wenglund wrote: marg wrote:wenglund wrote:marg wrote:Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. All claims are not equal in truth value. Some are more likely to be false or true than others.
Lack of extrodinary evidence for extraordinary claims may be grounds for unbelief or disbelief, but not for accusation about lying.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-
Incorrect. Absence of evidence which one might reasonably expect to find, given a particular claim can indeed be
grounds for reaching a conclusion with good reasoning..that someone lied.
If J. Smith made claims (let's ignore extraordinary for the time being) either the claims are true or false. If they aren't true..then one might ask why. Again data needs to be accumulated to come to a reasoned conclusion and the conclusion given the data might be that the claim was fabricated or a deliberate lie.
Extraordinariness of claims is only important in that the more strange, unusual, extraordinary the claim is...then the evidence to support that claim should commensurate with the sort of claims made. In other words the more extraordinary the claim...the presumption is it isn't true. And the side making the extraordinary claim has a burden to overcome that presumption their claim is not valid. The reasoning and evidence has to be such as to overcome the assumption the claim isn't true.
Okay, then by your same "reasoning", you may be deemed as lying in what you say above because your extrodinary claim about extraordinariness being grounds for accusing people of lying, lacks extraordinary evidence in support thereof. You did not "overcome the presumption [that your] claim is not valid", In other words, your "thinking" is, unwittingly, self-negating.
I am fine with that.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-
The reasoning that J.Smith was with high probability lying about his various claims has been given to you Wade, but you are too biased to appreciate it objectively. Let's take one of the claims discussed ..the gold plates. To claim that they were taken by an angel to some other realm...is extraordinary. That is, it's far from the ordinary that reasonable people consensually appreciate about the physical realities of the world we live in.
If one employs reasoning to this claim and looks into other possibilities for why there are no plates to examine, it is possible that J. Smith fabricated the claim. Additional data can be gathered (which I'm not going to bother getting into) and through inductive reasoning..one can with good reasoning reach a conclusion that the claim was an outright fabricated lie.
Critical thinking is inductive reasoning. That is one gathers data and from that data one makes a probability (reasoned) conclusion. Not everyone is necessarily going to reach the same conclusion. And the conclusion will also be a function of how good the data is both in quantity and quality, how well one reasons from that data. But it is irrational to think that one can not determine based on evidence whether or not an individual has lied. And if one might reasonable expect to find evidence and it's not available that in itself is a piece of data/evidence.
You wrote: "you may be deemed as lying in what you say above because your extrodinary claim about extraordinariness being grounds for accusing people of lying, lacks extraordinary evidence in support thereof."
In what way is my claim extraordinary? Is it physically impossible that Smith lied? What reasoning is there to suggest that Smith was so trust worthy that he'd never lie? He was human, people lie all the time for personal rewards...power, money, ego, status, etc. An argument can easily be presented that there is nothing extraordinary about people lying and no reason to presume that Smith
must have been telling the truth. As has been pointed out to you, there is much evidence to reach a conclusion he lied and a good chunk of that evidence is lack of the plates and the absurd extraordinary claim that they were taken by an angel to some other realm.
Looking at your words from above "because your extrodinary claim about extraordinariness being grounds for accusing people of lying" aside from my claim not being extraordinary and it being a claim which has been reasoned to with good reasoning..aside from all that...I did not say extraordinariness is grounds for accusing people of lying. You had argued a point that lack of evidence
could not be grounds for lying and I pointed out to you ..that lack of evidence
can indeed be grounds particularly when it is reasonable to expect the evidence to be available. Please be more careful in interpreting what I do say Wade. Otherwise if you continue to twist and distort my words I will likely interpret you are into disingenuously game playing argumentation which I have noted others have already concluded about you.
Now if you wish to present an argument that I'm lying about anything whatsoever...please do. But so far you've presented no reasoning, no evidence to suggest any such thing.