Hey MG I see others have responded to this already, but you are asking me, so i figure I better respond.MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Wed Sep 01, 2021 5:53 pm
As a believer Dr. Rasmussen is, by default, going to factor God into any equation that is part of his analysis. How can he not? As a disbeliever you are going to base your analysis on your personal bias/views. Your conclusions are going to be different.
Why fight it?
You will ALWAYS go your way as a disbeliever trying to take God out of the equation. Believers are going to formulaically going to do the opposite. Who’s formula has the bona fides that lead to ultimate truth?
Depends on what you think about the supernatural.
Regards,
MG
I'd be interested to see what Kyler would say if you posed this question to him. I say that because I think he actually doesn't realize he's smuggling God into it. You seem to be thinking he should add God into the mix. I'd wonder if he'd disagree with you.
Ultimate truth? We're talking probabilities here, bub. Keep up.
So on to it...Let's consider I claim to jump on top of a 10 story building. I mean leap from the ground to the roof. I tell everyone and I gather witnesses saying I did it.
Someone comes along and wishes to determine the probability. Did I jump up there or have mechanical aid. These are the two options we narrow it down to. That is, for the analysis we'll go with the notion that I was on the ground and took one movement to the roof. The question is did I really jump, or did wires, perhaps, lift me?
After the evaluation, it is concluded I most likely tricked onlookers and used perhaps a series of unseen wires connected to pullies and the like to pull off the stunt. "oh" but I quip, "God did it. He gave me extra powers to jump up there." That claim wouldn't change the evaluation of probability. It'd still be more probable that I'd have pulled off a trick. It would suggest the claim of God and magic couldn't be evaluated. We have no reference points...it's simply a claim of magic and everyone would do well to think I pulled off a trick.
This is like evaluating the probability of the Book of Mormon being written anciently vs modernly. On Kyler's analysis even if it's more probable it came fr the 19C, it doens't matter, because God did. It's as if he wants to circumvent his own analysis.
Plus, as Dr Moore points out, he has a ton of other problems that render the whole evaluation a complete mess.