New Testament is evidence in favour of the Christian God, but at the same time it’s also evidence against Vishnu or Zeus—indeed it may be stronger evidence against Zeus that it’s good evidence for the Christian God.
I’m not therefore sure at all if it would have a positive correlation with (be evidence for) the existence of a God in general.
I’m not therefore sure at all if it would have a positive correlation with (be evidence for) the existence of a God in general.
I’m pretty sure it’s completely uncorrelated. My previous comments were to point out the flaws in your rhetoric. Deconverting people is a noble goal, but
“What if God only saves atheists, and sends believers to hell?”
Sorry, but I still don’t see any flaws in my logic. As a point of fact, some people atleast can conceive superior beings as pieces of fiction; and indeed they constantly seem to do so, every culture ever imagining some being more powerful than they currently are, from Zeus to Superman.
Also, as a point of fact, some people try to pass off fictions as truths (conmen and fools, as i said).
Therefore if, given the above, and without knowing why, nobody ever in the history of civilization considered combining the above two (passing the idea of a superior being as truth) -- this is evidence in favour of something, an unknown law of nature or biology or an unknown agent, stopping this from happening.
Where is the logical flaw here? If you tried to simulate the whole of human history, using the most accurate biology possible, and religion (alone of all human charactestics) arose nowhere in your simulation, wouldn’t you consider it evidence in favour of some programmer tinkering with the program in order to purposefully eliminate it?
New Testament is evidence in favour of the Christian God, but at the same time it’s also evidence against Vishnu or Zeus—indeed it may be stronger evidence against Zeus that it’s good evidence for the Christian God.
I’m not therefore sure at all if it would have a positive correlation with (be evidence for) the existence of a God in general.
Does that answer the contradiction you perceived?
I’m pretty sure it’s completely uncorrelated. My previous comments were to point out the flaws in your rhetoric. Deconverting people is a noble goal, but
is not the way to go about it.
Sorry, but I still don’t see any flaws in my logic. As a point of fact, some people atleast can conceive superior beings as pieces of fiction; and indeed they constantly seem to do so, every culture ever imagining some being more powerful than they currently are, from Zeus to Superman.
Also, as a point of fact, some people try to pass off fictions as truths (conmen and fools, as i said).
Therefore if, given the above, and without knowing why, nobody ever in the history of civilization considered combining the above two (passing the idea of a superior being as truth) -- this is evidence in favour of something, an unknown law of nature or biology or an unknown agent, stopping this from happening.
Where is the logical flaw here? If you tried to simulate the whole of human history, using the most accurate biology possible, and religion (alone of all human charactestics) arose nowhere in your simulation, wouldn’t you consider it evidence in favour of some programmer tinkering with the program in order to purposefully eliminate it?