Responding to airbrush. All quotes are from airbush. I had to shorten the quotes for size limitations.
There are just as many books and websites out there to support the accuracy of the Bible as there are to critcize it, and although I'm sure Snakum, cjh, BB, and the others would immediately consider any supporting documentation to be "highly suspect" (so much for open mindedness), there is no less of a biased agenda behind those who seek to discredit it.
So what you're saying is that you are open minded and could be persuaded to be an atheist, right? Give me a break. Just because we will not make a leap of faith doesn't make us close minded.
In the last century, dozens of highly educated, highly motivated skeptics have traveled the world... but while some have actually become believers, even the others had to admit (grudgingly, I'm sure) that their findings either supported Biblical accounts, or were neutral in their effect.
1) Just a minute ago you were accusing non-believers of being close minded and now you are citing examples of non-beleivers changing their minds.. but I will let this particular contradiciton pass without further comment.
2) Lots of highly eductaed people go both ways. This really doesn't prove anything.
3) Those of us on my side of the fence (the non-believing side) would say that you (the believing side) have the burden of proof. You can't prove a negative.
4) Neutral findings that the Bible Stories may have some base in reality does not prove that there is a god any more than findings that there was once such a city as Athens proves that there was a Zeus.
...contemporary writings supporting the existence of Jesus ...accounts by Flavius Josephus... ... The list goes on, and there are many good books on the subject for those interested.
1) None of these references to Jesus proves that Jesus was a deity.
2) There are many books written by people who have been kidnapped by aliens. That doesn't make the stories real and it doesn't make them god.
3) You have an internal link problem - how do you get from some real historical reference to Jesus to Jesus being the son of god?
4) No one really disputes that Jesus may have lived. This part of your argument is a paper tiger - you are trying to frame the debate in such a way that if Jesus lived he must therefore be the son of god. Sorry, I am not buying it. Even if he lived, so what?
In terms of science having "disproved" the Bible, that is also a popular but mistaken assumption. The fossil record ....Dawkins,... Gould,... Sagan... differences in opinion...
1) If I showed you an interim species you would ask me where the interim species was between it and something else. Each species in the fossil record can be thought of as transitive. This is frankly an old argument that doesn't get you anywhere.
2) "blind faith" in science. There is a huge difference. What Dawkins, Gould, Sagan (and I, if I may be so bold to include myself with that list of names) believe will pass the "Popper test". IE, it is conceivably "falsible". It is therefore not blind faith. Your side of the fence, however, cannot pass the Popper test. Your argument is flat wrong (no personal offense intended here).
Studies in other areas of science.... Then we have the objective, intellectual model of Gould's writings, ...
1) Science continues to revise itself as our understanding of the universe grows. Your argument that science is weak because it contiues to grow and expand its knowledge is laughable. That's the whole point!
2) Your side of the fence is the one that cannot change. If that's not bias, I don't know what is.
3) Science is strengthened by disagreement between scientists. The end result is more study and finally a better understanding o the universe. I will not discuss how religion pales in comparison.
4) Science is not complete. Just because we don't know all the answers
today does not disprove the approach,
5) Science is as much about the approach to learning and to knowledge, as it is about what the knowledge is. See the falibility stuff above.
Like a defense attorney, you think the case is won not by proving the innocence of your client, but by attempting to cast just enough doubt on his guilt to supposedly discredit the prosecution, without the burden of producing evidence to fully support your case.
1) Here, you've got it mostly right. We do believe that you have the burden of proof.
2) You have the burden of proof. Why am I the one who has to show the evidence? You show me god. You show me a guy walking on water or stopping the sun in the sky.
3) Again, here you are not really making an argument at all, you are trying to frame the debate in a way that keeps you from having to prove anything.
I choose to believe in the Divine .... Think about it; look at the sheer wonder of the entirety of human activity in a single day, in every culture, language, etc....... Art, literature, communication, transportation, music, construction; planes that fly and ships that sail and satellites that orbit the earth and allow us to talk to each other and see pictures in seconds; I can't even begin to mention it all, and most of this came about by man's imagination in just the last century alone!
1) I too am impressed. But I am still missing the internal link (see above), how does this prove there is a god?
2) I should also throw in here that the scientific knowledge that we have today comes in spite of Galileo's ex communication. Our understanding of the universe (in some cases) comes from people who risked religious persecution for disagreeing with church teachings. It is incomprehensible that you would say that MY SIDE has a closed mind.
3) The great things you have mentioned have been resisted at every turn by religious dogma. I've even got a quote somewhere (this is from a century ago) from a minister in the Northeatern United States that said that it was a sin to use a lighting rod! It defies the will of god, you see.
Now, since we "evolved" from monkeys, show me the progress made by even the most intelligent primate in the last THOUSAND YEARS?
Ok, if you really have read Gould then you are being disingenuous. Primates and humans split millinea ago - humans do not come from monkeys.
You (to no one in particular, just in general) claim the world would be a wonderful place if we could just dispose of religious belief systems. Well, the USSR was officially an athiest state, even teaching classes in the schools denying the existence of God. Over the course of 70 plus years, and estimated 200 MILLION people were slaughtered or imprisoned for daring to disagree with the Party line, and similar events took place in other regimes, from China to Cambodia and too many others, all in the name of NO GOD.
SIGH. Now you really are being disingenuous.
1) The communists simply substituted one dogma for another. I reject their dogma too.
2) These people were killed in the name of a political system, no atheism. You really keep running into this internal link problem.
3) But since you brought it up, how many people have been killed in the name of religion? Would you like me to give you a list? Shall I include the people God destroyed in the flood?
If the individual has no greater value than a rodent, those in power can decide to exterminate anyone or group of their choosing if the situation suits them, so the problem isn't solved. And THAT, friends, is the situation we Christians find as a possibility if the ideas some of you espouse become official government policy in the future, given enough time and repetition in the minds of those who do not take the time to explore the issue, and one that I would be irresponsible to not fight against.
Here you go trying to frame this debate in a way that you win automatically. Sorry, I am not buying it. None of us believes that a human and a rodent have equal value. This is another straw argument. You have framed the debate so that it sounds like atheists are arguing this and then you try to beat down the pseudo argument. Nice try.
So, although religion and politics can be a distastful mix, they are hard to separate (atheism is classified as a religion), and unfortunately, the head-butting will most certainly continue.
Definition of RELIGION from Meriam Webster online:
1 a : the state of a religious <a nun in her 20th year of religion> b (1) : the service and worship of God or the supernatural (2) : commitment or devotion to religious faith or observance.
2 : a personal set or institutionalized system of religious attitudes, beliefs, and practices
3 archaic : scrupulous conformity : CONSCIENTIOUSNESS
4 : a cause, principle, or system of beliefs held to with ardor and faith
I will accept definition 3 or 4, but certainly not 1 or 2. And I think you meant one or 2, otherwise you would use the term CONSCIENTIOUSNESS to describe what you believe and you go farter than that.
I contend that we are, at our core, spiritual creatures, with most of us sensing the innate desire to seek beyond that which we see, the need to believe that we are more than just an accident of a mindless nature, living a pointless existence. You may find that to be a crutch for the intellectually vacant, but I believe you are in the distinct minority.
1) You are a spiritual creature. I am not.
2) I am decidedly in a minority. But that's ok.
3) I will not insult something that you hold dear by calling it a crutch (this statement is sincere).