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Atheists: What would be evidence of God’s existence?

Trailblazer

Veteran Member
This was your claim I commented on (emboldened), it is clearly a circular reasoning fallacy. as it uses a begging the question fallacy. It is of course irrational by definition.

Making the unevidenced assumption the bible is divinely inspired, in an argument that it is evidence for the divine, is a begging the question fallacy, and circular reasoning.
I am not making any assumptions, I just have certain beliefs.

It does not MATTER if it is circular reasoning because...
if the premises are true, the conclusion must be true

I think this is what you don't want to see so you use logic to deflect, which is the red herring fallacy.

A red herring is something that misleads or distracts from a relevant or important issue.[1] It may be either a logical fallacy or a literary device that leads readers or audiences towards a false conclusion. A red herring might be intentionally used, such as in mystery fiction or as part of rhetorical strategies (e.g. in politics), or it could be inadvertently used during argumentation.
Red herring - Wikipedia
 

Trailblazer

Veteran Member
You are lecturing people on the definition of a circular reasoning fallacy who already know what it means, which is why we try to avoid using them. You however have used one, in which you assumed the premise of your argument in that argument, the rest is just desperate semantics.
The components of a circular argument are often logically valid because if the premises are true, the conclusion must be true. Circular reasoning - Wikipedia
 

9-10ths_Penguin

1/10 Subway Stalinist
Premium Member
That's right, at least as far as religious claims are concerned, and that is why logical argumentation can never be used to try to prove religious claims.
It's not even a matter of "proving." It would be foolish to think that a circular argument even hints at a conclusion.
 

Sheldon

Veteran Member
OK .. so does the Bible include any historic facts at all?
Did Jesus and his disciples exist?

Were Jesus and his disciples Jewish?

I'll answer those when you answer my question in the post you just responded to. Here it is again....

Where have I remotely claimed "all history books are full of bare assertions"?

Since that was what you falsely accused me of.
 

Sheldon

Veteran Member
I am not making any assumptions, I just have certain beliefs.

Of course you have.

The Bible is not proof that there is a deity, but it is evidence if one believes it is divinely inspired.

So there is your assumption about the bible, emboldened. Of course this is a circular reasoning fallacy. if you assume it to be divinely inspired that is a begging the question fallacy, as has been explained. You already claimed it was evidence for a deity, that was how this exchange started.

1. Can you cite any biblical evidence to support your claim it evidences a deity?
2. Do you accept or believe the bible is divinely inspired?
a) Can you demonstrate any objective evidence for 2, if your answer is yes?
Now since you have been asked these questions already and have not attempted to evidence them they remain unevidenced assumptions.

assumption
noun
  1. a thing that is accepted as true or as certain to happen, without proof.
So again here is your assumption.

The Bible is not proof that there is a deity, but it is evidence if one believes it is divinely inspired.
 

Trailblazer

Veteran Member
Trailblazer said:
The Bible is not proof that there is a deity, but it is evidence if one believes it is divinely inspired.

So there is your assumption about the bible, emboldened.
It is not an assumption, it is a belief. A belief is not an assumption, otherwise there would not be two words.

I have not accepted the Bible is true without proof. Admittedly, I have no proof that the Bible is true, but I do not believe that all of the Bible is true.
Of course this is a circular reasoning fallacy. if you assume it to be divinely inspired that is a begging the question fallacy, as has been explained. You already claimed it was evidence for a deity.
Here is your problem, a problem you will never be able to overcome. If the Bible is evidence for a deity, then there is a deity.

It does not matter one iota if it is circular reasoning or begging the question, that is just a smokescreen. Atheist have their fallacies and instead of looking at the evidence for God they HIDE behind fallacies. This is psych 101 stuff.
So again here is your assumption.

Trailblazer said:
The Bible is not proof that there is a deity, but it is evidence if one believes it is divinely inspired.
I just realized the mistake I made and I corrected it below. It does not matter what one believes since that has nothing to do with whether it is evidence or not.

Trailblazer said:
The Bible is not proof that there is a deity, but it is evidence if it is divinely inspired.

There is no proof that there is a deity but the Bible is evidence that there is a deity if it is divinely inspired.
 

Sheldon

Veteran Member
It is not an assumption, it is a belief. A belief is not an assumption, otherwise there would not be two words.

So an orange isn't also a fruit then, or there wouldn't be two words? :rolleyes:

Synonym
noun
  1. a word or phrase that means exactly or nearly the same as another word or phrase in the same language, for example shut is a synonym of close.
Assumption
noun.

1. A thing that is accepted as true or as certain to happen, without proof.

Belief
noun

1. an acceptance that something exists or is true, especially one without proof.

You claimed the bible was evidence for a deity. Yet cannot demonstrate a single example from the bible, and when pressed resorted to a circular reasoning fallacy.
 

Trailblazer

Veteran Member
You claimed the bible was evidence for a deity. Yet cannot demonstrate a single example from the bible, and when pressed resorted to a circular reasoning fallacy.
I refuse to play word games with you because it is childish and egotistical and it leads nowhere.

Let's cut to the chase: I believe that the Bible is evidence for a deity but there is no way to demonstrate that because it cannot ever be demonstrated. That is why it is called a belief and not called a fact.
 
Last edited:

Trailblazer

Veteran Member
I told you why I don't consider the Bible or any words ever written evidence for a deity. Evidence for something is something detectible or discernible that make one of two or more possibilities more likely to be the case. If that is not how you are interpreting evidence, then you're misinterpreting it. Is the existence of the novel Moby Dick evidence for (or against) a God as well? Does its existence make the likelihood of a god greater, less, or the same?
Less likely to be the case according to what your expectations. All people see things from their own perspectives and I have different expectations, so as I see it, it would be unlikely to be the case that the entire Bible was written by men who had no divine inspiration because there would be no motive for men to make all that stuff up about God and because authors who did not even know each other wrote things that are consistent with what the other authors wrote.

The existence of the novel Moby Dick is not evidence for or against a God. Its existence does not make the likelihood of a God greater, less, or the same. However, the Bible is not comparable to a novel.
No, I have not concluded that gods don't exist.
That’s good to hear. So you are an agnostic atheist.
I suppose that if I relax my standards enough, I could call Moby Dick evidence that there is no God. You might object, saying that that book in no way rules out gods, and my answer could be like yours: You have convinced yourself that Moby Dick is not evidence against God based upon what you would expect to see.
I understand the point you are trying to make, but it is the fallacy of false equivalency to compare the Bible to a novel because the Bible does not read like a novel nor does it pretend to be a novel.

False equivalence is a common result when an anecdotal similarity is pointed out as equal, but the claim of equivalence doesn't bear scrutiny because the similarity is based on oversimplification or ignorance of additional factors.
False equivalence - Wikipedia
It doesn't need to be proven either way to serve as evidence for a God. It just has to be words that make the existence of a God more likely. I gave you an example with irreducible biological complexity. Such a finding is strong evidence for an intelligent designer, although that intelligence need not be supernatural.
More likely according to what you have determined would be likely if the Bible was evidence for God. The analytical process you are engaging in only yields a personal opinion – more likely vs. less likely according to what you would consider likely if the Bible was evidence for God.

I never claimed that biological complexity was evidence that God is the Creator, because there are other ways that Creation could have come into being.
What you offer as evidence of a God is words that either of us could have written. I'm sure I could. Actually, I think it would be more likely that I could write convincing pseudo-scripture than a classic novel. That is why others are rejecting your assertion that the Bible or any other holy book indicates that a God wrote any part of it.
Unless you actually wrote the Bible you cannot say you could have written it. You believe you or I could have but you do not know.

I never claimed that God wrote any of the Bible! God does not write but God can inspire people to write. How much of the Bible is divinely inspired is anyone’s best guess. I don’t believe much of it is, but there is no way to know.

Here are some Baha'i views of the Bible, and I hold the middle ground.

Introduction

Although Bahá'ís universally share a great respect for the Bible, and acknowledge its status as sacred literature, their individual views about its authoritative status range along the full spectrum of possibilities. At one end there are those who assume the uncritical evangelical or fundamentalist-Christian view that the Bible is wholly and indisputably the word of God. At the other end are Bahá'ís attracted to the liberal, scholarly conclusion that the Bible is no more than a product of complex historical and human forces. Between these extremes is the possibility that the Bible contains the Word of God, but only in a particular sense of the phrase 'Word of God' or in particular texts. I hope to show that a Bahá'í view must lie in this middle area, and can be defined to some degree.

A Baháí View of the Bible
These are the rules of interpreting evidence. They're not negotiable to one with well developed critical thinking skills. As I've said before, if you want to persuade such a person, you have to play on their field by their rules. If you offer as evidence that which does not make your conclusion more (or less) likely, it will be rejected as evidence for that claim, which is what is happening here.
What is happening here is that you have already decided what would be more or less likely is God existed and as long as you hold to that position you will not change what you believe.

God either exists(a) or God does not exist (b), and using likelihoods of x, y, or z will never get you any closer to determining if it is a or b because the likelihoods are based only on your expectations of what would be more likely or less likely if God existed, and you could be wrong.
And your response is basically that you intend to consider those words evidence for a deity anyway. OK. That's obviously adequate for you, but not for the critical thinker. Remember, you began this thread by asking what would be evidence of God's existence. You have been told.
Regarding the Bible, I cannot say I would ever have considered it evidence for God’s existence if Baha’u’llah did not uphold it as God’s testimony. I was never a Christian.

No, I have not been told what would be evidence of God's existence which is what I asked in the OP, I have only been told what would not be evidence for God’s existence; e.g., the Bible. But I already know that atheists don’t consider the Bible to be evidence for God’s existence so that is nothing new.
That which makes the likelihood of a deity more likely. You claim that words from prophets and messengers do that, but have yet to show a single passage that accomplishes that.
It is not mainly the scriptures that show that the Messengers claims are valid. Below is what Baha’u’llah wrote about the 'evidence' that establishes the truth of His claims. Baha’u’llah enjoined us to look at His own Self (His character), His Revelation (His mission and works, which can be seen in Baha'i history), and if those do not fully suffice He said to look at His words (His Writings).

“Say: The first and foremost testimony establishing His truth is His own Self. Next to this testimony is His Revelation. For whoso faileth to recognize either the one or the other He hath established the words He hath revealed as proof of His reality and truth. This is, verily, an evidence of His tender mercy unto men. He hath endowed every soul with the capacity to recognize the signs of God. How could He, otherwise, have fulfilled His testimony unto men, if ye be of them that ponder His Cause in their hearts. He will never deal unjustly with any one, neither will He task a soul beyond its power. He, verily, is the Compassionate, the All-Merciful.” Gleanings From the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh, pp. 105-106
This comment from Sam Harris summarizes where we are at now:

· "If someone doesn't value evidence, what evidence are you going to provide to prove they should value it? If someone doesn't value logic, what logical argument could you provide to show the importance of logic? Water is two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen. What if someone says, "Well, that's not how I choose to think about water"? All we can do is appeal to scientific values. And if he doesn't share those values, the conversation is over."

What if someone says, that's not how I chose to think about evidence? What if their position is that anything they want to call evidence for their belief is evidence to them even if it doesn't make their belief more likely? Same answer: Then the conversation is over. That's what I meant by playing by rules of critical analysis, which includes knowledge about interpreting evidence.
Logically speaking, the converse applies. What if someone says, that's not how I chose to think about evidence? What if their position is that anything they want to call non-evidence for their non-belief is non-evidence to them even if it doesn't make their non-belief more likely? Same answer: Then the conversation is over. That's what I meant by playing by rules of critical analysis, which includes knowledge about interpreting evidence.
I've told you that the rules for interpreting evidence aren't negotiable. If you choose to do it your own way, then you're off the reservation.
Why are your rules for interpreting evidence better than my rules?
So you think this kind of writing is evidence for a God? I don't.
I never said that the writing is evidence for a God and I don’t know where you got that idea. Scriptures will normally be viewed as evidence only AFTER one had already verified the source from which they originated to be of divine origin. As I noted above, the scriptures are not the first evidence we look at.
I could write the same thing about critical thinking:

I actually have support for my version. The stellar success of science is evidence that this approach to knowledge (epistemology) is valid, and no other method is, since no other method can do that. Baha'u'llah is just making unevidenced claims.
To compare science and religion is the fallacy of false equivalence since religion is NOT science. As such the approach to knowledge of science and the approach to knowledge of religion can never be the same. Science can be proven factually true by testing and experimentation whereas religion can never be proven factually true by testing and experimentation. That is why they are called religious beliefs.
Aren't you arguing that such an argument is supporting your contention that scripture is evidence of a God?
I am absolutely NOT arguing that scripture is evidence for God’s existence since as you said scripture could have been written without a God involved.
 

Trailblazer

Veteran Member
That would make the Bible not evidence for a deity.
To demonstrate is to prove, so that would make the Bible not proof of a deity, but the Bible would still be evidence for a deity since evidence is not the same as proof.

Evidence: the available body of facts or information indicating whether a belief or proposition is true or valid: https://www.google.com/search

Evidence is anything that you see, experience, read, or are told that causes you to believe that something is true or has really happened. ‘
Objective evidence definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary

Proof: evidence or argument establishing or helping to establish a fact or the truth of a statement: https://www.google.com/search
 

CG Didymus

Veteran Member
The whole Bible is evidence of a deity.
Yes, the Bible says that God created the world a few thousand years ago, and that God flooded the whole world about 4000 years ago. We can verify this by geological evidence. We can verify that the whole Egyptian army was drowned by God during the time of Moses. We can see the pillar of salt that used to be Lot's wife. We can see the giant skeletons of the Nephilim that have been discovered. Or... maybe nothing can be verified about what the Bible says? Which one would you go with?

You have convinced yourself that the Bible is not evidence for God based upon what you would expect to see if God had something to do with the writing of the Bible.

You have convinced yourself that God does not exist based upon what you would expect to see if God existed.
As if you or any Baha'i believes anything significant about the Bible. "Did God walk in the garden with Adam and Eve"? Baha'is, "No." "Did God turn Moses' cane into a snake?" Baha'is, "No." "Part the seas?" "No." "Have Jonah get swallowed by a big fish?" "No." And then the things about Jesus... "Did he walk on water?" "No." "Rise again?" "No."

Unless you disagree with those, then I'd say Baha'is don't believe in the Bible. Ah, but it's the Bible being "literally" true that Baha'is don't believe in. Well, that's different. Say those are just made-up fictional stories written by men, and I think some of the Atheists might agree with you. But do fictional, allegorical stories about a God prove that there is a God? Or is even evidence for a God? How could those stories be evidence? They're fictional.

No that's not true, and several posters, myself included have asked you demonstrate any part of the bible you think evidences a deity, and you have offered nothing beyond bare claims.
Trailblazer, "The whole Bible is evidence of a deity." Yeah, what is an example that you think is evidence for a God?
 

Sheldon

Veteran Member
The Bible is evidence, but not a proof.

That's just a repetition of the bare unevidenced claim.
You simply claim not to believe that the historical accounts are true.

That's not true, and what's more you know it isn't, as you made this false accusation already, and I asked you to quote me saying anything like that. Well can you quote any post of mine remotely claiming this? Or are you going to dishonestly turn your claim into a question again, like last time?
 

CG Didymus

Veteran Member
The Bible is not proof that there is a deity, but it is evidence if one believes it is divinely inspired.
Did a manifestation, or at least a prophet, write the Bible? Or... was it based on past down oral traditions before it got written down? So, who were the people that actually wrote it down? Were they accurate in what they wrote? No, at least one place Baha'is believe they got it wrong. The Bible say Isaac was taken to be sacrificed. And every Baha'i knows it was Ishmael. So, contains at least that one error. Wasn't written by a manifestation. And depended on scribes to write down ancient passed down oral traditions. Why, other than your religion tells you so, would you think it is "divinely" inspired?
 

CG Didymus

Veteran Member
The Bible is evidence, but not a proof.
You simply claim not to believe that the historical accounts are true.
I doubt that Baha'is believe the historical accounts are true. Definitely not the Creation story and the Flood. And, in the NT, not the resurrection of Jesus.
 

Trailblazer

Veteran Member
Trailblazer, "The whole Bible is evidence of a deity." Yeah, what is an example that you think is evidence for a God?
As you know, I go by what Baha'u'llah wrote, and that is why I said "the whole Bible" which to me means the Bible in its entirety. However, that does not mean that everything in the Bible is literally true or that the Bible is completely accurate in every detail. To the Muslims Baha'u'llah wrote the following, calling them foolish for rejecting the Gospel message:

“We have also heard a number of the foolish of the earth assert that the genuine text of the heavenly Gospel doth not exist amongst the Christians, that it hath ascended unto heaven. How grievously they have erred! How oblivious of the fact that such a statement imputeth the gravest injustice and tyranny to a gracious and loving Providence! “How could God, when once the Day-star of the beauty of Jesus had disappeared from the sight of His people, and ascended unto the fourth heaven, cause His holy Book, His most great testimony amongst His creatures, to disappear also?” The Kitáb-i-Íqán, p. 89
 
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