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Einstein Letter on God His unvarnished opinion

#221 User is offline   mike777 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 00:38

1) Most if not all of these facts are expected to be taken literally....
2) Most if not all Christians concede if they are untrue, lilterally, then, their religion is a total fake, worse a cruel fake.
3) If Jesus did not die a horrible, horrible death and then rise from the dead, Yes a horrible cruel fake......
4) It would not take much to dismiss the whole Passion Play as a horrible cruel fake......
5) As we all know many...billions and billions think so......
6) It is assumed Jesus loves everyone ...even you.....
7) posting about religion may not be best.
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#222 User is offline   han 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 03:33

In Mathematics and plausible reasoning volume I by G. Polya from 1954 I came across the following quote in the chapter on maxima and minima. It reminded me of the discussion in this thread:

Quote

Since the fabric of the world is the most perfect and was established by the wisest Creator, nothing happens in this world in which some reason of maximum or minimum would not come to light. -Euler


Euler is one of the most important mathematicians of all time. The author comments that these words "describe vividly a certain aspect of the problems on minima and maxima which may have appealed to many scientists in his century."

I think it is a wonderful book by the way, especially for those who are interested in mathematics but haven't studied it in great depth.
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.

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#223 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 03:47

Han said:

these words "describe vividly a certain aspect of the problems on minima and maxima which may have appealed to many scientists in his century."

Let me see if I can make sense of this .... the axiom that defines the real numbers is the existence of a supremum and infimum of each bounded set, even in those numbers cannot be constructed (unless one accepts sup(X) as a construction). It follows a.o. that continous functions on closed intervals have maxima and minima. So what Euler is saying is that the real numbers must be an adequate model of real-World phenomena? Or does it mean something completely different?

mike777, on Jun 1 2008, 07:38 AM, said:

2) Most if not all Christians concede if they are untrue, lilterally, then, their religion is a total fake, worse a cruel fake.

Most if not all of the Christians I know disagree strongly with this. Most if not all christian theologists whose comments and essays I have read seem to disagree with this.

I sometimes get the impression that the word "Christian" means completely different things in different parts of the World.
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#224 User is offline   han 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 04:19

helene_t, on Jun 1 2008, 04:47 AM, said:

Han said:

these words "describe vividly a certain aspect of the problems on minima and maxima which may have appealed to many scientists in his century."

Let me see if I can make sense of this .... the axiom that defines the real numbers is the existence of a supremum and infimum of each bounded set, even in those numbers cannot be constructed (unless one accepts sup(X) as a construction). It follows a.o. that continous functions on closed intervals have maxima and minima. So what Euler is saying is that the real numbers must be an adequate model of real-World phenomena? Or does it mean something completely different?

I am sure this is not what either Polya or Euler intended. The book is not a mathematics book in the common use of the word. It does not touch subjects as advanced as the axioms of the real numbers. Rather it discusses how "plausible reasoning" is very important in mathematical research just as it is in any other field of science. I think you would really love the book Helene, I did.

Euler's quote applies to many things, for example light following geodesics. Of course Euler won't have had this example in mind.
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.

- hrothgar
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#225 User is offline   luke warm 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 07:35

TimG, on May 31 2008, 09:56 PM, said:

luke warm, on May 31 2008, 09:14 PM, said:

and this is just another example, richard... because of your own views you call some of the things i believe "myths" (Christ arising, for example)... you're perfectly allowed to hold that view, but you aren't (logically) allowed to objectively dismiss some historical documents and not others simply because of worldview

Isn't this what you are doing? You have conveniently left out Richard's reference to:

Quote

Does anyone here believe that Romulus and Remus were suckled by wolves?
That mighty Achilles was the son of the nymph Thetis?
That Odin hung himself from the World Ash?
These legends (if you object to calling them myths) were all retold by generations and/or written about.

What evidence, aside from "the Bible tells me so", do you have that Mary was a virgin when she gave birth to Jesus? Or, do you believe this is one of those Bible facts that should not be taken literally?

no tim, i don't think i am... how many times do i have to say that we *all* have our presuppositions?

as for mikeh's criticisms of the false literacy found in my posts, i accept that we all here are merely posters on a bulletin board forum, none are what i would call great or objective or original thinkers... the difference i see, and i might be wrong, is that i can acknowledge the towering and superior intellect of past and present atheist thinkers while disagreeing with their conclusions.. i've not heard atheists give the same respect to theist thinkers, some whose works are barely discernible to even the brightest amongst us - such as mikeh
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#226 User is offline   TimG 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 08:13

luke warm, on Jun 1 2008, 08:35 AM, said:

Quote

What evidence, aside from "the Bible tells me so", do you have that Mary was a virgin when she gave birth to Jesus?  Or, do you believe this is one of those Bible facts that should not be taken literally?

You've criticized Richard for referring to Christian beliefs as myth, but you did not address the quoted question. It seems to me that you are not applying the same objectivity to Christian legend that you are to other religious (or world view) legends.
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#227 User is offline   jtfanclub 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 08:17

helene_t, on Jun 1 2008, 04:47 AM, said:

mike777, on Jun 1 2008, 07:38 AM, said:

2) Most if not all Christians concede if they are untrue, lilterally, then, their religion is a total fake, worse a cruel fake.

Most if not all of the Christians I know disagree strongly with this. Most if not all christian theologists whose comments and essays I have read seem to disagree with this.

I sometimes get the impression that the word "Christian" means completely different things in different parts of the World.

Actually, that's one of my favorite questions of Christian priests and Jesuits (used to live near Cincinnati, lots of Jesuits to ask). If we found conclusive evidence that Jesus lived, and all thing said about him were true, except that he did not rise from the dead, would this make you question your faith? And so far, it's been a unanimous yes. I don't claim to understand why this is so, and yet, it seems to be the case.
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#228 User is offline   luke warm 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 08:53

tim said:

You've criticized Richard for referring to Christian beliefs as myth, but you did not address the quoted question. It seems to me that you are not applying the same objectivity to Christian legend that you are to other religious (or world view) legends.

tim i'll try again... i didn't criticize richard for referring to my beliefs as myths, i simply stated that his presupposition is that they *are* myths... the same goes for what you, he, i believe about zeus or anyone else... the only criticism occurs when the person making the claim denies these presuppositions

jtfanclub, on Jun 1 2008, 09:17 AM, said:

helene_t, on Jun 1 2008, 04:47 AM, said:

mike777, on Jun 1 2008, 07:38 AM, said:

2) Most if not all Christians concede if they are untrue, lilterally, then, their religion is a total fake, worse a cruel fake.

Most if not all of the Christians I know disagree strongly with this. Most if not all christian theologists whose comments and essays I have read seem to disagree with this.

I sometimes get the impression that the word "Christian" means completely different things in different parts of the World.

Actually, that's one of my favorite questions of Christian priests and Jesuits (used to live near Cincinnati, lots of Jesuits to ask). If we found conclusive evidence that Jesus lived, and all thing said about him were true, except that he did not rise from the dead, would this make you question your faith? And so far, it's been a unanimous yes. I don't claim to understand why this is so, and yet, it seems to be the case.

paul said, "if he is not raised your faith is in vain" ... so yes, that would destroy christianity
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#229 User is offline   jtfanclub 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 10:45

luke warm, on Jun 1 2008, 09:53 AM, said:

paul said, "if he is not raised your faith is in vain" ... so yes, that would destroy christianity

In the same chapter he says...

42This is how it will be at the resurrection of the dead. What is planted is decaying, what is raised cannot decay. 43The body[z] is planted in a state of dishonor but is raised in a state of splendor. It is planted in weakness but is raised in power. 44It is planted a physical body but is raised a spiritual body. If there is a physical body, there is also a spiritual body.

That implies to me that resurrection is of spiritual body, not of the physical body. To say that his body died but Jesus lived on in spirit...that to me is a very different thing than saying his body rose from the dead as Lazarus' was said to.
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#230 User is offline   TimG 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 11:28

luke warm, on Jun 1 2008, 09:53 AM, said:

tim said:

You've criticized Richard for referring to Christian beliefs as myth, but you did not address the quoted question. It seems to me that you are not applying the same objectivity to Christian legend that you are to other religious (or world view) legends.

tim i'll try again... i didn't criticize richard for referring to my beliefs as myths, i simply stated that his presupposition is that they *are* myths... the same goes for what you, he, i believe about zeus or anyone else... the only criticism occurs when the person making the claim denies these presuppositions

I still don't quite understand. It seems to me that Richard has not dismissed the Christian legend out of hand but rather he has some (perhaps considerable) knowledge regarding who wrote the legend, how it was translated and accepted by the Church, and which parts of the story are corroborated by other histories. Based upon this, he has concluded that the story of Jesus is at least part myth. Not unlike the process by which he has concluded that the stories of Zeus and Odin are myth.

Is the complaint that Richard (and others) have a predisposition not to believe in the super-natural? Or, that we have a predisposition not to believe specifically in the Christian super-natural?

As a child I attended church and Sunday school. I was taught that the stories of Jesus as told in the Bible were true. At some point, my presupposition was that of the Christian perspective. I now consider myself an atheist. I came to atheism despite teaching to the contrary.

I do not doubt that you believe in the tenants of Christianity. But, I do not believe there is evidence to support your beliefs; I deny the Christian God. I don't deny your beliefs, I just think you are wrong!

I do not claim to be able to prove there is no God, and I am disposed to think that it may be something that is impossible to prove. But, I have not heard any convincing argument for the existence of God, either. I believe the onus of proof is on those who believe in the existence of God rather than on those who do not believe. Just as I would say that the onus of proof is on those who believe there is (or once was) life on Mars, rather than those who do not believe. I would suppose nothingness until provided with evidence to the contrary.

You are still avoiding the question regarding the virgin birth.
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#231 User is offline   matmat 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 11:49

luke warm, on Jun 1 2008, 08:35 AM, said:

i've not heard atheists give the same respect to theist thinkers,

perhaps they don't deserve it?
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#232 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 12:12

matmat, on Jun 1 2008, 06:49 PM, said:

luke warm, on Jun 1 2008, 08:35 AM, said:

i've not heard atheists give the same respect to theist thinkers,

perhaps they don't deserve it?

Some do IMHO. Kirkegaard is one of my favorite philosofers.

But theology is not one of my hobbies so I cannot mention any others. OK, Newton and Bayes were theologists too and we just read Han quoting Euler for mentioning God, but I don't know anything about the theological ideas of those guys. So there is not much to respect or disrespect AFAIAC.
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#233 User is offline   han 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 12:13

luke warm, on Jun 1 2008, 08:35 AM, said:

as for mikeh's criticisms of the false literacy found in my posts, i accept that we all here are merely posters on a bulletin board forum, none are what i would call great or objective or original thinkers... the difference i see, and i might be wrong, is that i can acknowledge the towering and superior intellect of past and present atheist thinkers while disagreeing with their conclusions.. i've not heard atheists give the same respect to theist thinkers, some whose works are barely discernible to even the brightest amongst us - such as mikeh

You are quite a clown, writing an insult like that and then complain about a lack of respect in the same paragraph.
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.

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#234 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 13:42

luke warm, on May 31 2008, 02:53 PM, said:

helene_t, on May 31 2008, 10:08 AM, said:

kenberg, on May 31 2008, 01:47 PM, said:

I think people do take many ancient accounts, and modern accounts for that matter,  with more than a few grains of salt. The adage is that the history books are written by the winners, suggesting that you do well by not taking everything they say at face value.

Yes. Also, when the original texts are not available, copying errors and translation errors (if not downright fraud) are huge problems. Something that is easy to underestimate in these days of high-fidelity copying and professional translation.

So to trust an ancient historical document at the very least you need agreement between independent sources. Fortunately, the bigger issues can be addressed by a combination of history, archeology, physical anthropology, linguistics, genetics etc.

what you and ken say is true, but has nothing to do with what matmat said... he said, " My point is that religion expects you to believe things with virtually NO evidence."

what he, and i suppose you and ken, are lending credence to is the "... virtually NO..." part of his sentence... there is every bit as much, if not more than, historical evidence regarding the new testament as there is regarding other things we accept as true about the ancient world...

Just to set the record straight, I think I was the one who said "there's virtually NO evidence".

I admit that I'm not a history scholar, and perhaps I've been reading biased accounts because I mostly read pro-atheism books. From what I've read, there isn't much concensus among historians on whether Jesus actually existed. But if he did, there's strong evidence that the Bible's accounts of his birth and life are in error.

For instance, the story of Joseph and Mary refers to a Roman census. The Romans actually kept good records of these things, and historians can find no evidence that such a census happened at the time the Bible claims.

If someone could actually heal lepers, walk on water, feed lots of people with a single loaf of bread, or perform any of the other miracles attributed to Jesus, don't you think it would have been in all the papers at the time, or in lots of witness's diaries? And surely some of them would have been discovered by archeologists by now, wouldn't they? Yet the only reports we have of these magnificent events are the gospels; they're attributed to his disciples, who could hardly be considered unbiased, and many historians believe that they were actually written hundreds of years later, so they aren't even the 1st-hand reports that they claim.

And even if the New Testament is true, what about all the stuff in the Old Testament? God creating the heavens and the earth in 6 days, Noah and the flood, the exodus from Egypt. Despite the fact that I attend seder every year and recount the story of God rescuing us from bondage, I now understand that there's no historical evidence that the Jews ever lived there, let alone as slaves.

Is everything in the Bible made up? No, I don't think so, it's "based on true events", like Oliver Stone's "JFK" movie. But is there any independent evidence for any of the miraculous stuff? That's the stuff we're asked to believe that make this a religion, not just a history.

#235 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 14:14

mikeh, on May 31 2008, 04:15 PM, said:

barmar, on May 30 2008, 11:30 AM, said:

Quote

And one last point: Religion "demands major lifestyle changes". That is new to me.


Praying towards Mecca 5 times a day. Attending Mass on Sunday or Synagogue on Saturday.

Dietary restrictions (kosher, fish on Friday, sacred cows).

Clothing requirements.

Language (not taking God's name in vain) and art (no graven images, no depictions of Mohammed).

Lent.

Gender-specific rules.

and so on.

Individually most of these are mere inconveniences (although the sexist rules go beyond that), but taken as a whole they pretty significant requirements on how you live your life if you're going to follow all the tenets of a religion.

Pinker explains the utility of these rules brilliantly: he is summarizing the work of others, to whom he gives full credit. Simply put, these rules are not due to reasons of hygiene (I was taught, as a child, that the Semitic prohibition against pork was for health reasons) but are instead crafted to create a social identity and to build a barrier between 'us' and 'them'. If we had no such arbitrary rules, people would mingle, and groups would dissolve and the leaders would lose their power of control. The creation of special rules served to perpetuate power.... which has long been a major purpose of organized religion.

The literal inability of some religious people (as evidenced by posts here) to recognize these human drives is a large part of why they are so successful. LW and others appear to truly be blind to the arguments made against their faith. If it were not for the pernicious effect of fundamental religion, such blindness should be pitied rather than debated. Telling a blind man how to see is futile, after all.

Yes, I understand why the rules exist. In fact, organized religion mainly exists, IMHO, as a way for leaders to control the masses and maintain a stable society. Most ancient societies didn't have democracy and the rule of law as a means to accomplish this.

My point is that most of the adherents to the rules actually believe that a God commands them to do so, they're not just going with them to be part of the crowd. If they didn't have this belief, I doubt that they would go along with so many requirements just because of peer pressure.

That's what keeps religion going, I think. It's pressure that comes from all angles, starting when you're a young child, not just your intimate peer group. Religious indoctrination comes from relatives, friends, authority figures, popular culture, and in many places schools. Most other forms of peer pressure come just from one direction, and it's easily recognized for what it is. Considering how it's taught, I guess I can understand why it gets past the usual skepticism people have for fantastic claims. The only other thing in life that's comparable is patriotism (hmm, does anyone know if there are more people who change their religion or change their citizenship?).

One thing I often find curious: Many explanations for why religion propagates so well include the fact that children are predisposed to believe what authority figures, especially their parents, tell them -- it's how they learn to survive in the world. And when we're young, they're told stories about Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny, and believe them, yet all children figure out that they're lies when they reach a certain level of maturity (despite the evidence that they actually did receive presents and find colored eggs). But somehow they don't outgrow the God stories. I guess people have a more deep-seated need to find meaning in life than just to "get stuff", so they maintain this theory. I suppose that's a positive thing -- spirituality is better than greed.

Then again, they also may notice that they don't stop receiving Christmas presents just because they stopped believing in Santa. I wonder why they don't figure out the analogy, that they can live a full and meaningful life without believing in a supernatural being.

#236 User is offline   TimG 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 14:18

luke warm, on May 31 2008, 01:53 PM, said:

what he, and i suppose you and ken, are lending credence to is the "... virtually NO..." part of his sentence... there is every bit as much, if not more than, historical evidence regarding the new testament as there is regarding other things we accept as true about the ancient world... for him to say what he did is to admit to arbitrarily accepting some more than others, with nothing but presupposition as the reason... now i know we all have those presuppositions, but the intellectually honest amongst us at least acknowledge that

Where is the non-Bible historical evidence that Jesus was born to a virgin mother or walked the earth after his death?

What other ancient-world, super-natural events do we accept as true?
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#237 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 16:56

Woodie Guthrie said:

I was born about ten thousand years ago,
There ain't nuthin' in this world that I don't know,
I saw Peter Paul and Moses playin' ring-around-the-roses,
And I'll whup the guy what says it isn't so!

Well, I'm just a lonesome traveler, a great historical bum,
Highly educated, through history I have come,
I built the Rock of Ages, it was in the year oh one,
And that's about the biggest thing that Man has ever done!

I saw Adam and Eve driven from the door,
I'm the guy that picked the figleaves that they wore,
And from behind the bushes peepin' saw the apple they was eatin',
And I swear that I'm the one that et the core!

Now I built the garden of Eden, it was in the year oh two,
Joined the apple-pickers union and I always paid my dues,
I'm the man that signed the contract to raise the risin' sun,
And that's about the biggest thing that Man has ever done!

I taught Samson how to use his mighty hand,
I showed Columbus to this happy land,
And for Pharaoh's little kiddies I built all the pyramiddies,
And to the Sahara carried all the sand!

Now I was strawboss on the pyramids and the tower of Babel too,
I opened up the ocean, let the mighty children through,
I fought a million battles and I never lost a one,
And that's about the biggest thing that Man has ever done!

I taught Solomon his little ABC's,
I'm the first one to eat Limburger cheese,
And while floating down the bay with Methuseleh one day,
I saw his whiskers floating in the breeze!

Now I fought the revolution that set this country free,
It was me and a couple of Indians that dumped the Boston tea,
I won the battle of Valley Forge and the battle of Bully Run,
And that's about the biggest thing that Man has ever done!

Now Queen Elizabeth she fell in love with me,
We were married in Milwaukee secretly,
But I got tired of snooker and ran off with General Hooker,
To go shootin' skeeters down in Tennessee!

I was born about ten thousand years ago,
There ain't nuthin' in this world that I don't know,
I saw Peter Paul and Moses playin' ring-around-the-roses,
And I'll whup the guy what says it isn't so!

Well, I'm just a lonesome traveler, a great historical bum,
Highly educated, through history I have come,
I built the Rock of Ages, it was in the year oh one,
And that's about the biggest thing that Man has ever done!


"The Braggin' Song", as sung by the Chad Mitchell Trio.
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As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
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#238 User is offline   luke warm 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 17:08

han, on Jun 1 2008, 01:13 PM, said:

luke warm, on Jun 1 2008, 08:35 AM, said:

as for mikeh's criticisms of the false literacy found in my posts, i accept that we all here are merely posters on a bulletin board forum, none are what i would call great or objective or original thinkers... the difference i see, and i might be wrong, is that i can acknowledge the towering and superior intellect of past and present atheist thinkers while disagreeing with their conclusions.. i've not heard atheists give the same respect to theist thinkers, some whose works are barely discernible to even the brightest amongst us - such as mikeh

You are quite a clown, writing an insult like that and then complain about a lack of respect in the same paragraph.

strange han, you didn't mention mike's insulting post(s) to me... in any case, how did i insult him? in rereading it i'd say i paid him a compliment

matmat, on Jun 1 2008, 12:49 PM, said:

luke warm, on Jun 1 2008, 08:35 AM, said:

i've not heard atheists give the same respect to theist thinkers,

perhaps they don't deserve it?

which of their books have you read?

jtfanclub, on Jun 1 2008, 11:45 AM, said:

luke warm, on Jun 1 2008, 09:53 AM, said:

paul said, "if he is not raised your faith is in vain" ... so yes, that would destroy christianity

In the same chapter he says...

42This is how it will be at the resurrection of the dead. What is planted is decaying, what is raised cannot decay. 43The body[z] is planted in a state of dishonor but is raised in a state of splendor. It is planted in weakness but is raised in power. 44It is planted a physical body but is raised a spiritual body. If there is a physical body, there is also a spiritual body.

That implies to me that resurrection is of spiritual body, not of the physical body. To say that his body died but Jesus lived on in spirit...that to me is a very different thing than saying his body rose from the dead as Lazarus' was said to.

christians believe Jesus was raised physically from the dead and took on his spiritual body at the ascension... i don't know what the "resurrection of the saints" entails, but i believe it is to spiritual bodies
"Paul Krugman is a stupid person's idea of what a smart person sounds like." Newt Gingrich (paraphrased)
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#239 User is offline   matmat 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 17:19

luke warm, on Jun 1 2008, 06:08 PM, said:

matmat, on Jun 1 2008, 12:49 PM, said:

luke warm, on Jun 1 2008, 08:35 AM, said:

i've not heard atheists give the same respect to theist thinkers,

perhaps they don't deserve it?

which of their books have you read?

does it matter? I just asked a question...
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#240 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2008-June-01, 17:48

A queston on human sacrifice, or atonement, which is a staple of Christianity.
If I understand this theory correctly, man cannot stand in the presence of God because of man's imperfections, or sins - as God is Himself perfect - therefore there had to be a perfect sacrifice to eliminate these flaws.

It seems not even God can overcome the laws of logic: i.e., He cannot be God, and also not be God; He cannot be perfect, and also be not perfect.

But there seems to me some conflict. We are told that Jesus was both man and God - but does that not contradict the Laws of Logic? How could Jesus be God, and also be not God (man)? If Jesus was God (perfect), how could he abide sinners(imperfection) in his presence at the same time? The Laws of Logic state this cannot occur, that you cannot be perfect, and also be not perfect.

Unless as God you were all-powerful and could obviate the need to abide by the Laws of Logic.

So, if Jesus were God and man at the same time, which is the Christian argument, then it would mean that God's power could overcome the Laws of Logic, which would mean that a logical reason for atonement would not be necessary.

If there is no logical need for atonement, then what is its purpose?
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." Black Lives Matter. / "I need ammunition, not a ride." Zelensky
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