Re: Science, God, and Free Will
- From: partso2@xxxxxxxxx
- Date: Thu, 22 Nov 2007 12:18:18 -0800 (PST)
On Nov 20, 10:16 pm, Vend <ven...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 19 Nov, 07:51, part...@xxxxxxxxx wrote:Again, I'm not sure that was what they spoke about. Anyway Wikipedia
On Nov 14, 4:56 am, Vend <ven...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:> On 13 Nov, 15:38, part...@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
Ok. I didn't know that there was a group of Jews isolated from the
rest until modern times.
Do you have some link about them? I'm just curious.
My knowledge is based on conversations with scholars. However,
little search yielded this. Maybe that's what they were talking about.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jews_of_Hadramaut
Thanks.
Wikipedia states that Jewish immigration to Yemen appears to have
begun in the second centrury CE. and that those Jews have preculiar
religious traditions.
also says something about the immigration starting at 1st Temple
times, even in King Solomon's. Anyway I'm far from being an expert in
the Yemen Jew's history.
(The point was brought to demonstrate the impossibility to rely on
(BTW Sennacherib's version is incredible, as it's clear that his
siege wasn't for the profit, and so point all his other conquests.
Also, he mentions nothing as to where has his army disappeared).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sennacherib
So on one hand we have a claim that the siege ended by completely
human methods, and on the other hand we have a claim of supernatural
intervention. Seriously what do you think it's more plausible?
'historical' sources, as they are never objective, and are written to
present one specific viewpoint. The increditibility of the Assyrian
version was just a sidenote).
True, if that was the only reason to believe in a supernatural
entity. As there are more serious reasons, the Bible's version adds no
new assumptions.
Maybe the Jews really paid a tribute to end the siege, maybe the siegeSo both are liers? highly unlikely. Also note, that the Bible has no
failed because the Assyrians run out of resources or the army and the
king were needed somewhere else (a king can't stay too long away from
his trone before somebody tries to grab it). These are common events
in history and don't need any supernatural explanation.
problem of telling us of bribes paid by Jewish kings, or sieges
abandoned for other, natural, reasons. They should have had a very
serious reason to invent the angel story. And, really, Sennacherib has
some explanations to make for the disappearance of his army, and the
end of his conquests. Something must apparently have happened to his
army - what would have prevented the Bible from telling the truth? I
don't think that such angel's intervention appears in any other place
in Kings.
Divine intervention in a war instead, has never been observed.No 'historical' way of knowing (meaning the usual method
Same for Esther. Clearly, the Jews didn't need any further record. A
Bible-included story is more than enough. The Jew's enemies couldn't
fake it as a victory of theirs, so they just didn't keep a record. And
the Bible is clear that there were no neutral people here... Also,
look in Ezra 6:1-2 - it's amazing. The Persian king has issued an
order, 50 years earlier, and this whole order has just disappeared.
They had to check in the archives, and even then, they found only one
copy. Why? becasue in the meantime, a Jew-hater (Hamman...) was in
rule, and he just destroyed every copy of this pro-Jewish order.
That's the way things were done then. And in many other places and
times.
Ok, anyway you can't cite Bible stories as historical facts. Some
Bible stories might be true, but if there is no independent evidence
we have no way of knowing.
archeologists etc. use). But still, tradition proves them, along with
the rest of the Bible.
We consider not only the rulers' intentions, but also the
I'm not an expert on the subject, but as far as I know, with the
exclusion of the Nazi, those persecutions against Jews were never
aimed at destroying Jews althogether. They were attempts by the local
dominant political-religious-ethnical bodies to remove Jews from their
jurisdictions, like they did with other Chrisian sects and other
ethincities, basically to acheive religious-ethnical uniformity.
Indeed, the main aims were at eliminating the Jewish culture.
No. The main aims were at not having to deal with Jews on a daily
basis.
Local rulers didn't care of what Jews were doing outside their
jurisdictions or whether they could have returned in the future.
population's. Anyway the chances of surviving such a series of such
events is negligible.
Anyway this point has long deprted from my initial intention. If we
want to talk of proving the Bible, the easily-refutable tests seem a
better proof (you saw that post, didn't you? it was my last response
to Robert. Sorry, but I still didn't find how to link to posts...).
Again, the point is that they were not extinct (culturally).That
they didn't succeed is amazing - Jewish cultured returned to every
such place.
Today you can find people of any ethnicity in almost every place of
the world, but the Jews didn't return to many places they were
expelled since recently.
And I don't see anything special or supernatural about that. What
supernatural power would be required for the Jews to return to those
places?
Also note that the Jewish culture changed significatively during thisOUCH. Now that's a statement.... well, let's first note that the
time, so you can't claim that modern Jews share culture of medieval
Jews.
prophecy refers to the Bible itself, that it won't be forgotten from
the Jews. But now, why do you way that? what has changed? since the
medieval jewish culture was based on the Bible and Talmus (which is
itself Bible-based), and so is the modern (at least Orthodox) Jewish
culture, what can have changed? the Talmus covers all of life's areas
(well, cloths fashion may have changed, but it was never Jewish anyway
- it was more or less copied from the neighbours (or forced by them,
in some cases)). I understand that the guidings of medieval Rabbis are
still accepted nowadays.
Yet every other culture of this time (and many later ones) wasWhat probability would you give that? I think that the one
who prophecied it, was either extremely stupid to declare that it'll
happen this way, or alternatively - he just knew what he speak on. A
pre-declared negligible probability event is a proof, don't you think?
I don't see anything improbable about it, since there was only a
single attempt at the complete destruction of their culture (the Nazi
one).
Many uncoordinated local expulsions or killings werent' unlikely to
completely destroy them.
indeed destroyed.
Moreover, consider the notion of self-fullfilling prophecy:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-fullfilling_prophecyWhen stuck into a church, having two options (Christian baptism or
The mere existence of the prophecy might have contributed to the
Jewish sense of unity and migh have helped them to keep the their
identity.
death), or given these options by crusaders, I can hardly see how
knowledge of the prophecy might have helped. How can it help them
escape a Pogrom? It can theoretically lead them to spread their
culture in any possible place, but I know of no actual event in which
Jews did it in this intention. Do you? And, sense of unity comes from
a common culture, even without such a prophecy. It doesn't add to it.
And it didn't help any other culture....
Bingo! I did mean the Kuzari principle. I had no idea it has a name,
Let's say I can produce a book which claims to be written by an
eyewitness of the event that confirms my claim. Would you belive me
(and the book)?
If this book says that my father saw it, and my father denies it,
I'll disbelieve it. If it says my father did see it, and my father
confirms, I will. If it says that millions of people did, and in every
generation since then, millions of people heard from their fathers
that this tradition is correct, and passed it on to their childs, I
will.
This is called Appeal to Tradition and more specifically Kuzari
Principle and it's a fallacy:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appeal_to_traditionhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuzari_Principle
and appears on wikipedia.... nice to see it there. Anyway the apply to
tradition doesn't seem very connected (I don't argue something is good
- I argue it's true).
And it's very childish in my opinion: it's effectively claiming that
you belive because your parents told you so.
Yeah. That's the reason you believe your name is what it is, and
that your grandparents immigrated to America from Spain (or whatever),
etc. etc. But it's even stronger. See below.
What if your parents lied you, or were forced to accept a belif (whatParents don't lie on such things - again (as was mentioned in that
does the Bible says about the appropriate treatment for those who
reject the religious authority?), or were simply ignorant of their
history and trusted what the priest said?
reply to Robert), the tradition obligates one to live very
uncomfortable life, and even agree to get killed if someone tires to
force one to abandon it. No reason the parents will give their
children such an heritage, without a VERY good reason. Lying isn't an
option.
when forced to accept a belief, one abandons it as soon as one can,
and never makes one's children (or oneself) die for it... See all the
Jews that were forced to accept Christianity (e.g. Spain 1492) - they
were never loyal Christians, and returned to Judaim as fast as
possible. That's why the Inquisition was so busy. Such an obligating
heritage can't be forced. And never on masses.
About historical ignorance, well, that's exactly what's the Kuzari
Principle is about. If I knew nothing on my history, isn't still not a
reason to believe the priest. Especially if he tries to make my life
so uncomfortable and dangerous. If he says that my ancestors witnessed
something that forces me to accept his instructions, the first thing
I'll do is verify it with my ancestors. My ignorance of this tradition
is the best arguemnt I'll have against him... people just don't
believe such tales. Especially when they're so obligating.
Will you belive your father if he confirmed my story if I had theThen he'll do the best to clarify the truth to me. And usually,
power to stone him to death in case he didn't?
parents are willing to die to ensure their children better lives. It's
hard to believe that the father, preferring his own life, will doom
his children's. And anyway, it'll be very clear to the children that
he doesn't speak out of real faith, but only because he's forced. Of
course, in this scenario, the children will pass the tradition on
(assuming again that they will unnaturally prefer their own lives),
because they have to, but a true faith will never emerge. That will
ensure that this tradition will disappear at once, when the enforcing
force is gone (and it is, long ago).
I do. The reason to 'start believing' it is this unfakeable
I don't KNOW that the LoR is incorrect. As far as I know, our
physics theories might be wrong, and the story might be possible. Many
physical theories were refuted during history, and 'impossible' things
were proven to be correct. However, I don't have a reason to assume
that on the LoR. So until I have a proof, I reject it, not with
certainty, but only because I don't have a reason to believe it. If
the reason is later supplied, I'll believe it. The fact I don't
believe it now, won't bother me then.
Then you should apply the same logic to your Bible.
tradition. Or the refutable tests.
I think it's not very intellectually honest to accept science as a
method to answer questions about the world when it's useful to create
new technology or solve crime cases and not accept it when it produces
answer contrary to belifs hold by faith.
1) Even if we accept science so, still, extrapolating the science
laws to the past is an un-scientifical assumption (not experimentally
refutable). Actually, application os scientific method to investigate
the past are usually un-sicentific, for this reason.
Then you disagree with using forensic science to investigate crimes
don't you?
How could we know that the laws of nature we observe now were the same
when the crime has been committed?
Only because of the razor. Yet, if I have a reason to belive they
WERE different, I'll remember that this reason has only to overcome
the razor, not any harder. In most crimes, there's no such reason. In
the Bible's case, there is.
If you truely believe that the laws of physics are the same behind
your back, well, that's a fallacy. We can assume that only of behalf
of the razor - nothing more. We can't even know that a brick has an
interior - it's only a model. Indeed it's the simplest we know of, but
there's no certain knowledge. I think Feynmann brings this example in
one of his popular books.
Likewise you must be questioning the validity of any historical claim
if you were honestly applying your logic.
2) I don't accept science for explaining the world (and you
shouldn't, too). That would mean confusing science with philosophy. A
physical theory is science, but its interpretation is philosophy. We
can accept a a theory (e.g. Newtonean mechanics) to describe the
world, use it for predictions and building machines, but not accept
its philosophical interpretation (unless you believe in Newtonean
space-time). That's perfectly valid.
Whatever.
Not so big, as long as you have a reliable tradition, millions of
people (each generation) agreeing on the same (written!) version of
events. That's stronger than the evidence you have for Caesar and
Hannibal.
Which was written much later than the events the events it supposely
describes.
And tradition is known to be very irreliable. Or do you belive in any
claim of any religion just because there is a tradition which supports
them?
Now THAT'S an assumption... you're explicitely assuming that the
Bible (which states that it was written shortly after the events it
describes) is false. You can't prove the Bible's fasity based on such
assumptions.
Why do you say the tradition is unreliable? my whole point is based
on the reliability of this tradition! So let's talk straight. Have any
evidence? or other reason to doubt the reliability?
And basically yes. Any tradition-supported claim (religious or not)
should be accepted, provided its tradition is strong enough. I think
the wikipedia's Kuzari page states it as a clear consequence of the
principle.
.
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