But sometimes accurate. Your assertion was so absurd that it was completely warranted. A claim deserving of no respect will receive none.
I think not but even if we pretend a personal attack was accurate that is not to say it was justifiable. I wish only that you would either prove how you know things like my motivations or emotional reactions or states or stop assuming you do and only discuss the issues. Until you do your wasting a lot of time I do not have with these unknowable sidebars.
Nope, not buying it. You weren't talking about a specific brand of faith. You said, quite clearly:
"Christians are the group above any other that have arrived at the position most in opposition to that which they began with."
Above any other?? Are you serious? You don't think that, say, someone who was raised by a fundamentalist Christian family in the American south, who grew up to want to be a preacher and went to seminary school, only to become an atheist, has arrived at a position more in opposition than, say, a person who grew up in a non-Christian family, had a personal experience, and became a Christian? This is a ridiculously broad, sweeping statement which indicates not only a level of disconnect between your beliefs and reality, but a disconnect between you and reality in total. And I would say the exact same thing were you making the same claim about almost any group, because the generalization is simply that absurd.
This is confused and not accurate. When I state anything about the group "Christian". I am talking about the group of people that Christ was describing.
1. When I talk about humanity in general I am talking about what the bible says is true of all of us and what reality makes obvious. WE are all born without any defined notion of God. Most develop some belief in something beyond nature but no-one begins life believing in the biblical God, heaven, Hell or Christ, much less being in harmony with him. No one lives their pre-teen years with a believe they are condemned for their actions. This can only be deduced by learning it from another source. Our conscience may be consistent with this but will never generate it in isolation.
2. When talking about a Christian I am talking about that which Christ described not that person who answers questions on a census. The person described in # 1 learns about Christ and concludes that it is true. Upon doing so he is united with God, the Holy Spirit comes to live in their heart, Christ's nature is accessed, habits are extinguished and our first taste of heaven, the supernatural, and actual peace is ours and it is quite shocking and revelatory.
Oh, I get it. So, because I am an atheist and you are not, my preference for how I want my beliefs to be portrayed takes precedence over yours. Makes sense. I am an atheist, therefore I am more likely to be correct about atheism than you are
. I have no idea what your talking about. We were talking about the radical nature of the change that occurs in a Christian upon being born again. Since you are not one you cannot meaningfully contribute to it. Your beliefs have nothing to do with that. WE have all been atheists and can comment on that but we are not all Muslims, Born again Christians, or Hindus. Not that the other two require anything beyond intellectual agreement but the principle is still applicable.
Well, that definitely makes it true, then. Because it's not like experiencing nirvana, or being reincarnated, or reaching enlightement, or projecting yourself into the astral plane are difficult rites of passage. No, those ideological transformations are the easy way out. Clearly, Christianity has the monopoly on difficult transitions, because it says so.
Yes not one of these is doctrinally similar to Christianity but that was not the main point. That was a point I made to support the main point. You will not find even a meaningful fraction of people who claim to have reached Nirvana, etc... compared to born against. There must be a thousand to one ration here, not that the quality is even remotely comparable either. It's numbers, quality, and doctrine and no other group has even a relevant (comparatively) amount of either. Not that I ever said any or all three were proof.
I'm not sure you know what "personal" means. "Personal" is when I attack you, as a person. Attacking what you are saying is quite different.
In this case I mainly mean commentary based on assumptions about things you have no access to. Like my motivations or emotional responses. I have never dodged anything you mentioned, I was never embarrassed, etc... It is a complete waste of our time.
I've already explained how the reliability of quantum physics can be demonstrated every time you use a computer. What part of that is difficult for you to understand?
Exactly is obvious proof of the quantum about a HP desktop? It's operating system was not designed by anyone that was a quantum theorist. The processors your talking about do not exist in our normal environments. However how is any of this irrelevant. I have made two types of general claims here. That theoretical science is not as knowable as you suggest and that God has no scientific disproof. Neither is affected by what you stated above.
Actually, no. That's not relevant either, since we're not debating my credentials with regards to quantum physics. We're debating the reliability to which I am capable of assessing that quantum physics presents an accurate view of reality, to which I can attest that my belief in its reliability is dependent on the real-world applications of the theory. I don't need a PhD in quantum physics to determine that any more than I need a PhD in aerodynamics to understand that what we know about weight, mass and inertia is accurate and true enough to enable us to fly around in planes.
I could not care less but we have discussed the know ability of the quantum quite a bit. Since we both know you and I are only dabblers in issues this complex we can dispense with any knowledge of it being a contention with the bible and so cease discussing it.
Well, personal experience is apparently your only means of knowing anything, then.
That is overwhelming true. The exceptions to it are far and few between and true for all of us. In this case my personal experience is such as to be a reliable indicator of hos prevalent quantum experts are in the fields of electrical engineering, advanced avionics, processing, weapon systems, and gps guidance etc... They are rare and I only gave an example to confirm this, nothing more.
That wasn't rhetorical. I'm seriously asking why you keep mentioning it when it's not relevant to what you and I are discussing.
Just ignore what you can't get, I am not going back 4 levels of posts to find out what your talking about. These posts are long enough and irrelevant enough as it is.