Then why did your prophet use an analogy of a "lamp in the other room" as how easy it is to access this supposed evidence? Your prophet says it's easy and obvious, you are saying it isn't.
I used that as an analogy because I think it works. There is evidence in the next room but most people do not bother to even go into the next room to look at the evidence. The evidence is the researchable information about Baha’u’llah and the history of the Baha’i Faith and it is easy to access because this is the information age so you can research just about anything on the internet.
That was not written by Baha’u’llah. It is an excerpt from a talk given by Abdu’l-Baha, the son or Baha’u’llah and the Centre of His Covenant. In order to understand what that excerpt means you have to read the whole talk.
ON CALUMNY, Paris Talks, pp. 102-106
The preceding paragraph will help you understand the context:
“Do not let your hearts be troubled by these defamatory writings! Obey the words of Bahá’u’lláh and answer them not. Rejoice, rather, that even these falsehoods will result in the spread of the truth. When these slanders appear inquiries are made, and those who inquire are led into a knowledge of the Faith.
If a man were to declare, ‘There is a lamp in the next room which gives no light’, one hearer might be satisfied with his report, but a wiser man goes into the room to judge for himself, and behold, when he finds the light shining brilliantly in the lamp, he knows the truth!” Paris Talks, p. 103
What that means that as Baha’is we should not be troubled when people attack our Faith because that only results in other people inquiring about the Faith and then they learn more about it. The foolish man who listened to the calumny will be satisfied and believe it but the wiser man will do the research (go in to the next room) and find out for himself what the Faith is all about.
1) what reasons are there that some can't see it?
2) how do the rest see this evidence? What makes them special and different than the others?
1) We are all looking with different eyes (different minds) and that is why some see it and some don’t see it.
2) Most people see the evidence as indicative of a man, an ordinary man, but some of us see the evidence as indicative of a Messenger of God. That makes people different from one another; it does not mean they are special or better, just different.
he dogma isn't about looking at lamps in the other room. The meaning of the analogy is that the evidence is as OBVIOUS as a lamp in the other room.
No, the meaning of the lamp analogy
is not that the evidence is as OBVIOUS as a lamp in the other room. The meaning is that the evidence is
IN the next room. Some people will go into the next room and see the lamp and other people will never even bother to go into the next room because they don’t believe there is even a lamp in the next room. Although some people will go into the next room and see the lamp, not everyone who sees the lamp will see the light shining brilliantly from the lamp. Some people will see the light shining brilliantly from the lamp and some people will not see the light shining.
The point is that unless you go into the next room and check it out, you will never know if there is a lamp at all. Even after you go into the next room and see the map there is no guarantee you will see the light shining brilliantly from the lamp, but at least you made an effort to look at the lamp.
But given all you have posted the evidence is not available to open minds that only have to observe this evidence existing. Your evidence requires conditions, and those conditions are to assume certain things, like a God exists, and that there are messengers of God.
No, looking at the evidence in the next room has no preconditions whatsoever. You do not have to
assume there is a God and Messengers of God in order to LOOK at the evidence. In fact you should not assume that before looking at the evidence. Why would you? You have no REASON to believe there is a God or Messengers of God UNTIL you look at the evidence.
Neither of these assumptions can be justified. There are no facts that suggest either are valid. I understand you cite some quotes, but upon reading them there is nothing spectacular about them. They often make their own assumptions that have to be accepted for the message to be treated as true/valid. A messenger should be offering obvious and verifiable claims that require no assumptions.
A thorough investigation requires that we look at all the evidence, not just a small part of the evidence. Some parts will not be evidence to you whereas there might be something else that will click for you. What convinces some people will not convince others. We are all very different. The Writings of Baha’u’llah were not very appealing to me when I first became a Baha’i and for many decades after that, so I read other books that contained the information I needed to know.
What is obvious and verifiable for some people will never be obvious and verifiable for other people because we all think and process what we read with a different mind. What looks spectacular to some is nothing special to others. That is what I was pointing about above in 1) and 2).