Autodidact
Intentionally Blank
Good job at completely ignoring, or possibly missing, his point.I have never claimed that God has given me everything I've ever asked him for. Quite the contrary. I'm sorry I gave you that impression.
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
Good job at completely ignoring, or possibly missing, his point.I have never claimed that God has given me everything I've ever asked him for. Quite the contrary. I'm sorry I gave you that impression.
I never was arguing with you, and I didn't present an argument to defend. I simply stated my opinion.Then why did you? You were fine with arguing with me, until I responded to you, when suddenly you didn't want to defend your arguments.
If you don't want to read my posts, don't. Put me on ignore if it will make things easier for you. You're not the only one I'm addressing my remarks to. There is no way I can prove that prayer works, just as there is no way you can prove that it doesn't.This is a discussion forum. Its purpose is discussion. Specifically, each separate forum is for debate of the subject of that forum. If you're not interested in debating, don't post.
Oh, that's different. When you saidI never was arguing with you, and I didn't present an argument to defend. I simply stated my opinion.
it didn't sound like an opinion. Maybe you could clarify that by using a word other than "know," or by saying something like, "In my opinion." Just a suggestion.I don't know about anybody else's prayers, but my prayers work.
Oh, again, when you said,If you don't want to read my posts, don't. Put me on ignore if it will make things easier for you. You're not the only one I'm addressing my remarks to. There is no way I can prove that prayer works, just as there is no way you can prove that it doesn't.
I got the distinct impression you were addressing me. Your problem seems to be that I'm not ignoring your posts--I'm responding to them, in the way the forum is designed for, discussion and debate. I get the impression that you're happy to disagree with others, but not so happy when others disagree with you.Actually, most Mormons on this forum are waiting much more fervently for you to knock off the never-ending insults directed at our beliefs, but it doesn't appear very likely that this will ever happen.
Exactly. It works in exactly no way.
You seem very confused about experiments. The purpose of experiments is to allow people who don't have knowledge of something to get that knowledge. In fact there have been quite a lot of experiments that have demonstrated over and over again that prayer does not work. Doctors actually took two groups of people recovering from surgery, had people pray earnestly for one and not the other, with neither the people in the study nor the doctors studying the patients knowing who was who. The patients who were prayed for did not recover any better than those who were not. The prayer did not work.
If things actually produce actual results in the actual world, then it is not at all impossible to detect that.
Baloney. Would you like the sites? It has been definitively established that prayer has no effect. It turned out that the only study that found any effect was cheating.
It doesn't matter how thoughtful they are; they have no effect. Is it your habit to believe things without evidence? If someone snaps their fingers for an end to the war, who is going to prove that their snaps did not help the soldiers in any way?
This is really, really, basic logic. If they believe opposite things, they cannot all be right. A cannot be not A. Is it your habit to believe things without evidence in support? It's a simple yes or no question.
I have never claimed that God has given me everything I've ever asked him for. Quite the contrary. I'm sorry I gave you that impression.
No, the facts.Again: your perception.
I'm familiar with all the research in this field, and the sum total result shows that prayer does not work. For example, let's take your first link. It reports on some amazing results with plants. It turns out to be the bogus "work" of Rev. Loehr from 1959. Rev. Loehr was a minister and psychic proponent. I'm not saying the guy was an utter liar, but no one has ever replicated his work, and more recently when someone tried, they found that Prayer and thought are ineffective stimulants to plant growth, a group of students reported yesterday. An experiment conducted as part of the course work of Social Relations 71 revealed, in fact, a tendency for the control plants to grow more than those prayed for or thought about. Harvard CrimsonOf course, you're right. I've read about plenty of experiments where the results suggest that prayer does not work. Ah, but didn't you like my previous link about successful experiments? If you don't want anything from Muslim sources, then here's the same article from a Buddhist source:
Buddhist Gateway: Article
Nothing has ever been definitively proven by scientific means; that's not how science works. The question is, what does the evidence tend to show? The evidence tends to show that prayer does absolutely nothing, zip, nada, zero, for anyone or anything outside the person praying.Here are some others, too, if you'd like to take a look:
Scientific Research on Prayer
The effectivenss of prayer at a distanceas a supplement to medical treatment
(both successful and unsuccessful results are included here)
My answer for this has already been given above. The unsuccessful results you want to show me will not convince me of anything, while I am perfectly aware that my successful results most likely will not convince you of anything either. Nothing has been definitively proven by scientific means.
No, science has shown that praying for people to get well does not get them well. It's not complicated. There is either an observed effect, or there isn't. There isn't.Exactly. You cannot prove something like that, no matter how hard anyone tries. The results of things we truly, definitively know as fact can be predicted and anticipated. Since the studies concerning prayer have come back so varied and inconsistent, then obviously prayer is not understood on a scientific, factual level. Something not understood by science cannot be proven by science.
I'm not talking about their rights, of course everyone has the right to be wrong. I'm talking about whether they're correct or not. If you believe that prayer affects the world, you are incorrect in that belief. It's your perfect right to be incorrect, but why would you want to?I did not say everyone is right, because of course that is logically impossible. I said "they are not wrong in following their beliefs". Even if I disagree with someone, that person has every right to keep on believing whatever they want, just like they have the right to be respected for it.
No, I base my beliefs on the evidence.As for your question...if you want to put it blatantly in black and white terms, then yes, there are things I believe in that have no scientific support. How about you then.
No, I use both man's and woman's understanding.Do you make it a habit to limit yourself by man's own limited understanding?
Of course not, we only know a tiny bit. But what we do know we know via science and evidence. If it is your habit to believe things without evidence, I have some money in a bank account in Nigeria; will you help me get it out?I'm not saying that I know everything, as that's really something extremely amusing. But surely we can't assume that modern science or even future science will know everything either.
Apparently I didn't miss your point then, as Autodict seemed to think. Essentially I said the same thing as you did -- that God does not grant every request made of Him. As I said, He hasn't given me everything I've ever asked Him for.I didn't get that impression. My point was just that regardless of one's position on this issue, it's obvious (at least, I hope it should be obvious) that God does not grant every request made of Him.
Well, here are my thoughts on each of those three possible reasons:However, I recognize something: the corollary to the claim that God does answer prayers is that a God exists who is perfectly capable of answering prayers, but for some reason does not.
I think that any possible reason for this would fall into one of three categories:
- characteristics of God (e.g. the whole "God hates amputees" thing, or the idea that God has a more perfect knowledge that lets Him see how things that appear horrendous are actually for the best)
- characteristics of those doing the praying (e.g. they're the wrong religion, or they're just not praying the right way)
- characteristics of those being prayed for (e.g. they're the wrong religion, or they just don't deserve healing)
Basically, I think the suggestion that God answers prayers also introduces the idea that He answers some but not others, as well as the question "why?".
No, the facts.
I'm familiar with all the research in this field, and the sum total result shows that prayer does not work. For example, let's take your first link. It reports on some amazing results with plants. It turns out to be the bogus "work" of Rev. Loehr from 1959. Rev. Loehr was a minister and psychic proponent. I'm not saying the guy was an utter liar, but no one has ever replicated his work, and more recently when someone tried, they found that Prayer and thought are ineffective stimulants to plant growth, a group of students reported yesterday. An experiment conducted as part of the course work of Social Relations 71 revealed, in fact, a tendency for the control plants to grow more than those prayed for or thought about. Harvard Crimson
It's not just, some studies say one, some another. You have to look at the methodology and, most important, the replicability, of the results. The sum total of all the research is that it doesn't work.
Nothing has ever been definitively proven by scientific means; that's not how science works. The question is, what does the evidence tend to show? The evidence tends to show that prayer does absolutely nothing, zip, nada, zero, for anyone or anything outside the person praying.
No, science has shown that praying for people to get well does not get them well. It's not complicated. There is either an observed effect, or there isn't. There isn't.
Science can study lots of things it doesn't understand; that's what science is for--to help us understand things that we don't.
I'm not talking about their rights, of course everyone has the right to be wrong. I'm talking about whether they're correct or not. If you believe that prayer affects the world, you are incorrect in that belief. It's your perfect right to be incorrect, but why would you want to?
No, I use both man's and woman's understanding.
Of course not, we only know a tiny bit. But what we do know we know via science and evidence. If it is your habit to believe things without evidence, I have some money in a bank account in Nigeria; will you help me get it out?
It really doesn't take a deep and powerful mind to perform a simple test and analyze it. I'll even show you how to do your own, personal Prayer Power test; see below.The facts of whom? Scientists with limited understanding.
Absolutely so. Case in point: take a coin. Close your eyes and pray to any preferred deity that it comes up heads. Flip it.Ah, you're right. It seems many experiments in this field have not been conducted properly, including some that I had mentioned. I admit I didn't do all of my homework in that respect. Although I find it interesting that every study considered credible has produced results not in favor of prayer. Let's say hypothetically for a moment that prayer does not work. Wouldn't there still be plenty of cases where the control groups did worse than the variable ones, since prayer is supposedly nothing more than chance?
Yes, it really is that simple. You conduct an experiment; you analyze the results. The more times you repeat the experiment, the more assured you can be that the results are consistent. Prayer has been tested for efficacy countless times. The results are always consistent with random chance. Always.Well then, I find it confusing when you tell me here that nothing has ever been definitely proven by scientific means, but in a previous post of yours (#97) you stated, "it has been definitively established that prayer has no effect". Surely science has proven things. For example, it has been definitively established that eyes use light to see; that without a brain we cannot function; that without water we cannot survive. However the study of prayer obviously is not that simple, regardless of how much anyone wants to believe it is.
Similarly, this godlike being to whom you refer may, on a whim, decide to punish those for whom you pray by killing them even more rapidly and often. Or there could be three gods, who mud wrestle for the privilege of deciding how to answer prayers that day. Or little green men in light bulbs. And so forth.But it is complicated. We cannot tell people to pray for others who are hospitalized and then expect positive results every time, or even at all. There is an element in this field that cannot be measured: God. Whether you believe in His existence or not is not the point; it is that if science truly wants to prove something, all aspects must be taken into consideration. The true nature of prayer and God cannot be crammed into an experiment. If all the prayers were perfect, who's to say that God did not reject them due to His perfect foresight? Science has no way to prove or disprove this and therefore it is completely lacking the proper understanding and grounds to conduct any reliable research, whether the results be in favor of prayer or not.
Science doesn't seek to prove anything. Science seeks to draw hypotheses, principles and theories based on the evidence at hand. But you seem to imply that since there might be magical faeries living in the woods mucking around with my experiment results, then nothing, absolutely nothing that I study using the scientific method can ever be reliable. Thus, science itself is completely useless, and random chaos prevails.Yes, that is what science is for, but you altered my words again. I said, "something not understood by science cannot be proven by science". Scientists can study whatever they want, but it cannot go around claiming definitive results when the subject being studied isn't even understood. That's like me claiming to have discovered undeniable proof of evolution without even understanding the first thing about biology.
I can see some merit in this viewpoint, though when I look at the entire spectrum of human suffering, I don't think I can accept that there's a good reason for all of it that we just can't appreciate. To a child, a vaccination would be a source of pain, but abuse would be as well.Well, here are my thoughts on each of those three possible reasons:
1. I think you're on to something with this one, although I probably look at it far less cynically than you do. As an analogy, a parent takes a small child to the doctor for his vaccinations. He submits his child, who adores and trusts him and who looks at him to protect him, to pain. He does so intentionally, despite the child's cries and obvious bewilderment at the betrayal and cruelty. The parent, of course, does have a reason for doing so and really does have a knowledge and understanding the child can't possibly have. There will ultimately be something good come out of the pain, even though it is inconceivable to the child.
Fair enough. I only included it because I think that there are some people who believe that their religion has some special hotline to God.2. Essentially, I disagree with this almost entirely. I don't believe God discriminates against anyone who comes to Him in faith. I believe He hears all prayers directed to Him, regardless of the beliefs of the person praying.
I suppose I can appreciate that: sort of suffering as physical consequence, not necessarily as the result of a judgement. A skull fracture isn't so much "punishment" for falling off a cliff as it is just the logical consequence... right?3. I also disagree with this one, but probably to a lesser extent than I disagree with reason number 2. I suspect that the worthiness of the person for whom the prayers are being offered does figure into the equation, but again, probably not in quite the way you are thinking. I don't think God just lets some people suffer with cancer because they "deserve" to, but if He tells us not to do something and we do it anyway, He does let us suffer the consequences of our choices. The bottom line is that bad things do happen to good people and there isn't always a logical (to us) explanation.
I suppose that if you think God wants you to pray to Him, then that's probably enough: God wants you to do it, so you do it. If that's the motivation, then whether He actually does what you ask Him is secondary.I do believe there are times that God does intervene, however, and that He wants us to ask for His help. In asking, we recognize that He is the one in control. We acknowledge His power, but also His wisdom in making a decision we can't always understand.
Agreed. Actually I believe (and my Church teaches) that there are many reasons that suffering exists. These three come to mind:I can see some merit in this viewpoint, though when I look at the entire spectrum of human suffering, I don't think I can accept that there's a good reason for all of it that we just can't appreciate. To a child, a vaccination would be a source of pain, but abuse would be as well.
True. A lot of people do.Fair enough. I only included it because I think that there are some people who believe that their religion has some special hotline to God.
Right.I suppose I can appreciate that: sort of suffering as physical consequence, not necessarily as the result of a judgement. A skull fracture isn't so much "punishment" for falling off a cliff as it is just the logical consequence... right?
Agreed.I do think that this would only apply to certain things, though. For example, I can't see how any condition we're born with could be considered a "consequence" for our actions.
That's more or less what I was getting at. I do believe He responds to many of our requests, but only when it will ultimately be for our best good. That, of course, raises another question: If He only gives us what will be best for us, is He really answering our prayers at all? Isn't He just doing what He would do whether we prayed or not? And why should we think that our asking Him made any difference? From my perspective, it gets back to His desire that we communicate with Him, that we develop a close relationship with Him, and that we learn to trust that He knows what's best for us. I believe He wants us to be happy and, like any loving parent, will give us whatever will make us happy, provided what we want is also good for us to have.I suppose that if you think God wants you to pray to Him, then that's probably enough: God wants you to do it, so you do it. If that's the motivation, then whether He actually does what you ask Him is secondary.
How do you know this?I'll tell you why, I don't know. But I do know that one day it will all make sense.
And how do you know this?I don't know all the answers, but God does.
This is demonstrably untrue. I do not need your god. I furthermore resent your inclusion of me in your sample set without first polling my opinion.You may think that it is folly for me to think in this way. I don't blame you. It sounds like folly at first. Trusting in God is a transforming process. We learn to trust gradually as we try to follow his commandments. As we slowly learn to put faith in him, our faith grows from a dim spark into a burning flame. But it starts with baby steps. It starts with a desire to know God. It starts with the first time we really humble ourselves and kneel down and ask God for help. We all need him.
How could an omnipotent being have needs? Why does an omniscient being need to be informed? Why does an omnibenevolent being withhold his assistance until petitioned?And he needs us. He loves us and wants us to talk to him. He can understand us and our problems. He knows what we struggle with and what we are going through. He knows how to help us.
Again, I have no such need.That's why we need to pray to him.
Because of the Holy Ghost, which speaks to the heart of man.How do you know this?
You learn more about someone as you get to know them better. I have learned through personal experience to trust God. He doesn't lie. He said "Take my yoke upon you for my burden is easy and my yoke is light." If we come unto him and have faith in him, he will guide us through all our problems.And how do you know this?
I'm sorry you resent it, but it doesn't change anything.This is demonstrably untrue. I do not need your god. I furthermore resent your inclusion of me in your sample set without first polling my opinion.
The reason is that in order for him to help us, we must first make an effort to seek his help. He can only truly help us when we seek to know and follow him. That is why he needs us. He needs us to cooperate so that he can help us. It's like he said "I stand at the door and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me."How could an omnipotent being have needs? Why does an omniscient being need to be informed? Why does an omnibenevolent being withhold his assistance until petitioned?
I realize that you probably really don't see the need. That's okay. There will come a time when you do. Either in this life or the next. When that time comes, remember, he will always be there to help us.Again, I have no such need.
- Xaxyx
1. Prayer is to be made with sincerely good intentions. Sure, people make them with cruel intentions, I don't doubt that. But what goes around comes around. That's a whole new direction however.
2. Being logical is important, I agree. My religious mentality does not affect my ability to see and act upon reality, believe it or not.
3. Prayer by itself is meant to be thoughtful, reflective. Praying is void if that's all I do, because prayer is based upon sincerity and intention. If I pray for a sick person, but totally ignore my ability to help them, then my prayer meant nothing anyway.
Okay.
4. No, it isn't a time issue. I don't know when my prayer's going to be answered, or if it ever will be. Though it's personal perspective I suppose.
.
How does this entity communicate with you? And what makes this entity correct?Because of the Holy Ghost, which speaks to the heart of man.
That this entity has never lied to you does not, in turn, allow us to conclude that it never lies. I have never lied to you; does that mean you trust me implicitly as well?You learn more about someone as you get to know them better. I have learned through personal experience to trust God. He doesn't lie. He said "Take my yoke upon you for my burden is easy and my yoke is light." If we come unto him and have faith in him, he will guide us through all our problems.
Of course it does. You made a claim about every single person on the face of the Earth. I'm here to tell you that you are wrong. I do not need your god. You cannot and will not speak for me. If you're truly sorry, then you will retract your claim about me.I'm sorry you resent it, but it doesn't change anything.
He can't help us if we don't want him to? So we control him? How then can he be omnipotent?The reason is that in order for him to help us, we must first make an effort to seek his help. He can only truly help us when we seek to know and follow him. That is why he needs us. He needs us to cooperate so that he can help us. It's like he said "I stand at the door and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me."'
You can predict the future?I realize that you probably really don't see the need. That's okay. There will come a time when you do. Either in this life or the next. When that time comes, remember, he will always be there to help us.
1. Really, who made up that rule, and what is good? Good to a fundmentalist Xian may be quite different that good to a fundametnalist Islam
2. I would say most prayers have nothing in common with logic.
3. Again, this in only for you, not them.
4. The old "will of Allah"?
2. Illogical in your perspective is not illogical in mine.