No, DOC. I don't think the
threads are low grade garbage. A lot of very knowledgeable people have posted lots of interesting (and accurate!) information in them.
It is your
posts that constitute the low-grade rubbish.
As BobtheDonkey wrote:
Ironic that you would ask for examples and then provide one immediately afterwards, no?
Of course you ignored the main purpose of my post which was to demonstrate the threads that should not be considered being low grade garbage and concentrated on me giving the post counts of two of them. This was done to show if the threads are garbage then the people responsible for the 100,000+ hits must like low grade garbage.
The threads I've posted in response to a person who criticized my threads speak for themselves, now back to this thread.
Bolding mine.
Again, you show a complete lack of logic and critical thinking.
Why the number of hits on a thread you started should mean
anything about the people who post in said threads, or about the veracity of he thread subject, is a mystery to me, and anyone else with an understanding of logic. It is posts like this that make the rest of us certain that you have no ability to think critically about the garbage you trot out.
If you read those threads (and I remember them), you will find that most of the 100,000 posts are people trying (futilely, it seems) to explain to you
why your arguments are unsound and unconvincing. And even still, you continually trot out the length of your threads as evidence of your greatness as an apologist. The mind boggles.
So you believe by portraying the apostles as cowards who didn't attend Christ's crucifixion to give him support and having the women (who at the time couldn't even testify in court or be counted as part of a crowd) attend his crucifixion and be the first to discover the empty tomb somehow furthered the cause? And that having Peter (the main apostle and future leader of the church) deny Christ 3 times to a lone woman at a campfire somehow furthered the cause. I would disagree with that contention.
It is your contention that these things, the "embarrasing details", and other irrelevant bits of nonsense somehow are evidence that the New Testament can be taken as accurate concerning the life, death and resurrection of Jesus.
The fact that you cannot see the problem with this logic proves my point about you being incapable (thus far) of applying critical thinking skills to your apologetics.
<about moderate Christians who, by and large, do NOT accept that:>
(1) Dying for your beliefs makes the belief more true.
(2) The New Testament writers including embarrassing details about themselves is evidence for the supernatural parts of the bible
(3) The theological views of the Presidents of America is proof of the resurrection
<snip>
These are your arguments he's re-stating, DOC.
Do you really not see why they are fallacious?
I'll help you out:
(1) unfounded premise, non-sequitur
(2) opinion, non-sequitur
(3) appeal to popularity, appeal to authority, non-sequitur
These are the fallacies present in the above arguments (which you have made). I'll leave it as an exercise for you to figure out which parts of the argument correspond to which fallacies.
If we know [Luke] got all of these highly detailed facts right it is only a supernatural bias that keeps us from believing he got the 35 miracles [...] right.
Emphasis mine
The emphasized bit here is perhaps a slip on your part, but is nonetheless highly important.
You are correct. It is indeed a bias against the supernatural that prevents us from accepting supernatural claims.
The reason for this bias is simple: To date, no supernatural claim has ever been shown to have any substance beyond ignorance of the underlying causes.
Not one.
Why, then, should we accept claims of things that have never been demonstrated, never been shown as realistic?
You do, because you have FAITH.
You have FAITH that these things are real. Your so-called "evidence" makes sense to you
because you have faith in these supernatural events being true.
Underlying all your claims has been this faith.
ANd you know whay?
I have no problem with you having faith.
If you wish to claim that you have faith in Jesus' resurrection, in Jesus being the son of God, in the New Testament gospels being authored by eyewitnesses who later martyred themselves, that's fine.
You are free to have faith. I can't touch it. And I won't try to stop you from having it.
But if you are going to claim to have
evidence that the New Testament writers told the truth, it had better be able to stand up to critical scrutiny.
So far, not a single piece of "evidence" you have trotted out has even fit the proper definition of evidence, let alone pass a rudimentary application of rational thought.
If you want to claim that you take the New Testament as truth based on faith, do it. No one will attack you for it. They might call into question your reasons for your faith (to which you really don't need to respond, if you don't want), but they will not attack you for admitting that your belief is faith-based.
But this thread promised "evidence".
Either bring it up, or admit you have no evidence that does not relay on a pre-existing faith in the supernatural.
And if you insist on continuing to use the stuff brought up so far in this thread, you will receive only continued disrespect, mockery, and belittlement.
Why?
Because all the primary and supporting evidence you have brought forward to date has
not stood up to critical scrutiny.
The reasons
why the arguments have failed has been explained to you in patient detail.
DOC, it's time to stop pretending that American Presidents, supposed (and unproven) martyrs, opinions about what is embarrassing, and landmarks constitute evidence that Jesus' resurrection and miracles really happened as documented in the New Testament.
Because other works can also make these claims, as has been pointed out, forcing you into desperate "special pleading" mode where you bring out more irrelevant, illogical nonsense that gets torn apart and spit back at you. And then you get all huffy and "persecuted".
I repeat:
Either bring forward some real evidence (or sound arguments for why the stuff you've brought forward so far should be considered as such), or admit it is a matter of faith to you and that you have no solid evidence.
We are seeing plenty of obvious mistakes here. You can take the truth of the resurrection as a matter of faith. You can’t say that it definitely happened because the New Testament writers described it like other historical events: with a simple, unembellished account. An argument made in the O.P..