Santa is real... it is your parents.You get presents if you believe in Santa.
Thanks for helping me prove my point.
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Santa is real... it is your parents.You get presents if you believe in Santa.
Hey im not a christian. I pray but not to the christian god. My gods aren't all powerful and often dont help in the real world. To me the point of prayer is to talk to my gods not ask for stuff. They might help but that's not my goal in prayer.
Not really. My point is that requiring double-blind tests to evaluate the effectivity of prayer, is an a-priori defeater of the efficacy of prayer. For there is no reason for God to grant prayers in such a way that only a statistical analysis can detect.No... I haven't lost. Apparently you didn't read the OP. It seems like you have in your mind something that is tainting what you are reading.
I find that prayers, when understood, are usually "yes".
Certainly some prayers are superfluous (like praying for a loan). But, if a child asks for bread (self-interest) - would you as a parent not answer the self-interest prayer?
That's fine, but I was making the point in the context of this thread making assertions for the efficacy of intercessory prayer. I also don't agree that its efficacy can't be measured, as it has been. The research was contracted to remove subjective bias, and outside variables. The only objections people seem able to offer amount to selection bias, but in the case of the research on post operative heart patient recovery the excuses simply don't make any rational sense. However this research does show how easy such claims are to objectively test.
I will simply say this, prayer has never been objectively demonstrated to regrow a severed limb, an easy task for an omnipotent deity. After all evolution has managed to do this in certain species, so why can't a deity?
It is difficult to ask
Not really. My point is that requiring double-blind tests to evaluate the effectivity of prayer, is an a-priori defeater of the efficacy of prayer. For there is no reason for God to grant prayers in such a way that only a statistical analysis can detect.
Ciao
- viole
Santa is real... it is your parents.
Thanks for helping me prove my point.
That's fine, but I was making the point in the context of this thread making assertions for the efficacy of intercessory prayer. I also don't agree that its efficacy can't be measured, as it has been. The research was contracted to remove subjective bias, and outside variables. The only objections people seem able to offer amount to selection bias, but in the case of the research on post operative heart patient recovery the excuses simply don't make any rational sense. However this research does show how easy such claims are to objectively test.
I will simply say this, prayer has never been objectively demonstrated to regrow a severed limb, an easy task for an omnipotent deity. After all evolution has managed to do this in certain species, so why can't a deity?
Prayer Prevents Sickness and Heals According to Several Studies - RachFeed
There are multiple sites by medical professions that support ti.
did you try searching for them?
Prayer Prevents Sickness and Heals According to Several Studies - RachFeed
There are multiple sites by medical professions that support ti.
did you try searching for them?
Relevance to the subject matter?
Handy to line up handwaving excuse in advance, when the evidence inevitably doesn't go your way. The irony of course if it did, we all know theists would leap on it as proof for a deity. I have yet to see any argument for intercessory prayer that didn't involve such obvious selection bias. It appears to work, it's evidence, it doesn't work - it's not evidence and can be waved away, the way you did with the double blind clinical trials conducted on post op heart patient recovery.
I'm afraid the bias is too obvious too ignore,
Have you even read these links you're Googling? Or do you not understand the difference between correlations and causation?
Firstly that's an article citing studies not medical research, and they're clearly using subjective claims, secondly these studies are showing a correlation between religiosity and health benefits, this is not objective evidence for anything supernatural obviously, since the benefits of doing things one enjoys, especially in cohesive social groups are well documented. They not of course apply solely to religiosity, meditation for example has vey similar health benefits. As previously explained several Scandinavian countries are now almost entirely secular or atheistic, and they have some of the highest life expectancy rates in the world. The research would need to remove many other variables of course for even the core claim to be objectively measured.
As has been explained one can Google anything and get results that reflect what you want, which is what you appear to be doing here. Try and imagine for a moment, the global impact of properly conducted scientific research that "proved" intercessory prayer works? As opposed to showing that religiosity including prayer can have health benefits. Go look at the Catholic Herald website, the headline reads "Pope Francis gives red hat to Archbishop Arthur Roche"
No mention that science has proved prayer works, I'd have thought the implication was not that opaque to any objective individual.
A lot of people whose prayer was fulfilled (including me) would not agree with you.
Because sincere praying to God doesn't mean testing it.
There is also a verse somewhere in the bible which says we should not stop praying for same thing over and over again.
We have medical verifications. We have a multitude of people who can testify of its efficacy. People who go to church (where prayer is engaged are 55% less likely to die:
Church attendance, allostatic load and mortality in middle aged adults
another study:
Religious Service Attendance and Mortality Among Women
My main point is that I gave just three reasons why "the quotes against prayer" didn't have the correct parameters. Prayer has spiritual principles that are necessary to be effective.
Well, you just undermined your entire case in the OP......
You said that for prayer to work, you need to meet the correct criteria for how praying should be done.
And then you gave 3 such criteria from the bible. And if you think there are more criteria, I'm sure they'll be christian criteria as well.
And your entire case is that if one doesn't comply to your criteria then the "test is invalid" - because they are "praying wrong" and thus god wouldn't answer.
But then again you also said that this god doesn't actually care about those criteria either, since you believe he answers the prayers of this muslim fellow and that he's so good and merciful that he'll answer "wrong" prayers anyhow.
So I'm confused...
Are you saying that following the "correct" criteria gives one a guarantee of having the prayer answered?
And thus a 100% success rate?
Strange way to sidestep my post, but the blog post you linked to, which cited... another blog post sure was compelling.Prayer Prevents Sickness and Heals According to Several Studies - RachFeed
There are multiple sites by medical professions that support ti.
did you try searching for them?
So how can we make up a double blind study that fits the requirements?
How can we test the beliefs of both the person praying and the person being prayed for? How can we test for the sincerity? How can we select people that pass this so that we can even proceed to a test?
The test in the OP took people who believe in the power of prayer and had them pray according to their beliefs. The funny thing is that those patients that knew they were being prayed for had worse outcomes than those who did not.
Indeed.Indeed, but more importantly how are the perceived successes being differentiated from random chance? All I have seen offered are subjective selection bias. Research that leaps from correlation to causation while ignoring any number of affecting variables, and didn't remotely evidence the efficacy of prayer in any objective way.
You are the "2nd person".There is no No True Scotsman fallacy here because in the story I quoted there is no 2nd person who would improperly disqualify Saul's mistakes.
Sorry but, you either didn't understand the point or you don't know what is "No True Scotsman" fallacy.
You made the initial claim so surely you have a position on the implications of it.I really have no idea nor did I ever go after what other people are praying.
Yes. If you think there is context that refutes my point, feel free to explain it.Did you read the broader context?
So you are saying that in order to realise that prayer works, you first have to believe that prayer works?obviously to someone who have 0 XP with prayer and encounter with God.
How do you figure that?Scriptures say not to test God, therefore their tests are useless and impossible to prove anything.
Then we can assume it never happened. (Claims that are made without evidence can be dismissed without evidence.)I would rather not share that here.