (preliminary).
• In 2004 the death rates per 100,000 population for white males were 0.9, for black males 0.6, for white females 1.3 and for black females 1.0.
http://www.americanheart.org/present...dentifier=4712
NICK:
So let me get this straight. Because this woman only had a 30% chance of surviving from this disease, and she did. Therefore, it was a miracle.
here is what you posted.
“A miracle is an event whose only adequate explanation is the extraordinary and direct intervention of God.”
And adequate explanation is that “she got lucky” If her chances were say .
.00232x10^-10989 or something like that and she spontaneously recovered, then it may have been argued that it was a miracle.
If the criteria for a miracle are that someone beat the odds of 1 and 4 then whatever scientific organization that “verified” these alleged miracles is probably not peer reviewed and is on par with creation science.
Cheers,
Nick