Sheldon
Veteran Member
Sheldon said: ↑
Unlike religion of course, which is left stupidly clinging to erroneous archaic superstition, long after it has been unequivocally falsified.
This is true for all false religions because they are based on superstition.
That's a no true Scotsman fallacy, and you might want to look up the word superstition in a dictionary, as I don't think it means what you think it means.
Jesus Christ rising from the dead hasn’t been proven false after 2000 years because it happened.
Argumentum ad ignorantiam fallacy, no one has proven invisible unicorns don't exist, this doesn't lend credence to them being real. Not one shred of objective evidence exists for this superstitious claim.
The evidence of the empty tomb,
There is no such evidence, only anecdotal hearsay, from mostly unknown authors, long after the events they allege to have happened, and of course an empty tomb is not evidence for anything, it is by definition an appeal to mystery.
eyewitness accounts,
There are no eyewitness accounts? What on earth are you talking about, not one word was written about Jesus until decades after he is alleged to have died, and the authors Mathew Mark Luke and John are fictional names assigned centuries later. Did you not know this?
, the fact that lives are still being changed,
Evidences nothing, since other religions with different deities make identical claims, and plenty of people change their lives without any superstitious religious beliefs at all.
demons expelled in His Name are still happening.
A claim you would need to demonstrate some objective evidence for, unevidenced or anecdotal narratives are pretty meaningless. No more compelling than alleged sightings of mermaids.
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