TheRiov wrote:
Evidence has a chain of causality. The supernatural events, by their nature are quite literally a Deus ex machina. Even if you have hundreds of witnesses who heard a voice booming out of the heavens, there is no evidence of any of the 'rest' of the story.
What "rest of the story"? Why exactly is that important? I've already stipulated that you can't observe the supernatural except in circumstances where it allows itself to be heard, so you seem to be simply repeating what I've already stated but in different words in order to imply there's some sort of problem you're not specifying.
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Lets take an example of a murder: We can trace a gun from its manufacture, sale, etc. We have a long trail going into the event and a trail going out. Supernatural events on the other hand, seem to never have any.
This of course is internally consistant with the power ascribed to an Abrahamic God, but is utterly unsatisfying (spiritually) for some of us.
What's your point? With the murder, the goal is proof beyond a reasonable doubt. However, some murders never get solved. In the case of faith, most people realize that they cannot prove/solve the question of whether God exists; they simply take what evidence there is, and decide it is enough to have faith that there is a God.
I realize that's unsatisfying, but the fact that it's unsatisfying to some people does not make the evidence go away, or invalidate it as evidence. That makes you no different than a juror who votes "not guilty" because he has a reasonable doubt. The fact that the juror sees doubt does not mean the existing evidence disappears.
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But we can duplicate what we think (based on testimony) are the facts of an event and they still remain logically consistant. We can trace all elements into the crime (and hopefully out of, or at least account for where they might have gone).
I'm not sure how you think you are "duplicating the facts of the event" in a court of law any more than people who read the Bible or the Koran are doing the same thing. Oh sure, the evidence is generally a lot more recent and complete, but it's also describing a far more limited scope of events.
As for "remaining logically consistent", the events that are supposed to have happened as a result of supernatural intervention are only "logically inconsistent" when we assume they must conform to the laws of this universe. Again, this is a way of trying to use your conclusion that there is nothing supernatural as a premise in showing that it doesn't exist, or at least to try to impeach the evidence for it. I don't see why it's so hard to understand that it is a major error to in any way approach the question with any sort of attack that uses has as its underlying assumption that the supernatural must conform to the laws of the universe or it cannot exist.
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On the other hand, the supernatural omits this. There is only a pile of salt. Or an unburned bush. Or fish from nowhere. And were you to reconstruct the events, the same thing would not happen again.
In the first sentence above you're simply pointing out that the majority of the evidence is testimonial, while physical evidence is sparse. As for "reconstructing the events", so what? You're just pointing out that we cannot interact with the supernatural unless it chooses to allow this. That is not, in any way, a weakness for the case; it's the nature of the thing in question. Trying to use that nature to impeach it is yet another form of begging the question.
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"perceived something" is simply stating the blindingly obvious in order to make it sound weaker. Each person takes that account, in conjunction with all the other evidence they are aware of, and determines what they believe.
No, its actually a key point, oft overlooked by the more credulous. One that often gets omitted by people trying to sell a point.
I have no idea why you think it's a "key point" or even how what you said pertains to what you responded to.
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Which is why I find it so silly that people of faith try to use 'evidence' to justify their faith. Just have faith. TRUE Omnipotence can create/destroy/eliminate/ignore any 'evidence' and in fact time itself, so no amount of proof can disprove an Abrahamic god.
People use evidence to justify their faith primarily in order to have some idea of what faith to have, as well as to combat the silliness of people who need to make up things like the Flying Spaghetti Monster in order justify their own petty resentment of beliefs they don't share. If there were no evidence, no one would beleive in much of anything because no one would have the foggiest idea what to beleive in. You'll note that "joke" religions like Scientology and the FSM appeared well after religions based on observation (regardless of how flawed those observations might be" appeared.
As for "True" omnipotence, yes it could do those, but if it did, then its doing so would be more evidence of it since clearly you are not claiming the universe itself would spontaneously cause such to appear or disappear. Your "just have faith" comment is simply a desire for believers to make it more convenient for you to make Flying Spaghetti Monster claims by just rolling over and not annoying you further by pointing out that there is, in fact, evidence for beliefs other than your own.