Lem wrote: ↑Wed Sep 01, 2021 4:43 pm
dastardly stem wrote: ↑Tue Aug 31, 2021 8:56 pm
In discussing with Billy Shears in the comments, Kyler suggests:
he seems to just keep doing this. "it's possible this could have happened..."
"what about this...this, oh, this, and that."
"well God could have made that happen. I mean he's God, so it's still possible and all of that. and the text says that God did it, so I believe God."
IT's like, well yeah...if we assume God did it, then why is anyone evaluating anything. His arbitrary number plugging can't possibly get us anywhere on such assumptions. Once we assume God's involved every probability goes all the way up to whatever number we like.
This is a significant point. When Kyler says this:
Your use of the term “made” suggests something far more supernatural than I’m suggesting..
he is not being accurate. He has made multiple assumptions, starting with a belief in God that is assumed, and that God spoke directly and specifically:
[1]God would need to have instructed
This conclusion is stated as being based on this assumption:
[2]but that’s exactly what the text says happened,
You'll note that Kyler assumes that the text can be relied on as true, in his test of the hypothesis that the text is true.
This is an egregious violation of statistical analysis. You cannot use a conclusion that the hypothesis is true as a step in a proof where you are supposed to be testing whether the hypothesis is true. this cannot be emphasized enough.
Excellent points, Lem. I agree. He should have presented two options: was it written anciently or was it written in the 19th C? And then left God out of the equation. I think he thinks he did that, but it seems to me the options he has considered are it was written in the 19c or God did it. If God did it there's no reasonable evaluation to do. And that's a problem for his method here.
His comment:
Your use of the term “made” suggests something far more supernatural than I’m suggesting..
This is what's so frustrating about his whole enterprise. What does it mean to be
more supernatural than something that is supernatural? Either way, no matter the degree of something being supernatural, he's appealing to God did it. Well if that's what he keeps doing, I'd just ask what's the point of this?
Also, the only items he's even put under evaluation that can possibly have any bearing on the question of anciently written or more modern is DNA, and questionably this boat travel thing. Everything else either can't possibly have any input on the question (like when he said Joseph Smith' first vision claim has something to value on the question) or basically is an appeal to God did it (like his evaluation of the witnesses...the plates weren't said to be used in the translation and fanatical believers claiming a vision of what they wanted to believe is just another way of saying God did it). Ah well, as others have said, we can't really see this as a serious effort.
“Every one of us is, in the cosmic perspective, precious. If a human disagrees with you, let him live. In a hundred billion galaxies, you will not find another.”
― Carl Sagan, Cosmos