Pogo
Well-Known Member
Not yet, she is still trying to figure out why she took it off.Do you need the coats back?
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Not yet, she is still trying to figure out why she took it off.Do you need the coats back?
Certainly, somebody is trying to figure it out.Not yet, she is still trying to figure out why she took it off.
Not me, I'm leaving that to the discernment duelists.Certainly, somebody is trying to figure it out.
Well that is rather your bad attitude, you don't care what anybody says or why, you just repeat whatever denial of the day you pick.
Here we have a person who agrees with you on much and you still don't care.
The point is that no information is travelling faster than light. Entanglement doesn't change this.Your second statement seems out of kilter with your first? If you accept the possibility that spacial locality could be illusory, that space and time are, as Einstein said, " . . . modes by which we think, and not conditions in which we live," then the speed of light is an illusion related to how we're designed to encounter the world, rather than something that exists even if we're not experiencing it.
These are fun ideas to play with but don't change the facts of our observations. And raise more questions than answers in my experience.As in Berkeley's theory that a chair doesn't exist when no one is looking at it, so too, light traveling through space doesn't occur, or exist, if no sentient entity is measuring it through observation. The concept of light traveling through space is a concept in a mind and not an event that exists without minds.
Naturally that's all a difficult pill to swallow for metaphysical naturalists who believe we evolve and adapt to a real and solid world outside of us rather than believing, as Christian idealists like Kant, Berkeley, and yours truly believe, that space and time are constructs of the mind and not elements of a mindless reality.
What we have meant to say is that all our experience is nothing but the representation of appearance; that the things which we experience are not in themselves what we experience them as being, nor their relations so constituted in themselves as they appear to us, and that if the subject, or even only the subjective constitution of the senses in general, be removed, the whole constitution and all the relations of objects in space and time, nay space and time themselves, would vanish. As appearances, they cannot exist in themselves, but only in us. What objects may be in themselves, and apart from all this receptivity of our sensibility, remains completely unknown to us. We know nothing but our mode of perceiving them - a mode which is peculiar to us, and not necessarily shared in by every being, though, certainly, by every human being. With this alone have we any concern.Immanuel Kant.
The only sensible way to proceed is by raising or lowering our expectations based on the evidence we are able to gather. The day you can come to me with evidence that "those who swallow the blood Christ transformed into wine will rule in the kingdom of God forever and ever amen" I'll raise my estimate of that statement being true.Quantum physics is the most recent example of the poverty of our empirical and logical relationship to reality. I'm not so much trying to use quantum physics to prove that Jesus could walk on water or turn water into wine as I'm pointing out that to even someone as intelligent and savvy as Albert Einstein, quantum physics proves that the world, reality, is far different than what we experience on a daily basis.
Men like Einstein initially considered many of the proposition proven as true by quantum physics to be far more unlikely than a man walking on water, or water being transformed instantaneously into wine. Nonetheless, Einstein and all the opponents of quantum physics were forced to swallow incredibly unlikely truths just as everyone reading this thread will one day see that those who swallow the blood Christ transformed into wine will rule in the kingdom of God forever and ever amen.
John
A miracle (such as turning water into wine) would not happen naturally.
I may agree agree with YoursTrue on this too. It's an interesting question concerning whether miracles are "supernatural" or just natural phenomena that's beyond the ken of existing knowledge?
Since space and time are an illusion, Jesus used the entanglement between the water with Chateau Lafite Rothschild of a later time in order to surprise and delight his wedding guests.
Alcohol has long been known to possess spiritual, medicinal, and celebratorial properties.Have you ever wondered ,Why Water into Wine?
Not Wine into Water!?
or Water into Oil?
Would that prove they were always drunk! ?
Alcoholic , for 5000 thousands years!
Neither.This thread is about whether such a miracle can occur naturally, or whether it is story invented by a person who has no understanding of how wine are made.
Well, that's nice to know. or think about. Thank you.I may agree agree with YoursTrue on this too. It's an interesting question concerning whether miracles are "supernatural" or just natural phenomena that's beyond the ken of existing knowledge?
The problem I would have with miracles being wholly supernatural, rather than simply elements of reality that are previously unknown and non-engaged, is that I don't think God does things willy nilly or on a whim as though he likes to flaunt his downright ornery power. I think he's actually quite humble such that miracles are merely his desire to wake us all up to the paucity of our true insight into the nature of the world as originally created.
I think God would like us to be far more open-minded about the fact that since the fall in the Garden we've been living in a thin sliver of reality under the illusion that our lyin eyes are far more faithful than they really are. With apologies to the Eagles, I think he thought by now we'd've realized there ain't no way to hide our lyin eyes.
John
it isn’t beyond any knowledge as to how wine are made, Brey.
People in that region - the Levant, or the entire Near East for millennia before Jesus in the gospel of John. They knew how to make wine, as well as other al beverages (eg beer or ale, mead, etc), and they did so without science knowledge.
What the gospel narrated with this water-wine miracle, is impossible without grapes…PERIOD!
When grapes are ripe, particular species of yeasts will start growing on the skins of grapes. When the winemakers crushed the grapes, juice come into contact with the skins, and therefore yeasts start feeding on the natural sugar in the grape juice. The yeasts turn sugar into alcohol, and when you let the al permeated the juice for a period of time, it will turn juice into wine.
That’s just how it is, even if the winemakers may not anything about the unicellular fungi that grow on the skins.
You try to mix the miracle with some nonsensical yarn about Jesus using quantum entanglement of bringing wine from someplace else to the wedding feast of Cana…
…is not only pure speculation, it is speculation that is utterly ludicrous.
That the event is part of the narrative of a human being demonstrating extraordinary powers is certainly something I'd agree on.Neither.
The event in question is part of a story intended to present the main character is an extraordinary and divinely sanctioned being. So as happens in a great many stories, this character is presented as havng abilities that are beyond the limitations of the rest of us.
Neither.
The event in question is part of a story intended to present the main character is an extraordinary and divinely sanctioned being. So as happens in a great many stories, this character is presented as havng abilities that are beyond the limitations of the rest of us.
George Washington never told a lie, and threw a dollar coin a half-mile across the Potomac River.That’s what I would call embellishments.
George Washington never told a lie, and threw a dollar coin a half-mile across the Potomac River.
Such 'embellishments' are symbolic. Because mythology is about conveying cultural ideological imperatives from one generation to the next. They are not historical documents even though they are often resented in that manner. They are symbolic representations of cultural ideals. Factuality is simply not a pertinent issue.
it isn’t beyond any knowledge as to how wine are made, Brey.
What the gospel narrated with this water-wine miracle, is impossible without grapes…PERIOD!
Special Pleading.In most cases this is historically true. But the Gospels are unique. They're the proof that all the previous mythological embellishments, though merely symbolic (virgin born sons of God, etc.), have a factual/historical signified that they're sign-language attempting to predict. The Gospels are what's signified by the merely mythological.
. . . the Fathers were right in fiercely defending the dogma of the Incarnation. From the point of view of the history of religions, the Incarnation represents the last and most perfect hierophany: God completely incarnated himself in a human being both concrete and historical (that is, active in a well-defined and irreversible historical temporality) without thereby confining himself to his body (since the Son is consubstantial with the Father). It could even be said that the kenosis of Jesus Christ not only constitutes the crowning of all the hierophanies accomplished from the beginning of time but also justifies them, that is, proves their validity. To accept the possibility of the Absolute becoming incarnate in a historical person is at the same time to recognize the validity of the universal dialectic of the sacred; in other words, it is to recognize that the countless pre-Christian generations were not victims of an illusion when they proclaimed the presence of the sacred, i.e. of the divine, in the objects and rhythms of the cosmos.Professor Mircea Eliades, The Sacred and the Profane.
John
The point is that no information is travelling faster than light. Entanglement doesn't change this.