Dr. Shades wrote:JAK wrote:Shades stated:
We're not "boxed in" with only these choices. Those are, quite literally, the only two choices there are.
While it is possible to construct a restrictive either/or argument, it is an unlikely case. The issue is chained to doctrinal claims. Since such claims have not been established as reliable, there are other options than those.
Forget doctrinal claims. Forget reliability. Either God was once a man, or he wasn't.
Think of it this way: Either you, JAK, are a member of the species
homo sapiens sapiens, or you're not. It doesn't matter what the doctrine is. It doesn't matter whether any claims are reliable. You are either a member of the species
homo sapiens sapiens or you're not.
Shades stated:
Good point. So it's time to accept the inevitable, jettison Mormonism, and become a critic.
One could say that. However, it is far behind the curve of present-day analysis regarding religious mythologies.
We're not talking about "mythologies" here. We're talking about whether something is true or whether it isn't.
There are many religious mythologies. They are a product of modification multiple times and over time. Certainly “a critic” recognizes that.
Truth and falsehood are independent of mythology.
Shades stated:
Forget doctrinal claims. Forget reliability. Either God was once a man, or he wasn't. The claim is a
doctrinal claim. There is no broad consensus in Christianity for the claim. Second, “reliability” is critical. Absent reliability and broad consensus on evidence that supports a claim of
fact, the claim should be rejected.
Third, there is no consensus on
God claims. Different
Christian groups claim different things in their
God assertions.
Fourth,
Timeline of Evolution for the planet earth is complex and requires
no God claim. Those who make such claims, make it up. They rely on their own evolving doctrines for making claims.
Fifth,
Development (or evolution) of religion has origins dating to early humans. Those developments have been in continuous change. In some cases the change was slow (over hundreds of human years). In other cases, there were dramatic breaks with a religious perspective.
Your second paragraph mixes one of definition and one of speculation. There is indeed broad and universal consensus regarding definition for
homo sapiens. That statement is correct but in no way on a par with the claim that
God was once a man. No evidence has established
God much less that “God was once a man.” We have evidence for homo sapiens. We have evidence for the evolution of hundreds of thousands of species on the planet earth. There is enormous scientific consensus on that.
The links provided demonstrate the complexity of evolution of life on the
4.5 billion year-old planet.
Critical to your speculation is
reliability of the claim. If we are to be intellectually honest, we have to take into account the evidence we humans now have. Absent the capacity to establish the
parameters or details for God, it’s an irrelevant claim. The additional claim (which apparently some wish to make) that this
God “was once a man.”
While
the age of the earth has general agreement, there is likewise general agreement on
the age of the universe as reported in the New York Times.
Hence, the age of man is far shorter than the age of the universe. And the age of man is far shorter than the age of the planet earth.
Mindless belief in that for which no evidence can be objectively presented, tested, and confirmed is “doctrinal claim.” Contrary to your claim, you are talking about “mythologies.”
The
burden of proof lies with those who make a claim. Objective, detached, dispassionate unemotional, evidence is a prerequisite for meeting the burden of proof. In addition, the more extraordinary the claim, the greater the need for compelling evidence.
Shades stated:
We're not talking about "mythologies" here. We're talking about whether something is true or whether it isn't. Incorrect, Shades. The assertions regarding
God claims are indeed
mythologies. Recognize that we have no unified agreement among the many religions (past and present) on their various claims for
truth.
It is the last resort of those who lack evidence to claim
truth by assertion.
Shades stated:
Truth and falsehood are independent of mythology. Yes. And assertions of “truth” absent well documented consensus on information leading to conclusions is unreliable.
JAK