[net.religion] what does it mean to talk to God a brief attempt at an answer

hedrick@topaz.ARPA (Chuck Hedrick) (03/07/85)

Amid the usual clutter of junk in net.religion, I have seen two perfectly
reasonable requests from non-believers.  The first is in response to the
various Christians.  These folks said they believe in God because they talk
to him all the time.  Many readers found it hard to figure out what this
means.  It seemed unlikely that these people were really seeing visions and
hearing voices.  And they couldn't figure out what else could be meant.  I
think it is quite reasonable to expect a bit more explanation.  So I am
going to try to explain what I mean when I say that I talk to God.

I am reluctant to take on this task, because it is primarily the task of the
philosophy of religion.  If any readers are versed in philosophy, it will
become painfully clear that I am not a competent philosopher.  However the
question seems important, and no one else seems likely to try, so I will.
Maybe one of you philosophers can try to clean up what I say.

In order to understand what I mean when I talk about God doing this or that,
you have to realize that my model of the universe does not separate events
cleanly into those that are caused by God and those that happen by "natural
causes".  It seems clear that the laws of the physics do not uniquely
determine what goes on in history.  Even in classical physics, many
different histories are possible, depending upon the initial conditions (or
some equivalent, if you believe in a universe that has lasted forever).
With quantum mechanics, there is of course far more freedom.  I think of God
as being responsible for the specific course that history has taken.  I view
the laws of physics as being similar in kind to the laws of poetry.  The
Author has chosen to follow certain patterns.  But these patterns are not so
rigid as to contrain what he is saying.  Thus I believe that every event can
be looked at from two different perspectives: that of someone tied to the
visible universe, and God's.  From our perspective, the event is tied in to
history, and has the usual sort of causes.  Depending upon the type of
event, these causes may or may not uniquely determine it.  But I also
believe that in his providence, God has either chosen to have the event
happen, or at least to make the universe a place such that the event would
happen.  This is somewhat similar to the "two levels" that other people have
talked about, except that I consider that every event can be understood in
terms of either level.

Now on to communication with God...  There are certainly times when God hits
people over the head, but for most of us, most of the time, communication
with God occurs in the context of prayer.  When I say that "God showed me
X", I think I normally mean that I realized X when I was praying.  If you
want to look at this from the worldly perspective, it could probably be said
that no information actually arrives from an extraterrestrial source when I
pray.  I think most insights could be regarded as coming from one of the
following sources:

  - considering events around me and seeing patterns in them
  - Scripture, particularly meditating on the life of Christ
  - the views of other Christians (or non-Christians, for that matter)

However in my view, God is still responsible.  One can see something like
this even in the case of human teachers.  I have found that it is not always
possible to teach something just by lecturing about it.  Often you have to
find some way of pointing to it.  Socrates is well known for trying to bring
his students to see matters for themselves.  Nevertheless, one would still
say that a teacher of this sort is communicating.  In my view, God has
arranged the world, and our lives, to help bring us to certain insights.  He
has provided Scripture to remove any ambiguity that might otherwise be
there.  Prayer is when I take time to think about things carefully enough
that I can see what God is trying to tell me.  (NB: This is not a complete
description of the role of prayer.  I am completely omitting intercessory
prayer, and no doubt other types of prayer as well.)

There is a danger here that I will be understood as meaning something like
the Deist model, where God sort of sets up the Universe and then leaves man
to make the best of it.  I believe that God is concerned with everything
that happens to us, and that his providence applies from minute to minute.
He *is* trying to tell me something specific.  It is just that normally he
speaks through events around me, through Scripture, and through other
people.

The primary difficulty with this view is that it is not "falsifiable".  That
is, if I claim that God is sending me messages on 100 MHz with frequency
modulation, it is very easy to verify whether this is true or not.  When I
claim that he is sending me messages through the events around me, it is
very hard to prove this true or false.  Someone else can look around and see
no message there.  According to certain philosophers of science, in the
final analysis this means that my claim is meaningless.  I do not have the
space here (or the expertise) to give a complete defense against this
charge.  However to some extent it is based on a naive understanding of the
way science itself works.  Many of the basic ideas of science (e.g.
conservation of energy) are not subject to direct proof or even disproof.
These basic ideas are embodied in a specific theory.  But if that theory is
disproven, it is always possible to add epicycles to it so that the basic
principle continues.  The actual choice among basic approaches is made in
the long run, on the basis of whether it proves useful or not.  If
conservation of energy leads theorists to be able to propose lots of new
experiments, and continues to be able to summarize the results of these
experiments elegantly, we will keep it.  I believe that it is the same with
following God.  If it leads me to new insights about myself and the world
around me, and if it is capable of making sense out of everything I run into
and see in the world, then it is a useful (and hence meaningful) idea.

sher@rochester.UUCP (David Sher) (03/07/85)

I found that the article that I excerpt below is a fairly good description 
of the way I think of prayer (aside from direct references to Christ).  
I am a Jew and the author is clearly a Christian.  Undoubtably other
Jews and Christians will disagree with this article.  Never the less
I think it is interesting that at least one Jew and Christian agree on
the fundamental nature of prayer.  Is this the case for the greater
mass of monotheists in general?
-David Sher

>Now on to communication with God...  There are certainly times when God hits
>people over the head, but for most of us, most of the time, communication
>with God occurs in the context of prayer.  When I say that "God showed me
>X", I think I normally mean that I realized X when I was praying.  If you
>want to look at this from the worldly perspective, it could probably be said
>that no information actually arrives from an extraterrestrial source when I
>pray.  I think most insights could be regarded as coming from one of the
>following sources:
>
>  - considering events around me and seeing patterns in them
>  - Scripture, particularly meditating on the life of Christ
>  - the views of other Christians (or non-Christians, for that matter)
>
>However in my view, God is still responsible.  One can see something like
>this even in the case of human teachers.  I have found that it is not always
>possible to teach something just by lecturing about it.  Often you have to
>find some way of pointing to it.  Socrates is well known for trying to bring
>his students to see matters for themselves.  Nevertheless, one would still
>say that a teacher of this sort is communicating.  In my view, God has
>arranged the world, and our lives, to help bring us to certain insights.  He
>has provided Scripture to remove any ambiguity that might otherwise be
>there.  Prayer is when I take time to think about things carefully enough
>that I can see what God is trying to tell me.  (NB: This is not a complete
>description of the role of prayer.  I am completely omitting intercessory
>prayer, and no doubt other types of prayer as well.)

-No signature at end of article

bch@mcnc.UUCP (Byron Howes) (03/08/85)

In article <893@topaz.ARPA> hedrick@topaz.ARPA (Chuck Hedrick) writes:
> ...if I claim that God is sending me messages on 100 MHz with frequency
>modulation, it is very easy to verify whether this is true or not.  When I
>claim that he is sending me messages through the events around me, it is
>very hard to prove this true or false.  Someone else can look around and see
>no message there.  According to certain philosophers of science, in the
>final analysis this means that my claim is meaningless.

More problematic is the situation where someone else looks around and sees
a *different* message there.  Now we have counterclaims of truth, each with
the same degree (or lack thereof) of falsifiability.  This is the question
which generates the continuing heat in this newsgroup.  As I have been
asked on any number of occasions, how is it possible to determine what is
correct?  I would claim that it is not, and that the evidence would
indicate that G-d speaks to different people in different ways and with
different messages.

It is easy to beg the question by saying that essentially "I know I am
right and you are mistaken -- come read *my* books."  There is not,
however, any objective criteria on which to base that statement and all
subjective criteria have to be equally weighted (my revelation is not
objectively superior or inferior to your revelation.)

I think Chuck's analysis is, as usual, well thought out but I don't
think it really addresses the questions that have been asked here.

-- 

						Byron C. Howes
				      ...!{decvax,akgua}!mcnc!ecsvax!bch

mrh@cybvax0.UUCP (Mike Huybensz) (03/08/85)

Chuck Hedrick provides the most intelligent and best written discussion
of a personal relationship with god that I've ever read.  It's such a
pleasure to read something intended to communicate avoiding jargon.

In article <893@topaz.ARPA> hedrick@topaz.ARPA (Chuck Hedrick) writes:
> Now on to communication with God...  There are certainly times when God hits
> people over the head, but for most of us, most of the time, communication
> with God occurs in the context of prayer.  When I say that "God showed me
> X", I think I normally mean that I realized X when I was praying.  If you
> want to look at this from the worldly perspective, it could probably be said
> that no information actually arrives from an extraterrestrial source when I
> pray.  I think most insights could be regarded as coming from one of the
> following sources:
> 
>   - considering events around me and seeing patterns in them
>   - Scripture, particularly meditating on the life of Christ
>   - the views of other Christians (or non-Christians, for that matter)

This corresponds very closely with my past views (back when I was religious).

This is the reason why I requested that someone describe their "talking
with god" using something other than buzzwords: because "talking with
god" is so inexact as to imply an inappropriate significance.  "I'm as
important as Moses, 'cause I talk with God just like he did, and you can too"
is the misleading meaning I (and many others) catch from fundamentalists.

> However in my view, God is still responsible.  ....  When I
> claim that he is sending me messages through the events around me, it is
> very hard to prove this true or false.  Someone else can look around and see
> no message there.  According to certain philosophers of science, in the
> final analysis this means that my claim is meaningless.

You miss one other possibility: that the message may have come from yourself,
and not god.  However, it is the undecidability between the possibilities
that lead me to agnosticism.

> Many of the basic ideas of science (e.g.
> conservation of energy) are not subject to direct proof or even disproof.
> These basic ideas are embodied in a specific theory.  But if that theory is
> disproven, it is always possible to add epicycles to it so that the basic
> principle continues.  The actual choice among basic approaches is made in
> the long run, on the basis of whether it proves useful or not.  If
> conservation of energy leads theorists to be able to propose lots of new
> experiments, and continues to be able to summarize the results of these
> experiments elegantly, we will keep it.  I believe that it is the same with
> following God.  If it leads me to new insights about myself and the world
> around me, and if it is capable of making sense out of everything I run into
> and see in the world, then it is a useful (and hence meaningful) idea.

Actually, some old theories are subsumed by new theories.  Instead of adding
an epicycle, the old theories become an epicycle (or degenerate case) of
the new.  Relativistic physics includes Newtonian physics.

I agree that elegance (meaning terseness and utility in making sense of
things) is a criterion well worth following.  People can perceive elegance
with or without religious belief.  For example, while I am a zealous agnostic,
I have (and do) learn from the Bible.  Perhaps different messages.

The elegance of the Bible that I perceive boils down primarily to inter-
human relationships.  Until recently, the elegance of science has been
primarily chemical, physical, mathematical, and biological.  Now I feel
that science is beginning to subsume the inter-human relationship field,
with medicine, psychology, ethology, archaeology, anthropology, ethnology,
sociology, sociobiology, and a host of others all prying their way towards
explanation of how and why we are what we are and do what we do.
-- 

Mike Huybensz		...decvax!genrad!mit-eddie!cybvax0!mrh

pmd@cbscc.UUCP (Paul Dubuc) (03/09/85)

>In article <893@topaz.ARPA> hedrick@topaz.ARPA (Chuck Hedrick) writes:
>> ...if I claim that God is sending me messages on 100 MHz with frequency
>>modulation, it is very easy to verify whether this is true or not.  When I
>>claim that he is sending me messages through the events around me, it is
>>very hard to prove this true or false.  Someone else can look around and see
>>no message there.  According to certain philosophers of science, in the
>>final analysis this means that my claim is meaningless.
>
>[Byron Howes:]
>More problematic is the situation where someone else looks around and sees
>a *different* message there.  Now we have counterclaims of truth, each with
>the same degree (or lack thereof) of falsifiability.  This is the question
>which generates the continuing heat in this newsgroup.  As I have been
>asked on any number of occasions, how is it possible to determine what is
>correct?  I would claim that it is not, and that the evidence would
>indicate that G-d speaks to different people in different ways and with
>different messages.

Not only different, but often contradictory.  Is there still no way
to sort out what is correct?  I would disagree that all religions have
truth claims with the same degree (or lack thereof) of falsifiability.

>It is easy to beg the question by saying that essentially "I know I am
>right and you are mistaken -- come read *my* books."  There is not,
>however, any objective criteria on which to base that statement and all
>subjective criteria have to be equally weighted (my revelation is not
>objectively superior or inferior to your revelation.)

Some religions have their revelation grounded more firmly in history than
others.  That is, once we accept the proposition that God is there (the
most basic) and that we also exist (undeniably so) we can examine the
relationship between God and us that is revealed by each religion and its
implications (philosophy of religion).  We may look at the problems
common to humankind and see how each philosophy deals with them.  We can
also look at the historical claims made by each and see where the firmest
ground lies.

There are religions with little grounding in the events of history.  There
are those whose adherents make circular claims for the authority of their
own revelation.  There are some that make denial of problems out to be the
solution to those problems.  And there are those that seem to deny the
usefulness of the very tools of reason we use to grapple with the problems
we face.  For these--you are right--there is little falsification possible
and no way to connect "epistemological subjectivity" with "metaphysical
objectivity".  You cannot, however, force all religions into that pigeon
hole and say objectivity is completely irrelevant to them all.

Even if you could do that, you still have to face the problems of
contridictory truth claims.  Surely you don't resolve them by saying they
are all equally valid.  You must have reasons for believing some things
are true and others not, even in the realm of religious belief.  How
can all subjective criteria be equally weighted when the only subjectivity
any of us posesses is our own?  Doesn't the act of weighing them require
something a little beyond total subjectivity?  From your parenthetical
note, it seems that you would agree that it does.  Yet you claim that
determination of what is correct it impossible.  I would hope that God
has made a provision to resolve the issues adaquately (albeit not
absolutely).  We cannot suspend judgement indefinitely on many things
that are important; the implications of our beliefs.  Laura thinks
Satanism is horrible.  Tim thinks Christianity is horrible.  I may agree
with Laura and disagree with Tim, but I would not claim that there
are no grounds for making such judgements; that the judgements themselves
are meaningless.  Religions invariably lead their adherents to hold
beliefs that inherently imply that other religious beliefs are wrong.
We cannot ignore this conflict.  There must be some meaningful way
to consider it.  We have no choice, I think.

Maybe I have totally misunderstood your point, Byron.  But you must
have some way of resolving these conflicts to your own satisfaction
and you must believe the methods you use have validity that extends
beyond your own subjectivity (why even discuss religion otherwise?).
-- 

Paul Dubuc	cbscc!pmd

abeles@mhuxm.UUCP (abeles) (03/10/85)

> >In article <893@topaz.ARPA> hedrick@topaz.ARPA (Chuck Hedrick) writes:
> >> ...if I claim that God is sending me messages on 100 MHz with frequency
> >>modulation, it is very easy to verify whether this is true or not.  When I
> >>claim that he is sending me messages through the events around me, it is
> >>very hard to prove this true or false.  Someone else can look around and see
> >>no message there.  According to certain philosophers of science, in the
> >>final analysis this means that my claim is meaningless.
> >
> >[Byron Howes:]
> >More problematic is the situation where someone else looks around and sees
> >a *different* message there.  Now we have counterclaims of truth, each with
> >the same degree (or lack thereof) of falsifiability.  This is the question
> >which generates the continuing heat in this newsgroup.  As I have been
> >asked on any number of occasions, how is it possible to determine what is
> >correct?  

Clearly, such messages are below the threshold of detectability, in
a signal-to-noise kind of way.  People are required to make decisions
in their lives, and unfortunately cannot wait around to "signal average"
for a thousand or so years before acting.  Religion really addresses
those human problems which are inaccessible to rational inquiry within
a reasonable length of time.  As the methods of rational inquiry, as it
were, are enlarged, there will obviously be developed certain areas in which
religion is not the only authority giving such "messages."  It is not
inconceivable to me that some religions may one day be considered spurious
as a result.

This point of view has no logical relationship to either a belief or
disbelief in any particular religion.  If a given set of beliefs (and
this is my ultimate reduction of the definition of what constitutes
a religion--though I also would like to exclude "cults" from being
considered as such) is shown to be inconsistent with reality, and that
proof is accepted, then that would just about prove that the origins
of that religion were falsely perpetrated upon innocent followers.

(This makes it imperative that all religions adjust to modernity:  they
run a serious risk of being considered outmoded.  Hence, many religious
authorities today do not consider evolution to be in conflict with
the story of creation in Genesis--a new interpretation is developed
to the extent that before the world was created, the meaning of the
word "day" was unclear and could constitute centuries or more.)

HOWEVER, I would like to shift the emphasis from the religions
themselves, which cannot be verified or disproven (that's why we
call them beliefs, natch!) to the followers or rejectors of those
religions, including all of us reading the net.  In other words,
the psychology of religion is my topic today:

Since as mentioned above people need to make life decisions without
all the facts, there arises an allegiance to those decisions because
psychologically (Abeles' 1st principle of psychology; forget about
some of what you may have been taught) man's greatest psychological
need is the need to be right.  It's that simple, folks.  If you're
a fundamentalist Ubizmatist, and if you just got finished spending
fifty years of your life living your life like a good Ubizmatist,
it would just about send you to the loony bin to look honestly
at the claims of other beliefs because you are going to be afraid,
and I mean AFRAID, to find out that you have been wasting your time
swinging dead chickens around over your head every Tuesday afternoon
(a requirement of Ubizmatic mystical beliefs).  It's MORE than
EMBARRASSING!

Similarly for atheists.  If you are a dyed-in-the-wool atheist and
you are getting old and find out that atheism is a drag 'cause it
kind of says that there is no particular reason to live, it is a
bit embarrassing to proclaim to the world that Ubizmatology is the
one true religion.

Actually agnostics have it the best; they can slowly move in the
direction they feel most comfortable with, without making a big
deal about it and staking their sense of self as strongly on this
issue of religion.  But ultimately, they have the same problem.

Point is, I don't really take the things people say about their
religious thinking too seriously because to a great extent they
are only claiming those beliefs to be facts because their egos
can't take the heat.  The ego is the part of the mind, according
to S. Freud, which deals with reality, and the fact of the matter
is that there aren't enough facts available on which to base
life decisions--thus potentially overloading the ego.  So sometimes
it compensates by spewing out nonsense.

Again, this bears no relationship to the validity of the general
concept of religion or validity of any particular manifestation.

--J. Abeles

rlr@pyuxd.UUCP (Professor Wagstaff) (03/12/85)

Well, it finally happened.  No, really.  God actually spoke to me.
I now really and truly believe in God.  What's more, I see the correctness
of the Christian perspective!!!  God has explained it all to me.

It happened in a dream last night.  Now you may remember that someone
(I think it was Alan Algustyniak) reminded us that when someone says
"God appeared to me in a dream", we should ask if God actually appeared
to that person or if that person just dreamed that God appeared to him/her.
So, being a very objective and rational guy, I performed some scientific
analysis:  I asked God if He was just something I dreamed up or if He was
really talking to me.  He told me to shut up, and stated (rather loudly) that
He was indeed God and not my own imagination.  Who was I to argue with God?

Moreover, He was really pissed off.  He told me, first of all, to stop
using the name Ubizmo as the name of a deity, because it was quite
simply wrong, and He didn't like it.  Secondly, He told me not to post to
net.religion.christian anymore, because He said so.  And thirdly, He told me
to print this retraction of everything I've ever said about belief in God
being based on wishful thinking or presumption or assuming the conclusion of
God first and analyzing the universe from there, and about the nature of
subjective personal experience not being a viable guage of reality.

Now I know what you're thinking.  All you atheists and agnostics with your
pessimistic dry and dead ideas and your hostile attitudes are just waiting
to ask me questions about my experience in order to debunk my story as a
fraud.  Well, I'll answer some of your hostile offensive questions in advance.

What does God look like?
	What a stupid question.  God is an incorporeal being!!!  Jeez!

What was He wearing?            /
	A very garish purple lame suit.  When I told Him it was tacky,
	He turned my face into jello (not a very pleasant experience).

How did you know it was God and not just your own dream/imagination?
	I ALREADY ANSWERED THAT!  He told me it was Him and not just a
	manifestation of my own dreams.  Do you doubt the word of God?

How can God be both omnipotent and omniscient?
	I asked Him that.  In response, He punched me in the face.  He
	then said unto me:  "And I thought about it, and I knew it was
	going to happen, and I did it.  And I saw that it was good."
	Luckily for me, my face had already been turned into jello at
	this point, so I didn't feel the infinitely massive blow of
	God's punch, because everyone knows there are no nerves in jello.

Who will win the third race at Pimlico tomorrow?
	I asked Him that, too, during my dream last night.  Why do you
	think I became a believer?

What's that?  You don't believe me?  You say that wasn't God I conversed
with last night?  How would YOU know?  This was MY personal experience,
and only I know for sure whether or not it was God or not.  Who are YOU
to judge MY personal experience, and claim it to be fraudulent and
flawed and erroneous?  You hostile arrogant vindictive humanist atheists
are all alike.

Oh, wait, it's not the atheists and agnostics and humanists who are telling
me that my vision of God is wrong.  It's my fellow Christians!!!!!
I'm wrong, they say, because I don't believe in their "god".  My vision of
God is different from theirs, and they claim that thus mine must be wrong.
Well, I hate to tell you this, but I really did speak to God last night,
and He told me that you were going to say this, and He told me that you're
all wrong, and that I (now) have it quite exactly right.  So, Karen (alias
whomever), and Ken Nichols, and Jeff, and anyone else out there, God told me
this directly:  you're going straight to hell and never coming back.  I hope
you are satisfied.  What's that?  You're saying that I'm NOT a Christian?
That my beliefs are FALSE and INCORRECT?  How can you say that?  How can
you judge my personal experience?  You claim I'm just making it all up?
HOW DARE YOU!!!!  You claim that my vision of god doesn't show the true
nature of god, whereas yours does?  I say POPPYCOCK!  Oh, God *may* deign
to listen to your feeble incorrect modes of prayer, but I know that the only
correct way to worship is the one I use myself, because I *have* spoken to God.

[WARNING: Satire follows.]
[Uhh, excuse me, but shouldn't that have gone at the BEGINNING of the article?]
[Whoops, sorry...]

I know I'm going to net.hell for posting this, but I really am not concerned.
The point of this article is to show the "burning issue" of one's personal
subjective experience of god for what it is.  A person who had the same
experience I describe above offers nothing more and nothing less than any other
equivalent subjective experience.  If you are offended by what I've said,
perhaps some personal reflection is in order.  Of a more objective sort.
If you feel I've attacked your personal beliefs, so be it.  It is not any
individual's personal beliefs being "attacked", but rather the nature of all
such systems based on such beliefs.  If you take that personally, that's your
problem, I'm not going to apologize for it.

I wrote this a few weeks ago and thought a lot about whether or not to post it.
I decided to do so, because I thought it offered something worth saying.  AND
I'm letting it go to n.r.c because it is in followup to numerous other articles
on the topic that have gone there.  If this offends you, realize that this is
an example of satire.  It is an attempt to show the erroneousness of a certain
thing by offering it in a completely different context so that it may be seen
in a different light.  If you fail to see this in such a different light, if
you feel there is a real quantifiable difference between your experience and my
"experience", please explain what that is.  If you can't, please say so.  
At the very least this article will give you a chance to show how your
experience is different from that which I experienced...
--
"So, it was all a dream!" --Mr. Pither
"No, dear, this is the dream; you're still in the cell." --his mother
				Rich Rosen    pyuxd!rlr

scott@gargoyle.UChicago.UUCP (Scott Deerwester) (03/12/85)

A cute satire, but there's an important flaw here exists in a lot of
what you and others say about the role of personal experience.  I've
read a few dozen articles, the gist of which is, "what makes your
experience any more valid that the experiences of {Rich Rosen,
Buddhists, Ubizmologists, ...}?"  The difference is that mine aren't
made-up examples.  I'd be glad to discuss the subjective basis as
well as the objective basis for my faith with you.  It's just that
statements describing a hypothetical personal experience that most
people (including me) would agree is off the wall doesn't send me
into a cold chill, doubting everything that I've ever experienced.

All that you're doing is saying, "See, I can make up an example of a
personal experience that clearly has no relationship to reality.
Therefore no personal experiences, including yours, can be used as
the basis for anything."  Sorry, but I'm not convinced.

Another important point: the subjective basis complements the
objective basis.  There are a lot of reasons why I believe that Jesus
Christ is really the Son of God, and that He really did die for my
sins.  Some are based on personal experience.  A lot of others
aren't.  Some that aren't:

	- the resurrection (see "Who Moved The Stone?")
	- fulfilled prophesies in the life of Jesus
	- the testimony and lives of people who were with Him
	- His words and wisdom (C.S. Lewis' "Lord, lunatic or liar" argument)
	- the Earth (the creation implies creator argument)

When I add everything up, including my own experiences and a rational
look at objective evidence, believing in God makes a lot more sense
than anything else that I've heard.
-- 
	Scott Deerwester
	Graduate Library School
	University of Chicago

...!ihnp4!gargoyle!scott	UUCP
scott@UChicago.CSNet		CSNet
scott@UChicago.ARPA		ARPA

tim@cmu-cs-k.ARPA (Tim Maroney) (03/13/85)

Paul, I take very poorly to people misrepresenting my positions.  I do not
think Christianity is horrible.  I have never made any comment about
Christianity that would imply such a belief.  Christians sometimes find it
convenient to misrepresent me in this way to make it easy to write off
anything I say, much as the segregated black social clubs which I opposed at
college called me a racist.  My understanding of the motive does not lessen
the negativity of my reaction: this sort of lie is totally irresponsible.

Furthermore, I find it ludicrous that a fundamentalist creationist is
demanding "proof" of others' religious positions.  Give me a break.
-=-
Tim Maroney, Carnegie-Mellon University, Networking
ARPA:	Tim.Maroney@CMU-CS-K	uucp:	seismo!cmu-cs-k!tim
CompuServe:	74176,1360	audio:	shout "Hey, Tim!"

hutch@shark.UUCP (Stephen Hutchison) (03/13/85)

[feed a bug, starve a lineater]

In article <338@mhuxm.UUCP> abeles@mhuxm.UUCP (abeles) writes:
>(This makes it imperative that all religions adjust to modernity:  they
>run a serious risk of being considered outmoded.  Hence, many religious
>authorities today do not consider evolution to be in conflict with
>the story of creation in Genesis--a new interpretation is developed
>to the extent that before the world was created, the meaning of the
>word "day" was unclear and could constitute centuries or more.)

Actually, this isn't the outright creation of a new interpretation.  The
tradition that "A day for the Lord is as a thousand years, and a thousand
years as a single day" dates from before Jesus.  The problem was in the
literalistic interpretation which came earlier, which did not consider all
that was known about God.

Hutch

rlr@pyuxd.UUCP (Professor Wagstaff) (03/13/85)

> A cute satire, but there's an important flaw here exists in a lot of
> what you and others say about the role of personal experience.  I've
> read a few dozen articles, the gist of which is, "what makes your
> experience any more valid that the experiences of {Rich Rosen,
> Buddhists, Ubizmologists, ...}?"  The difference is that mine aren't
> made-up examples.
> All that you're doing is saying, "See, I can make up an example of a
> personal experience that clearly has no relationship to reality.
> Therefore no personal experiences, including yours, can be used as
> the basis for anything."  Sorry, but I'm not convinced.

[FLAME ON]
How *DARE* you claim that I made up my example!!!  I really experienced
all the things I described, and who are YOU to claim that it's all
falsified or made-up????

Oh, I see, *you* can claim that MINE are made up, but I can't claim that
YOURS are made up.  Quite a double standard there.
-- 
"When you believe in things that you don't understand, you'll suffer.
 Superstition ain't the way."		Rich Rosen  ihnp4!pyuxd!rlr

rlr@pyuxd.UUCP (Professor Wagstaff) (03/13/85)

> A cute satire, but there's an important flaw here exists in a lot of
> what you and others say about the role of personal experience.  I've
> read a few dozen articles, the gist of which is, "what makes your
> experience any more valid that the experiences of {Rich Rosen,
> Buddhists, Ubizmologists, ...}?"  The difference is that mine aren't
> made-up examples.
> All that you're doing is saying, "See, I can make up an example of a
> personal experience that clearly has no relationship to reality.
> Therefore no personal experiences, including yours, can be used as
> the basis for anything."  Sorry, but I'm not convinced. [SCOTT DEERWESTER]

[FLAME ON]
How *DARE* you claim that I made up my example!!!  I really experienced
all the things I described, and who are YOU to claim that it's all
falsified or made-up????

Oh, I see, *you* can claim that MINE are made up, but I can't claim that
YOURS are made up.  Quite a double standard there.
-- 
"It's a lot like life..."			 Rich Rosen  ihnp4!pyuxd!rlr

bch@mcnc.UUCP (Byron Howes) (03/13/85)

In article <4947@cbscc.UUCP> pmd@cbscc.UUCP (Paul Dubuc) writes:
>
>                        ...you still have to face the problems of
>contradictory truth claims.  Surely you don't resolve them by saying they
>are all equally valid.  You must have reasons for believing some things
>are true and others not, even in the realm of religious belief.  How
>can all subjective criteria be equally weighted when the only subjectivity
>any of us posesses is our own?  Doesn't the act of weighing them require
>something a little beyond total subjectivity?

It is precisely because the only subjectivity we have is our own that we
cannot begin to "weigh" others religious experiences.  When Karen claims
she has spoken to G-d, who am I to dispute it?  It is her experience and
she, alone, knows the full texture of it.  If you or I call into question
the subjective religious experiences of the Hindu, the Moslem or the 
Mormon are we not essentially doing the same thing as Rich Rosen (in his
followup to this subject?)  My take is that this is hubris in the classi-
cal sense.

>                                                  Yet you claim that
>determination of what is correct it impossible.  I would hope that God
>has made a provision to resolve the issues adaquately (albeit not
>absolutely).  We cannot suspend judgement indefinitely on many things
>that are important; the implications of our beliefs.  Laura thinks
>Satanism is horrible.  Tim thinks Christianity is horrible.  I may agree
>with Laura and disagree with Tim, but I would not claim that there
>are no grounds for making such judgements; that the judgements themselves
>are meaningless.  Religions invariably lead their adherents to hold
>beliefs that inherently imply that other religious beliefs are wrong.
>We cannot ignore this conflict.  There must be some meaningful way
>to consider it.  We have no choice, I think.

"Horrible" is interestingly different than "wrong."  It is an aesthetic
rather than moral judgement.  I think Okra is "horrible" but I don't
think folks who like it are "wrong."  

Chuck Hedrick has astutely pointed out that the "purpose" of religion
is to bring man into relationship with G-d.  To this purpose all else
is secondary.  From what you have written, I take it that you believe
there is only one valid form of this relationship which is what you 
mean when you say "right" or "wrong" in the context of religious 
experience.  The "judgement" you refer to above is the decision as to
which path is "correct" from G-d's point of view.  Dangerous stuff.

The only "judgement" I can make is whether a particular set of beliefs
can or will lead *me* into knowing G-d.  I do not suspend that judgement,
but only limit its scope to my own existence.  For whatever reason,
fundamentalist Christianity does not provide me with the tools to sustain
a relationship with G-d, in that sense it is "wrong" for me.
Similarly, my brand of Gnostic Christianity is not useful to you or
to Karen.  In that sense it is "wrong" for you.  It does not meet your
needs.

There are billions of people in this world, each of the with differing
needs and perspectives.  My assumption is that the manifold ways
people relate to G-d are sustained because G-d has provided them to
meet differing human needs.  Although there may be a universal Truth
(which I don't believe I am privy to) I can't see a universal "correct"
in this sense.


>
>Maybe I have totally misunderstood your point, Byron.  But you must
>have some way of resolving these conflicts to your own satisfaction
>and you must believe the methods you use have validity that extends
>beyond your own subjectivity (why even discuss religion otherwise?).
>

The purpose in discussing religion is to listen to and share the
religious experience.  That we are different means that we cannot
help but learn from one another.  If what is said here helps anyone
in knowing G-d, then the purpose is served.
-- 

						Byron C. Howes
				      ...!{decvax,akgua}!mcnc!ecsvax!bch

scott@gargoyle.UChicago.UUCP (Scott Deerwester) (03/13/85)

>> A cute satire, but there's an important flaw here exists in a lot of
>> what you and others say about the role of personal experience.  I've
>> read a few dozen articles, the gist of which is, "what makes your
>> experience any more valid that the experiences of {Rich Rosen,
>> Buddhists, Ubizmologists, ...}?"  The difference is that mine aren't
>> made-up examples.
>>
>> All that you're doing is saying, "See, I can make up an example of a
>> personal experience that clearly has no relationship to reality.
>> Therefore no personal experiences, including yours, can be used as
>> the basis for anything."  Sorry, but I'm not convinced.
>
>[FLAME ON]
>How *DARE* you claim that I made up my example!!!  I really experienced
>all the things I described, and who are YOU to claim that it's all
>falsified or made-up????
>
>Oh, I see, *you* can claim that MINE are made up, but I can't claim that
>YOURS are made up.  Quite a double standard there.
>

Point one:

I claim that I believe that the experiences that I allude to actually
happened.  You said that you were being satirical:

>[WARNING: Satire follows.]
>[Uhh, excuse me, but shouldn't that have gone at the BEGINNING of the article?]
>[Whoops, sorry...] ...
>				... If this offends you, realize that this is
>an example of satire.

implying that the experiences of which you spoke did not actually
occur.  What double standard?  *I* didn't claim that your experiences
were made up.  *You* did.  I just believed you.

Point two:

I referred also to claims that an Ubizmologist can say that he
experienced the same things the I claim, etc.  Asserting that it's
possible for some person with some set of beliefs can claim to
experience something isn't the same thing as first or second hand
recounting of specific experiences that real people have actually
had.  This is the main point of my article.
-- 
	Scott Deerwester
	Graduate Library School
	University of Chicago

...!ihnp4!gargoyle!scott	UUCP
scott@UChicago.CSNet		CSNet
scott@UChicago.ARPA		ARPA

laura@utzoo.UUCP (Laura Creighton) (03/13/85)

I don't think you talked to God, Rich. talking to God is supposed to
*change* *your* *life* -- so far Ihaven't seen much evidence of that! :p)

Laura

mrh@cybvax0.UUCP (Mike Huybensz) (03/13/85)

In article <366@gargoyle.UChicago.UUCP> scott@gargoyle.UUCP ( Deerwester) writes:
> A cute satire, but there's an important flaw here exists in a lot of
> what you and others say about the role of personal experience.  I've
> read a few dozen articles, the gist of which is, "what makes your
> experience any more valid that the experiences of {Rich Rosen,
> Buddhists, Ubizmologists, ...}?"  The difference is that mine aren't
> made-up examples.

There are two ways to look at this claim.  If you are trying to convince
me that you are not making up examples, then how can I distinguish you
from a liar?

The other way is to consider how your own experience is convincing you.
Our memories of our experiences are quite volatile, inaccurate, and
subject to progressive modification.  And our experiences include a fair
number of unreal delusions, dreams, misunderstandings, perceptual errors,
hallucinations, etc.  So, while you may have experienced something, that
you didn't consciously make it up is not sufficient reason to assume it
to be valid.

> I'd be glad to discuss the subjective basis as
> well as the objective basis for my faith with you.  It's just that
> statements describing a hypothetical personal experience that most
> people (including me) would agree is off the wall doesn't send me
> into a cold chill, doubting everything that I've ever experienced.

If we could do that, I expect you'd worship us instead.  :-)
Yes, please do discuss your subjective basis for your faith.

> All that you're doing is saying, "See, I can make up an example of a
> personal experience that clearly has no relationship to reality.
> Therefore no personal experiences, including yours, can be used as
> the basis for anything."  Sorry, but I'm not convinced.

You shouldn't be convinced by that argument.  However, Rich isn't making
it.  What Rich is pointing out is the uselessness of testimony as a
rational argument for convincing someone else of religious beliefs.
Other arguments are used for denying validity of personal experience.

> Another important point: the subjective basis complements the
> objective basis.  There are a lot of reasons why I believe that Jesus
> Christ is really the Son of God, and that He really did die for my
> sins.  Some are based on personal experience.  A lot of others
> aren't.  Some that aren't:
> 
> 	- the resurrection (see "Who Moved The Stone?")
> 	- fulfilled prophesies in the life of Jesus
> 	- the testimony and lives of people who were with Him
> 	- His words and wisdom (C.S. Lewis' "Lord, lunatic or liar" argument)
> 	- the Earth (the creation implies creator argument)

These are hardly "objective" reasons to believe in JC or God or whatever.
The first three depend on the unjustified assumption that the Bible is true.
The lunatic/liar argument is a false dilemma: the conclusion that the Bible
is the product of liars resolves the dilemma.  As for the creation argument,
try it in net.origins and give us something to laugh at.

> When I add everything up, including my own experiences and a rational
> look at objective evidence, believing in God makes a lot more sense
> than anything else that I've heard.

(Great restraint exercised here to refrain from the obvious ad-hominem
attack.)  You remind me of a lawyer who can't understand why he loses his
cases when he is so convinced by his own arguments.  You seem blind to
the fallacies of your arguments.  Objective does not equal "anything
written in the Bible".  Try again.
-- 

Mike Huybensz		...decvax!genrad!mit-eddie!cybvax0!mrh

rlr@pyuxd.UUCP (Professor Wagstaff) (03/14/85)

>>>A cute satire, but there's an important flaw here exists in a lot of
>>>what you and others say about the role of personal experience.  I've
>>>read a few dozen articles, the gist of which is, "what makes your
>>>experience any more valid that the experiences of {Rich Rosen,
>>>Buddhists, Ubizmologists, ...}?"  The difference is that mine aren't
>>>made-up examples.
>>
>>>All that you're doing is saying, "See, I can make up an example of a
>>>personal experience that clearly has no relationship to reality.
>>>Therefore no personal experiences, including yours, can be used as
>>>the basis for anything."  Sorry, but I'm not convinced.  [DEERWESTER]
>
>>[FLAME ON]
>>How *DARE* you claim that I made up my example!!!  I really experienced
>>all the things I described, and who are YOU to claim that it's all
>>falsified or made-up????
>>
>>Oh, I see, *you* can claim that MINE are made up, but I can't claim that
>>YOURS are made up.  Quite a double standard there.  [ROSEN]

> Point one:
> I claim that I believe that the experiences that I allude to actually
> happened.  You said that you were being satirical:
>>	... If this offends you, realize that this is an example of satire.
> implying that the experiences of which you spoke did not actually
> occur.  What double standard?  *I* didn't claim that your experiences
> were made up.  *You* did.  I just believed you.  [DEERWESTER]

I lied.  In fact I am lying right now.  But more importantly, just because
it was satirical doesn't mean it didn't actually happen.  I had that dream.
God spoke to me in that dream.  In that very tone that I described.  Are you
calling me a liar?  Was I wrong if I believed that that was god?  If you
can answer "yes" to either of those questions, then it's only fair that I
make the same claims about your personal subjective experiences, lest we engage
in a double standard.

> Point two:
> I referred also to claims that an Ubizmologist can say that he
> experienced the same things the I claim, etc.  Asserting that it's
> possible for some person with some set of beliefs can claim to
> experience something isn't the same thing as first or second hand
> recounting of specific experiences that real people have actually
> had.  This is the main point of my article.

Could you please explain the difference between the recounting of "claims" and
the recounting of "specific experiences that real people have actually had"?
How are you able to tell the difference?  What is your gauge for determining
the accuracy of the recounting of others?  And of your own?
-- 
Meet the new wave, same as the old wave...
      				Rich Rosen     ihnp4!pyuxd!rlr

tim@cmu-cs-k.ARPA (Tim Maroney) (03/14/85)

This is a response to an article from scott@gargoyle.UChicago.UUCP (Scott
Deerwester) Tue Mar 12 11:15:41 1985.  That was a response to an article by
Rich Rosen, which took a reductio ad absurdum approach to showing the
worthlessness of personal spiritual experience in "proving" any system of
dogmatic religious beliefs.

> A cute satire, but there's an important flaw here exists in a lot of
> what you and others say about the role of personal experience.  I've
> read a few dozen articles, the gist of which is, "what makes your
> experience any more valid that the experiences of {Rich Rosen,
> Buddhists, Ubizmologists, ...}?"  The difference is that mine aren't
> made-up examples.

I see.  And Buddhists' experiences, by direct implication, ARE "made-up
examples".  Thanks for clearing up the issue, Scott; it isn't that you are
ignorant of other religions, it is that you are intolerant of them.

I expect you to deny that you implied that, overt intolerance being
unfashionable (although intolerant implications are not).  Please include
the complete text I have quoted above if you do so.  It will save me a lot
of time....

> I'd be glad to discuss the subjective basis as
> well as the objective basis for my faith with you.  It's just that
> statements describing a hypothetical personal experience that most
> people (including me) would agree is off the wall doesn't send me
> into a cold chill, doubting everything that I've ever experienced.

Ever hear of a thought experiment?  It is a perfectly valid form of
argument.  (In fact, I used it against Rich just yesterday. :-) )  Suppose
someone came up to you out of the blue and said what Rich did.  Perhaps that
will enable you to grasp his point.

> All that you're doing is saying, "See, I can make up an example of a
> personal experience that clearly has no relationship to reality.
> Therefore no personal experiences, including yours, can be used as
> the basis for anything."  Sorry, but I'm not convinced.

No, that is completely missing Rich's point.  Can you show that Rich is not
telling the truth?  No.  Can Rich show that you aren't telling the truth?
No.  But the failure to definitely refute either position is without value;
it does not lend any credence to either position, unless you want to admit
that Rich was telling the truth....

In the absence of evidence to support such wild claims of contact with
extraterrestrial intelligence, any person without an emotional stake in the
issue is going to assume that the person or group making the wild claims is
mistaken, if not fraudulent.

> Another important point: the subjective basis complements the
> objective basis.  There are a lot of reasons why I believe that Jesus
> Christ is really the Son of God, and that He really did die for my
> sins.  Some are based on personal experience.  A lot of others
> aren't.  Some that aren't:
>
> 	- the resurrection (see "Who Moved The Stone?")

Christians have consistently refused to tell me what method is used to show
that this supposed revivification actually took place.  (One did once, on
CompuServe's Religion SIG; I refuted her method point-by-point; she
responded with a message consisting solely of a single insult [it was "You
are obviously ignorant", if you're curious] and refused to discuss the issue
with me any more.)  I am willing to discuss this on a basis of reason with
you, Scott, but only if you first explain exactly what METHOD you intend to
use to prove that this took place.  If you refuse, or just start spewing
McDowell at me, that will be par for the course, but I honestly am hoping
for something better.

> 	- fulfilled prophesies in the life of Jesus

I have read a long essay written by a Jew on how to respond to Christian
missionaries who make this claim.  He made a very strong case that at least
as many prophecies went unfulfilled.

What it comes down to with prophecy is what you want to believe.  There is
no measure of objectivity in its interpretation.

> 	- the testimony and lives of people who were with Him

Charisma does not equal divine birth.  You can find equal praise of Hitler
if you look, or of the leader of any political party or religion.

> 	- His words and wisdom (C.S. Lewis' "Lord, lunatic or liar" argument)

At least as much wisdom can be found in the Upanishads as in the Bible.  And
the Tao Teh Ching blows away anything you'll find in the New Testament.
This is what you call "objective evidence"?  Clearly it is a purely
subjective claim!

The Lewis argument (from "Mere Christianity") is as preposterous as Lewis
always is.  I  recommend that anyone who is convinced by it should read R.
D. Laing, who shows that lunacy and enlightenment can and do co-exist.
There are also a variety of religious works on the subject, particularly in
Buddhism and Thelema.  In any case, why should we shy from applying the
label "lunatic" to a man who (according to his biographies -- of course, he
may have been framed) got a great deal of satisfaction from sadistic and
macabre gloatings on the coming fate of anyone who failed to worship him?

> 	- the Earth (the creation implies creator argument)

These are just getting sillier and sillier.  Yes, creation implies a
creator.  However, nothing implies that our world is in fact a creation.
The vast weight of evidence shows that it was produced by natural forces.  I
assure you that the Biblical explanations would be espoused by scientists if
they explained the facts better; there is no inherent schism between
religion and science, and in the old days (before we really got any good
measuring instruments and mathematics) scientific theories were always in
accord with the religion of their country.  They still would be if the
religious explanations had turned out to be correct.

The argument from evidence of design (your probable response to this
objection) is false because the ecosystem contains none of the clues that
normally tell us when something was created: for instance, removable parts,
tool marks, signatures, and so on.  The imagined evidences of design are
nothing like the evidences of design we are familiar with, and in fact they
are just as subjective as your opinions about the relative worth of Jesus'
sayings as opposed to Lao Tzu's.

> When I add everything up, including my own experiences and a rational
> look at objective evidence, believing in God makes a lot more sense
> than anything else that I've heard.

Perhaps after showing us the methodologies employed in your "objective
evidence", you'll grace us with your refutations of Atheism, Buddhism,
Taoism, Shinto, Zoroastrianism, Agnosticism, Thelema, Hinduism, Wicca, and
the dozens of other "anything elses" you have no doubt heard.  Be sure to
explain in particular why exclusivist monotheism is superior to each of
these, and why each of them would not have equally satisfactory explanations
for your experiences.
-=-
Tim Maroney, Carnegie-Mellon University, Networking
ARPA:	Tim.Maroney@CMU-CS-K	uucp:	seismo!cmu-cs-k!tim
CompuServe:	74176,1360	audio:	shout "Hey, Tim!"

teitz@aecom.UUCP (Eliyahu Teitz) (03/14/85)

> (This makes it imperative that all religions adjust to modernity:  they
> run a serious risk of being considered outmoded.  Hence, many religious
> authorities today do not consider evolution to be in conflict with
> the story of creation in Genesis--a new interpretation is developed
> to the extent that before the world was created, the meaning of the
> word "day" was unclear and could constitute centuries or more.)

	Some religions have had this theory ( of the days not being 24 hours
 long ) since way before Darwin came along. The traditional Jewish commentaries
 on the Bible already point out this possibility.

			Eliyahu Teitz.

mangoe@umcp-cs.UUCP (Charley Wingate) (03/15/85)

In article <660@pyuxd.UUCP> rlr@pyuxd.UUCP (Professor Wagstaff) writes:

>Well, it finally happened.  No, really.  God actually spoke to me.
>I now really and truly believe in God.  What's more, I see the correctness
>of the Christian perspective!!!  God has explained it all to me.

[lengthy story omitted]

>I know I'm going to net.hell for posting this, but I really am not concerned.
>The point of this article is to show the "burning issue" of one's personal
>subjective experience of god for what it is.  A person who had the same
>experience I describe above offers nothing more and nothing less than any
>other equivalent subjective experience.  If you are offended by what I've
>said, perhaps some personal reflection is in order.  Of a more objective
>sort.  If you feel I've attacked your personal beliefs, so be it.  It is not
>any individual's personal beliefs being "attacked", but rather the nature
>of all such systems based on such beliefs.  If you take that personally,
>that's your problem, I'm not going to apologize for it.

Actually, Rich, I didn't really read your little story.  All your story
proves is that you can write fiction.  I can make up a story about anything
else in the universe too, but it doesn't make the true stories false.  And
by the way, your little satire upon christian experiences of God can only be
taken as an attack; since christianity seems to be a sore spot with you, why
didn't you talk about Allah instead?

Charley Wingate   umcp-cs!mangoe

pmd@cbscc.UUCP (Paul Dubuc) (03/15/85)

[Tim Maroney:]
>Paul, I take very poorly to people misrepresenting my positions.  I do not
>think Christianity is horrible.  I have never made any comment about
>Christianity that would imply such a belief.  Christians sometimes find it
>convenient to misrepresent me in this way to make it easy to write off
>anything I say, much as the segregated black social clubs which I opposed at
>college called me a racist.  My understanding of the motive does not lessen
>the negativity of my reaction: this sort of lie is totally irresponsible.

I have a different opinion about the implications of your writing about
Christianity, I guess.  I suppose our idea of what your words imply doesn't
count since we are only trying to write off anything you say?  If that isn't
your position, Tim, then I suggest you represent your position better.  Maybe
you do think there is something good about Christianity.  I certainly don't
know what it is.  By and large, you only speak out about Christianity and
Christians in order to condemn some aspect of it or their actions.  You have
even stated that horrible actions are inherenty justified by biblical doctrine.

To accuse me of lying here implies that I know of things that should give
me a different impression of your attitude toward Christianity.  I don't.
If my impression of your true feelings about Christianity is wrong, I apologise.
But I do get that impression from what you write here and I'm not trying pass
off anything you say.  At worst, I misunderstand your position, not
misrepresent it.

>Furthermore, I find it ludicrous that a fundamentalist creationist is
>demanding "proof" of others' religious positions.  Give me a break.

A fundamentalists I am not (unless you say so, of course).  Creationist?
Well, I'll just say that as far as evolutionism goes I am not a true
believer.  I don't buy the whole creationist line either.

I am not demanding proof from Byron in particular.  I differ with him
as to whether religious positions can be compared, or justified
philosophically in comparision to others.  He seems to understand that.
You have spent a lot of time rejecting the claims of Christianity with
rational argument.  Do you subject the claims of your own religion to
the same scrutiny?

If you want a "break" you are welcome to hit 'n' when you see my articles.
I'm not forcing you to read anything I write, Tim, and I would expect that
you would find much of it to be ludicrous.  Seeing how you are so quick
to belittle those who misunderstand you and infer that they are liars,
it comes as no suprise.
-- 

Paul Dubuc	cbscc!pmd

tim@cmu-cs-k.ARPA (Tim Maroney) (03/16/85)

Scott Deerwester writes:

> I referred also to claims that an Ubizmologist can say that he
> experienced the same things the I claim, etc.  Asserting that it's
> possible for some person with some set of beliefs can claim to
> experience something isn't the same thing as first or second hand
> recounting of specific experiences that real people have actually
> had.  This is the main point of my article.

Pardon me, Scott, but I have provided exactly that and none of you
exclusivists has seen fit to reply.  In case your memory conveniently fails
you, I recounted my mystical experiences within Christianity, Wicca, and my
current eclectic stance.  My experiences in all three positions were of
comparable intensity and illuminating power.  And yes, one class of
experiences was of the sort usually characterized as "talking with God".

Let me assure you that I AM a "real person"....
-=-
Tim Maroney, Carnegie-Mellon University, Networking
ARPA:	Tim.Maroney@CMU-CS-K	uucp:	seismo!cmu-cs-k!tim
CompuServe:	74176,1360	audio:	shout "Hey, Tim!"

rlr@pyuxd.UUCP (Professor Wagstaff) (03/16/85)

> I don't think you talked to God, Rich. talking to God is supposed to
> *change* *your* *life* -- so far Ihaven't seen much evidence of that! :p)
> 
> Laura

How dare you!   Etc., etc., etc.,

re: :p)  ---  Have you taken up pipe smoking?    :-) ?

(Or is that a spoon under your nose?  Tsk, tsk, tsk.  :-)

Seriously, isn't it ironic that someone whose belief system doesn't foster
notions of a deity has presumptions about what "talking to god is supposed to
do".  :-?
-- 
"Does the body rule the mind or does the mind rule the body?  I dunno."
				Rich Rosen 	ihnp4!pyuxd!rlr

mrh@cybvax0.UUCP (Mike Huybensz) (03/16/85)

In article <5227@utzoo.UUCP> laura@utzoo.UUCP (Laura Creighton) writes:
> I don't think you talked to God, Rich. talking to God is supposed to
> *change* *your* *life* -- so far Ihaven't seen much evidence of that! :p)

There are several possible explanations, Laura.

You may be too immersed in maya to perceive the truth of his change.

Or, you may be jumping to conclusions in thinking that a change would be
visible.  After all, Adam and Eve talked with God, but they fell shortly
afterwards.  Rich has not yet reported talking to Satan or some less
opposed being, but who knows if he would?

(It's so much fun playing paranoid-fantasy games!)
-- 

Mike Huybensz		...decvax!genrad!mit-eddie!cybvax0!mrh

laura@utzoo.UUCP (Laura Creighton) (03/17/85)

Ah, but I *have* studied what ``talking with God'' -- or having religious
experiences of any sort -- is supposed to do to you. The interesting thing
is that there is tremendous agreement over what sorts of things happen - no
matter what tradition you are dealing with. This is why, by and large,
mystics of all religions can get together and discuss what is going on.
Often the mystics have more trouble with their own religious community.

This bit of ecumanism is one reason why the eastern religions are very
interested in being considered religions. Some western mystics have
real difficulty with non-certified religions. I know some Christian
mystics who are much more uncomfortable with Gnosticism than with
Sufism or Buddhism, and I think that in part this is because they can
say ``oh, that is a religion, therefore it is okay''. 

The ``p'' looks like a very good nose on the terminal I have at work.
Alas, it looks crummy here at home, though. Another idea bites the dust!

Laura Creighton
utzoo!laura

root@trwatf.UUCP (Lord Frith) (03/17/85)

> > the story of creation in Genesis--a new interpretation is developed
> > to the extent that before the world was created, the meaning of the
> > word "day" was unclear and could constitute centuries or more.)
> 
> Some religions have had this theory ( of the days not being 24 hours
> long ) since way before Darwin came along. The traditional Jewish commentaries
> on the Bible already point out this possibility.

If "the day" refered to in the bible were longer than a day, wouldn't
the plants have died over the long night?  Wouldn't half the world have
frozen while the other half baked?  To get around this you may have to
hypothesis a day that was inconsistant in length.

Instead of hypothesising inconsistance or variable length days we
should conclude that the description of Genesis is more likely
incorrect or is EXTREMELY metaphorical.
-- 


UUCP: ...{decvax,ihnp4,allegra}!seismo!trwatf!root	- Lord Frith
ARPA: trwatf!root@SEISMO

"And Frith made the world"

rlr@pyuxd.UUCP (Professor Wagstaff) (03/18/85)

>>Well, it finally happened.  No, really.  God actually spoke to me.
>>I now really and truly believe in God.  What's more, I see the correctness
>>of the Christian perspective!!!  God has explained it all to me.
>
>[lengthy story omitted]

> Actually, Rich, I didn't really read your little story.  [WINGATE]

(This explains "charley"'s faulty summaries of other articles:  he doesn't read
 them.)

> All your story
> proves is that you can write fiction.  I can make up a story about anything
> else in the universe too, but it doesn't make the true stories false.

Ah, yes, true stories...

> And by the way, your little satire upon christian experiences of God can only
> be taken as an attack; since christianity seems to be a sore spot with you,
> why didn't you talk about Allah instead?

Because it's the Christians who are the ones so adamantly talking about their
subjective experiences as "true stories".  No Muslim has stepped forward.
Nor has any Jew.  Nor anyone else as far as I can see.  Also, these other
people aren't the ones who insist upon their morality as societal law.
(I know, "chuckles", not you, of course.  Which is why your stalwart reply to
Don Black's hatred consisted of a pithy correction followed a meek "me, too".)

> There is indeed a real difference between your "experience" and that of
> the true believers. The difference is that yours did not take place.
> I'm not claiming that you did not talk to God, only God can say that
> (I believe he has posted on the subject :-). I am saying that you do
> not BELIEVE that God talked to you. I am even tempted to think that you
> didn't even have any dream at all. [HARTLEY]

I respond to this vicious attack on my beliefs by repeating what I was quoted
as saying:

>>You claim I'm just making it all up?
>>HOW DARE YOU!!!!

> Why do I think that?
> From your posting:
> 
> > [WARNING: Satire follows.]
> > [Uhh, excuse me,
> >	but shouldn't that have gone at the BEGINNING of the article?]
> > [Whoops, sorry...]

You know, sometimes you can't win no matter which way you turn.  If I had
left out the explanatory paragraph at the end, I would have been mauled by
the hundreds of "believers" who interpreted my article as a vicious attack
(as my own beliefs as a Christian are now being subjected to).  But since
I was good enough to admit that it was a satire, I'm subjected to charges of
being a liar, and accused of not having had the dream at all!  I'm sure most
people can see that these attackers are just picking nits:  they don't realize
how powerful my personal experience was, and if Satan chose to twist and
manipulate my words (we've seen from Yosi that he has a netnews feed!), and if
you chose to accept the twisted words of Satan, well, that's your problem.
The fact that you can no longer really tell when I'm telling the truth about
these things, these "experiences", should give you a taste of your own
medicine:  this is exactly how YOU sound to the rest of the world.  One can
only wonder why you don't sound that way to yourselves.  For just as I might
have wished you to believe in my experience, you wish yourself to believe your
own.

Besides, if you can't believe me because I was bold enough to admit that my
experience was nothing but wishful thinking, you can certainly believe the
word of Mike Huybensz, who DID have ice cream with god.  Do you disbelieve
HIS story?  Why?  How dare you.....
-- 
"Discipline is never an end in itself, only a means to an end."
						Rich Rosen   pyuxd!rlr

tim@cmu-cs-k.ARPA (Tim Maroney) (03/19/85)

> From pmd@cbscc.UUCP (Paul Dubuc) Fri Mar 15 13:17:32 1985
> [Tim Maroney:]
> >Paul, I take very poorly to people misrepresenting my positions.  I do not
> >think Christianity is horrible.  I have never made any comment about
> >Christianity that would imply such a belief.  Christians sometimes find it
> >convenient to misrepresent me in this way to make it easy to write off
> >anything I say, much as the segregated black social clubs which I opposed at
> >college called me a racist.  My understanding of the motive does not lessen
> >the negativity of my reaction: this sort of lie is totally irresponsible.
> 
> I have a different opinion about the implications of your writing about
> Christianity, I guess.  I suppose our idea of what your words imply doesn't
> count since we are only trying to write off anything you say?  If that isn't
> your position, Tim, then I suggest you represent your position better.
> Maybe you do think there is something good about Christianity.  I certainly
> don't know what it is.  By and large, you only speak out about Christianity
> and Christians in order to condemn some aspect of it or their actions.  You
> have even stated that horrible actions are inherenty justified by biblical
> doctrine.

I suggest you read better.  Many times I have said here that I use Christian
symbolism in my work and that I consider the Jesus legend a valid
manifestation of the Dying God archetypal story.  People don't want to hear
that; it doesn't fit their image of me as a nasty hateful person who is just
pissed off that Christianity is right.  So they forget it as soon as it
scrolls past their face.

I do criticize Christianity, and I do it often.  That is because people
insist on saying false things about it, putting a nicer face in it than it
really has.  For instance, would you believe that someone actually claimed
that it was impossible for a mainstream Christian to justify the persecution
of unbelievers using the Bible, which is full of praise for people who
persecuted unbelievers?  I don't know where people get such nonsense, but
I'm not about to let it go by.  Also, fundies like the late (of this group,
that is) and unlamented Larry Bickford, Ken Nichols, Gary Samuelson, etc.,
insist on insulting me by telling me I have to join their religion or I will
be rightfully tortured for all eternity.  When I explain to them why I don't
consider that to be a valid argument, Christians of all denominations start
screaming that I'm attacking them, when all I'm doing is defending myself.
(This despite the fact that I was careful to avoid anything that implied
that people who DID accept Christianity were wrong.)  It seems that what is
wanted is simply for me to shut up whenever I am attacked because of my
non-Christianity, or I see someone spouting absurdities about Christianity.

> To accuse me of lying here implies that I know of things that should give me
> a different impression of your attitude toward Christianity.  I don't.  If
> my impression of your true feelings about Christianity is wrong, I
> apologise.  But I do get that impression from what you write here and I'm
> not trying pass off anything you say.  At worst, I misunderstand your
> position, not misrepresent it.

If you are going to represent my position in a certain way, you are supposed
to have a reason for thinking that is what it is.  Having no reason to think
that is NOT what it is does not suffice.

> >Furthermore, I find it ludicrous that a fundamentalist creationist is
> >demanding "proof" of others' religious positions.  Give me a break.
> 
> A fundamentalists I am not (unless you say so, of course).  Creationist?
> Well, I'll just say that as far as evolutionism goes I am not a true
> believer.  I don't buy the whole creationist line either.

Sorry for misrepresenting you.  I could have sworn you were a
fundamentalist.  What parts of the Bible do you think are false?  In any
case, I should not have said "fundamentalist", but "Biblical literalist";
that is, someone who believes that the Bible is largely accurate about such
impossibilities as resurrection of the long-dead having occurred.  My
apologies for my lack of clarity.

> I am not demanding proof from Byron in particular.  I differ with him
> as to whether religious positions can be compared, or justified
> philosophically in comparision to others.  He seems to understand that.
> You have spent a lot of time rejecting the claims of Christianity with
> rational argument.  Do you subject the claims of your own religion to
> the same scrutiny?

Yes indeed.  Remember, I wasn't born a Thelemite.  I picked it because it
agreed with what my reason told me about morality and religious experience.
Do you have some objection in particular?  As for proof, that was in part a
reaction to your net.religion message and in part to personal mail.  Not
just personal mail to me; someone else posted a message here recently saying
that you had made a similar demand of "proof" in personal mail to him.

> If you want a "break" you are welcome to hit 'n' when you see my articles.
> I'm not forcing you to read anything I write, Tim, and I would expect that
> you would find much of it to be ludicrous.  Seeing how you are so quick
> to belittle those who misunderstand you and infer that they are liars,
> it comes as no suprise.

When people misrepresent my positions, making them into what they wish the
positions were rather than what the positions actually are, I can see no
reason not to call that a lie.  Whether it is from malice or
irresponsibility makes no difference.
-=-
Tim Maroney, Carnegie-Mellon University, Networking
ARPA:	Tim.Maroney@CMU-CS-K	uucp:	seismo!cmu-cs-k!tim
CompuServe:	74176,1360	audio:	shout "Hey, Tim!"

laura@utzoo.UUCP (Laura Creighton) (03/19/85)

From Rich Rosen:

	The fact that you can no longer really tell when I'm telling the truth
	about these things, these "experiences", should give you a taste of
	your own medicine:  this is exactly how YOU sound to the rest 
	of the world.  One can 	only wonder why you don't sound that way 
	to yourselves.  For just as I might have wished you to believe in
	my experience, you wish yourself to believe your own.

Rich, if you think that the people who talk to God don't already understand
that they sound weird to the rest of the world, then you need to do some
reading. Every single mystic I know of comments on the difficulty of
expressing what has happened. Religious experiences are very difficult
to write about. The reason that mystics make a certain amount of sense
to each other is a commonality of experience. There is something in
mystic experiences which seems to be common, no matter what faith the
mystic has. It is also the case that mystics seem to draw closer to a
common set of beliefs -- though by no means into an easily separable
``universal religion''.

There is no way that you can prove that a mystic experience is only
wishful thinking. It is definitely one theory. I tend to reject it,
though. Too many people have ended up having mystic experiences when
they were not really seeking for them. For instance, I was interested
in a way to get rid of migraine headaches, hit upon meditation and
ended up with a whole lot of stuff. Why do you reject subjective
experiences out of hand like that? More importantly, why do you
``hunt them down and kill them'' :-) rather than just ignoring them
as having no relevance to you?

Laura Creighton
utzoo!laura
	

bch@mcnc.UUCP (Byron Howes) (03/20/85)

>[Tim Maroney:]
>>Paul, I take very poorly to people misrepresenting my positions.  I do not
>>think Christianity is horrible.  I have never made any comment about
>>Christianity that would imply such a belief.  Christians sometimes find it
>>convenient to misrepresent me in this way to make it easy to write off
>>anything I say, much as the segregated black social clubs which I opposed at
>>college called me a racist.  My understanding of the motive does not lessen
>>the negativity of my reaction: this sort of lie is totally irresponsible.
[Paul Dubuc:]
>I have a different opinion about the implications of your writing about
>Christianity, I guess.  I suppose our idea of what your words imply doesn't
>count since we are only trying to write off anything you say?  If that isn't
>your position, Tim, then I suggest you represent your position better.  Maybe
>you do think there is something good about Christianity.  I certainly don't
>know what it is.  By and large, you only speak out about Christianity and
>Christians in order to condemn some aspect of it or their actions.  You have
>even stated that horrible actions are inherenty justified by biblical doctrine.
 
Sorry, Paul, I've got to side with Tim on this one.  Certainly Tim uses some
strong rhetoric, but by in large rebuttal to his points takes place outside
the context of the discussion which generated them.  I do not recall Tim
ever disparaging Christianity as a faith.  He has, however, taken the secu-
lar practice of christianity [small "c" deliberate] to task many times.  
If I understand Tim correctly it isn't the belief he objects to, but its
social effects as produced by the American fundamentalist movement.  

Tim's major contribution to this forum ("Even if I did Believe...") I
interpret not as an attack on Christianity, but as an attack on those who
"prove" Christianity on the basis of Biblical inerrancy but who in fact
exclude or ignore some of the more embarrasing events described in the
Bible.  It is a call to honesty:  fundamentalists have created G-d in
their own image as much as have the more liberal sects and need to be aware
of this.  Tim's opponents have tried, unsuccessfully, to pick the argument
apart point by point without dealing with the essential issue.

>To accuse me of lying here implies that I know of things that should
>give me a different impression of your attitude toward Christianity.  I
>don't.  If my impression of your true feelings about Christianity is
>wrong, I apologise.  But I do get that impression from what you write
>here and I'm not trying pass off anything you say.  At worst, I
>misunderstand your position, not misrepresent it.

Tim's use of "lie" is an effective, but unfortunate, turn of phrase.  It
did get your attention, didn't it?  There's a real frustration involved
when folks deal with your submissions on a sentence-by-sentence basis
rather than responding to the article as a whole.  After a while it is
very easy to believe that it is a deliberate attempt to sidestep the
issue.  Paul is not usually guilty of this, but many are.

>>Furthermore, I find it ludicrous that a fundamentalist creationist is
>>demanding "proof" of others' religious positions.  Give me a break.
 
>A fundamentalists I am not (unless you say so, of course).  Creationist?
>Well, I'll just say that as far as evolutionism goes I am not a true
>believer.  I don't buy the whole creationist line either.
 
>I am not demanding proof from Byron in particular.  I differ with him
>as to whether religious positions can be compared, or justified
>philosophically in comparision to others.  He seems to understand that.
>You have spent a lot of time rejecting the claims of Christianity with
>rational argument.  Do you subject the claims of your own religion to
>the same scrutiny?

Hopefully I'm not putting words in Tim's mouth, but so long as I have
crawled out on this limb I might as well saw it off behind me...

I believe Tim's contention to be (well, it certainly is *my* contention)
that one selects a faith on the basis of personal preference and world-view.
All faiths are essentially different views of the construction of the
universe.  None are unambiguosly provable.  One is drawn to a faith 
because it conforms to one's pre-existing ideals (perhaps not at a
conscious level) about morality, justice, fairness and a whole host of
other attributes.  In a sense one makes G-d over in the image of what
one expects.  Some faiths, like Christianity, have an enormous body of
interprative literature to aid in this transformation.  Others, like
Tim's do not.

The request for Christian self-analysis is a response to the Christian
claim of being the one TRUE faith.  In passing let me note that Tim 
has demanded the same of any other faith, like the Bahai, who have claimed
a greater authority.  As neither Tim or I believe that our respective
faiths are in any sense provable, the only person we need to account to
for them is ourselves.

-- 

						Byron C. Howes
				      ...!{decvax,akgua}!mcnc!ecsvax!bch

rlr@pyuxd.UUCP (Professor Wagstaff) (03/21/85)

>>The fact that you can no longer really tell when I'm telling the truth
>>about these things, these "experiences", should give you a taste of
>>your own medicine:  this is exactly how YOU sound to the rest 
>>of the world.  One can only wonder why you don't sound that way 
>>to yourselves.  For just as I might have wished you to believe in
>>my experience, you wish yourself to believe your own.  [ROSEN]

> Rich, if you think that the people who talk to God don't already understand
> that they sound weird to the rest of the world, then you need to do some
> reading. Every single mystic I know of comments on the difficulty of
> expressing what has happened.  [LAURA]

First off, we're talking about the people on this net who have claimed that
their subjective experience was not based on known phenomena such as
imposing preconceived patterns onto the experience, but was "real".
Both the refusal to accept the fact that their brains do such things AND the
fact that such people would deny similar experiences in others (similar but
different in image and meaning, according to them) are at issue here.  Second,
the fact that it's unexpressable doesn't make it "mystical".  And third,
I thought we talked in private letter about the "you need to do some reading"
tone.

> Religious experiences are very difficult
> to write about. The reason that mystics make a certain amount of sense
> to each other is a commonality of experience. There is something in
> mystic experiences which seems to be common, no matter what faith the
> mystic has. It is also the case that mystics seem to draw closer to a
> common set of beliefs -- though by no means into an easily separable
> ``universal religion''.

Why do we seem to be skipping over the question "Were these 'religious' or
'mystical' experiences?" so quickly here.  The fact that they have things
in common is not surprising, since a lot of human perception is held in
common (e.g., non-color-blind people all recognize blue as blue...)

> There is no way that you can prove that a mystic experience is only
> wishful thinking. It is definitely one theory. I tend to reject it, though.

It seems more like you tend to jump to the conclusion of the mysticality
first and then reject the theory because it contradicts the conclusion you've
jumped to.

> Too many people have ended up having mystic experiences when
> they were not really seeking for them.

I hardly think that's a criterion for determining mysticality (unless you
already assume it to be so).  The way the events are interpreted afterwards,
whatever may have taken place, seem tinged with preconception.  Not really
wishful thinking in an active sense, but wishfully believing certain
preconceptions afterwards.

> Why do you reject subjective experiences out of hand like that? More
> importantly, why do you ``hunt them down and kill them'' :-) rather than just
> ignoring them as having no relevance to you?

1) Because the nature of the experience is hopelessly unreliable.  Take the
example I often give, of seeing someone you know on the street and then
suddenly realizing it wasn't them at all (and asking yourself "What could have
made me think that that was so-and-so?  It doesn't even look like him/her...").
(Perhaps because some pattern of movement/image matched a pattern you associate
with that person in your brain???)  Would you go up to such a person that you
thought you recognized and INSIST that he/she was (a few seconds ago) the
person you know?  Of course not.  The same chain of faulty patterning occurs
all the time.  So how can one take such an experience as anything but fraught
with flaws?  2) As I've said before, when a certain group of people would like
to see a certain moral code imposed on other people, and when such people are
gaining strength precisely because they feed on the preconceptions, the wishful
thinking, the indoctrinated expectations of the general public, it is more than
necessary to show such things for what they are, lest we all get our brains
shut off by those who would have it that way.

By the way, I must ask:  your last question (and much of your other recent
writing) seems to be very defensive.  Why do you ask that question, which
you never seemed to ask before when I asked it of the Christians and others
who offered the notion of such things as viable evidence?  Is it because now
I'm examining your own assumptions and preconceptions?  As I said to Tim,
just because you're not Christian doesn't automatically make you somehow
immune from having your beliefs examined with equal fervor, even if that means
we find that you're making similar flaws in reasoning.
-- 
"Which three books would *you* have taken?"
				Rich Rosen	ihnp4!pyuxd!rlr

mrh@cybvax0.UUCP (Mike Huybensz) (03/21/85)

In article <5297@utzoo.UUCP> laura@utzoo.UUCP (Laura Creighton) writes:
> ... Why do you [Rosen] reject subjective
> experiences out of hand like that? More importantly, why do you
> ``hunt them down and kill them'' :-) rather than just ignoring them
> as having no relevance to you?

Allow me to volunteer an answer.  Rich and I do not attack subjective
experiences: we attack claims of their significance.  Just as we attack
other fallacies of logic and argument.

Subjective experiences of the sorts you've described have been quite
relevant to me at times, and perhaps Rich also.  That doesn't mean they
are "true", except in a brief, emotional sense.  Most people who have
been in love can testify to the inaccuracy of their subjective experiences:
why should "religious" experiences be different?  Mine weren't.

These experiences can take on a commanding significance to us individually.
That we are helpless is no reason for anyone else to take them seriously.
Otherwise we should as readily follow David Berkowitz (aka Son of Sam) or
maybe Charles Manson.

These experiences are probably normal, as are dreams.  Taking someone
else's religious experience seriously is probably as significant as
taking their dreams seriously.  To claim that we should take your
religious experience seriously is a clear fallacy of argument.
-- 

Mike Huybensz		...decvax!genrad!mit-eddie!cybvax0!mrh

hutch@shark.UUCP (Stephen Hutchison) (03/21/85)

<Does a lineater experience bugs?>

>  are from <414@cybvax0.UUCP> mrh@cybvax0.UUCP (Mike Huybensz)
>> are from <366@gargoyle.UChicago.UUCP> scott@gargoyle.UUCP ( Deerwester)

>> ... I've
>> read a few dozen articles, the gist of which is, "what makes your
>> experience any more valid that the experiences of {Rich Rosen,
>> Buddhists, Ubizmologists, ...}?"  The difference is that mine aren't
>> made-up examples.
>
>There are two ways to look at this claim.  If you are trying to convince
>me that you are not making up examples, then how can I distinguish you
>from a liar?

You obviously cannot.  How can you distinguish the stories you hear
about your next door neighbor's vacation from the ravings of a lunatic?
You cannot.  How can you tell that the tale of a survivor of the death
camps in Germany isn't a paranoid delusion?  You cannot.  How can you
tell that your parents didn't really adopt you as an infant, or conversely
that (if they told you that you are adopted) that you are really their
own child?  You can't.

Well, actually you can.  You look for other corroborative evidence.
If you can't find evidence to confirm or deny, you have to resort to
learning as much as you can about the person making the testimony.
Then, you decide whether that person is sane, and whether they are
prone to exaggeration or delusion.  Then, if they aren't, you give
limited credence to their testimony.  That is, you accept that they
did experience what they say they experienced, though you might not
accept their explanation as the only explanation.

>The other way is to consider how your own experience is convincing you.
>Our memories of our experiences are quite volatile, inaccurate, and
>subject to progressive modification.  And our experiences include a fair
>number of unreal delusions, dreams, misunderstandings, perceptual errors,
>hallucinations, etc.  So, while you may have experienced something, that
>you didn't consciously make it up is not sufficient reason to assume it
>to be valid.

This is a very popular argument.  It even has some basis in reality.
However, it can become an excuse for ignoring evidence which doesn't fit
within the framework we want our world to fit in.  The truth is, many
people do have very volatile memories, and others do not.  Some subjective
experiences can be laid to hallucination, or to perceptual error or illusion,
or to dreams.  Others should not.  This screening method must be used
with extreme caution.  An irreproducible event may still have happened.

>> All that you're doing is saying, "See, I can make up an example of a
>> personal experience that clearly has no relationship to reality.
>> Therefore no personal experiences, including yours, can be used as
>> the basis for anything."  Sorry, but I'm not convinced.
>
>You shouldn't be convinced by that argument.  However, Rich isn't making
>it.  What Rich is pointing out is the uselessness of testimony as a
>rational argument for convincing someone else of religious beliefs.
>Other arguments are used for denying validity of personal experience.

Watch out!  You'll get Rich chewing on your leg for putting words in his
mouth!  Actually, whether it was his intent or not, the "dream story"
Rich told, and his reply to the indignant followups, sure made it LOOK
like he was saying that NO personal experience, especially that of a
religious nature, can be used to draw ANY conclusions.  And to a
limited extent I agree with that; my proviso is that personal experience
must be limited to a supportive role, unless it can be corroborated by
physical evidence or repeated reliably.

>> Another important point: the subjective basis complements the
>> objective basis.  There are a lot of reasons why I believe that Jesus
>> Christ is really the Son of God, and that He really did die for my
>> sins.  Some are based on personal experience.  A lot of others
>> aren't.  Some that aren't:
>> 
>> 	- the resurrection (see "Who Moved The Stone?")
>> 	- fulfilled prophesies in the life of Jesus
>> 	- the testimony and lives of people who were with Him
>> 	- His words and wisdom (C.S. Lewis' "Lord, lunatic or liar" argument)
>> 	- the Earth (the creation implies creator argument)
>
>These are hardly "objective" reasons to believe in JC or God or whatever.
>The first three depend on the unjustified assumption that the Bible is true.
>The lunatic/liar argument is a false dilemma: the conclusion that the Bible
>is the product of liars resolves the dilemma.  As for the creation argument,
>try it in net.origins and give us something to laugh at.

I beg to disagree.  The resurrection of Jesus is one of the best documented
events in ancient history.  Further, there is no need to assume that the
whole Bible is true; the Gospels and the Acts are all that must be considered.
When they are treated as historic documents, several things come clear:
	First. the Gospels are not mythologized.  They are not written
	in the style in which myths were written.
	Second. They are not teaching fables.  They aren't written in
	the language of teaching fables.  We have examples of contemporary
	teaching fables to compare against, and they don't fit.
	Third.  They clearly are written as histories.
	Therefore, we have to conclude that they are fabrications or tales
	written by liars, or are histories written by honest men who were
	mistaken or hallucinating, or by honest men telling the truth.

	If they are fabrications, then there would have been a large
	number of holes in the different accounts.  There would be a
	considerable amount of physical evidence which could be used
	to discredit them.  There would be witnesses and testimony.
	In fact, there was no such evidence produced by the people
	who were trying to discredit the Nazarene movement.

	Similarly, if the histories were mistaken, then there would be
	counter-evidence produced.  This is in fact what happened with
	respect to the various Gnostic cults which spun off of the
	early Church, especially that one led by Simon Magus.

	There is only one option remaining.  Unless you choose to
	discard the evidence because it doesn't fit your framework.

>> When I add everything up, including my own experiences and a rational
>> look at objective evidence, believing in God makes a lot more sense
>> than anything else that I've heard.
>
>(Great restraint exercised here to refrain from the obvious ad-hominem
>attack.)  You remind me of a lawyer who can't understand why he loses his
>cases when he is so convinced by his own arguments.  You seem blind to
>the fallacies of your arguments.  Objective does not equal "anything
>written in the Bible".  Try again.

Nor does objective mean "anything written in the Bible is trash".
Try again yourself.

Hutch

laura@utzoo.UUCP (Laura Creighton) (03/21/85)

	First off, we're talking about the people on this net who have
	claimed that their subjective experience was not based on known
	phenomena such as imposing preconceived patterns onto the
	experience, but was "real".

Rich, you are making a serious mistake here. The question is ``was the
experience real''. Later we get to ``was the interpretation of the
experience true''. I am not arguing that what everybody says is the
``true meaning of my religious experience'' is actually correct --
indeed, I will go so far as to say that any claim we be in part untrue,
since some of the experience is lost and distorted in the act of
conceptualising it, and more is lost in expressing it in words, and so
on.


	Both the refusal to accept the fact that their brains do such
	things AND the fact that such people would deny similar
	experiences in others (similar but different in image and
	meaning, according to them) are at issue here.

Rich, when have you ever heard me deny that my brain does such a
thing?  When have I ever denied that such experiences happen to others?
This is the first time you have brought it up in connection with this
note. What I want to know is *have* *you* *read* *any* *mystical*
*writings* *at* *all*? And if so, which ones. Mystrical writings are
often full of warnings about the sorts of things that brains can do.
There are whole shelves of books on Eastern and Western mystical
similarities, compiled by Easterners, Westerners, and colaborations.
Yet you seem to deny their existence.

	Second, the fact that it's unexpressable doesn't make it
	"mystical".  And third, I thought we talked in private letter
	about the "you need to do some reading" tone.

I didn't say that the fact that it is unexpressible made it mystical. I
said that the fact that it was mystical means that it is unexpressible.
Are you reversing antecedant and consequent again? I still think that
you need to do some reading. You keep making grossly false ort
innacurrate statements.  But then, you misrepresent me as well. Perhaps
a library wouldn't help.

	Why do we seem to be skipping over the question "Were these
	'religious' or 'mystical' experiences?" so quickly here.  The
	fact that they have things in common is not surprising, since a
	lot of human perception is held in common (e.g.,
	non-color-blind people all recognize blue as blue...)

Please give me a distinction between ``religious'' and ``mystical''. I
have no idea how you use these terms.

	> There is no way that you can prove that a mystic experience
	is only > wishful thinking. It is definitely one theory. I tend
	to reject it, though.

	It seems more like you tend to jump to the conclusion of the
	mysticality first and then reject the theory because it
	contradicts the conclusion you've jumped to.

Rich, GO TAKE A VERY LONG WALK OFF A SHORT PIER. There is absolutely no
way you can tell what is more likely without having some knowledge of
my life. You are dead, dead, dead wrong. I spent years looking for
purely mechanical, purely material explanation of what was happening.
I was a very smug atheist before these bizarre things kept happening to
me.  I found exactly one explanation -- that I am insane, and all of
this is a delusion.

It does not do me much good to assume that I am insane, no. However, I
don't think that there is more evidence that I am insane than there is
evidence that I am sane.

	> Too many people have ended up having mystic experiences when
	> they were not really seeking for them.

	I hardly think that's a criterion for determining mysticality
	(unless you already assume it to be so).  The way the events
	are interpreted afterwards, whatever may have taken place, seem
	tinged with preconception.  Not really wishful thinking in an
	active sense, but wishfully believing certain preconceptions
	afterwards.

Rich, what does that have to do with anything? I already told you that
in conceptualising and remembering information is lost and distorted,
but that does not seem to be your point. Oh -- will it help you to
understand if I say people have certain experiences, write them down,
and then later discover that they are common mystical experiences but
that they had simply never heard of them before? This happens too.


	> Why do you reject subjective experiences out of hand like
	that? More > importantly, why do you ``hunt them down and kill
	them'' :-) rather than just > ignoring them as having no
	relevance to you?

	1) Because the nature of the experience is hopelessly
	unreliable.  Take the example I often give, of seeing someone
	you know on the street and then suddenly realizing it wasn't
	them at all (and asking yourself "What could have made me think
	that that was so-and-so?  It doesn't even look like
	him/her...").  (Perhaps because some pattern of movement/image
	matched a pattern you associate with that person in your
	brain???)  Would you go up to such a person that you thought
	you recognized and INSIST that he/she was (a few seconds ago)
	the person you know?  Of course not.  The same chain of faulty
	patterning occurs all the time.  So how can one take such an
	experience as anything but fraught with flaws?

Rich, the mystic who does not know anything about doubt is in need of
an advisor or a library. I have a better one for you. You have once
mistaken someone at a train station for someone you knew, but now
realise was not that person at all. Do you stop using your eyes because
you now have evidence that you can make a mistake? No? The why should
all the mystics stop either?

	 2) As I've said before, when a certain group of people would
	 like to see a certain moral code imposed on other people, and
	when such people are gaining strength precisely because they
	feed on the preconceptions, the wishful thinking, the
	indoctrinated expectations of the general public, it is more
	than necessary to show such things for what they are, lest we
	all get our brains shut off by those who would have it that
	way.

So mysticism is intrisically linked with a desire to impose a moral
code on people? Strange, that sure is news to Tim and me!

	By the way, I must ask:  your last question (and much of your
	other recent writing) seems to be very defensive.  Why do you
	ask that question, which you never seemed to ask before when I
	asked it of the Christians and others who offered the notion of
	such things as viable evidence?  Is it because now I'm
	examining your own assumptions and preconceptions?  As I said
	to Tim, just because you're not Christian doesn't automatically
	make you somehow immune from having your beliefs examined with
	equal fervor, even if that means we find that you're making
	similar flaws in reasoning.

Because you have never questioned that a Christian's experience was
*real* before, before you have questioned whether the *interpretation*
was *true*.  I do not think that any mystical experience can be used to
prove the truth of any one religion (as opposed to the falsehood of any
other one.) As I have told you before, I don't think that a religion
should be judged on whether it is *truthful*, but on whether it is
*useful*. I think that all religions are false, and all religions are
potentially useful. Which religion (or no religion) is most useful for
you depends on where you want to go.

The Christians also have defined that it is your business -- in that
they think that you should become a Christian and that they have a
moral obligation to proselytise. I can see why they might be your
business. I do not see why dismissing subjective evidence as being
unreal is a useful step, though -- just not very convincing of the
truth of any belief.

Laura Creighton
utzoo!laura

mrh@cybvax0.UUCP (Mike Huybensz) (03/23/85)

> are from <1292@shark.UUCP> hutch@shark.UUCP (Stephen Hutchison)
> >  are from <414@cybvax0.UUCP> mrh@cybvax0.UUCP (Mike Huybensz)
> >There are two ways to look at this claim.  If you are trying to convince
> >me that you are not making up examples, then how can I distinguish you
> >from a liar?
> You look for other corroborative evidence.

There is no other corroborative evidence for a subjective religious
experience.

> If you can't find evidence to confirm or deny, you have to resort to
> learning as much as you can about the person making the testimony.
> Then, you decide whether that person is sane, and whether they are
> prone to exaggeration or delusion.  Then, if they aren't, you give
> limited credence to their testimony.  That is, you accept that they
> did experience what they say they experienced, though you might not
> accept their explanation as the only explanation.

In other words, you depend on how good a judgement of character you can
make.  You ask yourself "would this person be 100% accurate knowing that
there was no way for anyone to check on his story, and knowing  that there
are all sorts of rewards (from peer admiration to money)?"  Keeping in
mind of course that few people are honest with themselves, let alone others.
Keeping in mind, of course, that many of these people WANT to have such
experiences, and have been told to look for them by their religious
leaders.  Keeping in mind, of course that perfectly normal people not
infrequently confuse dreams with reality until they deduce what was the
dream: an impossible task for experiences that are supposed to be subjective.

> >The other way is to consider how your own experience is convincing you.
> >Our memories of our experiences are quite volatile, inaccurate, and
> >subject to progressive modification.  And our experiences include a fair
> >number of unreal delusions, dreams, misunderstandings, perceptual errors,
> >hallucinations, etc.  So, while you may have experienced something, that
> >you didn't consciously make it up is not sufficient reason to assume it
> >to be valid.
> 
> This is a very popular argument.  It even has some basis in reality.
> However, it can become an excuse for ignoring evidence which doesn't fit
> within the framework we want our world to fit in.  The truth is, many
> people do have very volatile memories, and others do not.  Some subjective
> experiences can be laid to hallucination, or to perceptual error or illusion,
> or to dreams.  Others should not.  This screening method must be used
> with extreme caution.  An irreproducible event may still have happened.

Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof.  So tell me, have you
measured the accuracy of your religious leader's perceptions and memories?
Over long periods of time, and while just waking, or dreaming?
And having established a percentage accuracy, how do you know that the
religious experience is in the accurate category, and not otherwise?
Or are you trying to just make a valid argument go away with some handwaving?

> I beg to disagree.  The resurrection of Jesus is one of the best documented
> events in ancient history.  Further, there is no need to assume that the
> whole Bible is true; the Gospels and the Acts are all that must be considered.

The resurrection of JC is supported only by the writings of ONE cabal.
People who had lots of time to get their stories straight.  And why should
I assume any part of the Bible to be entirely true?

> When they are treated as historic documents, several things come clear:
> 	First. the Gospels are not mythologized.  They are not written
> 	in the style in which myths were written.

Neither is "Gone With The Wind".  Surely you need another method for
deciding whether something is a myth than style.

> 	Second. They are not teaching fables.  They aren't written in
> 	the language of teaching fables.  We have examples of contemporary
> 	teaching fables to compare against, and they don't fit.

Neither is "Gone With The Wind" a teaching fable.  So what?

> 	Third.  They clearly are written as histories.

So is "Gone With The Wind".  How could you tell which parts were fictional
2000 years later?  Or even today, assuming you could only use historical
records and evidence from that period?

> 	Therefore, we have to conclude that they are fabrications or tales
> 	written by liars, or are histories written by honest men who were
> 	mistaken or hallucinating, or by honest men telling the truth.

I prefer to think of the bible as embroidery upon the facts.  Fine, JC was
a real man.  But he didn't work miracles: those were tall tales.

> 	If they are fabrications, then there would have been a large
> 	number of holes in the different accounts.  There would be a
> 	considerable amount of physical evidence which could be used
> 	to discredit them.  There would be witnesses and testimony.
> 	In fact, there was no such evidence produced by the people
> 	who were trying to discredit the Nazarene movement.

The different accounts are about all that has survived the council of
Nicea.  They were selected for consistancy.  Nor is consistancy unexpected:
the cabal of apostles worked together closely for several years.

> 	Similarly, if the histories were mistaken, then there would be
> 	counter-evidence produced.

How do you know there was no such evidence?  What evidence would you produce?
A witness who said he didn't see JC after the resurrection?  A rotted corpse
that looked like any other corpse?  Trying to squash rumors and popular tales
was not something feasible in an era before mass communication.

> >> When I add everything up, including my own experiences and a rational
> >> look at objective evidence, believing in God makes a lot more sense
> >> than anything else that I've heard.
> >
> >Objective does not equal "anything written in the Bible".
> 
> Nor does objective mean "anything written in the Bible is trash".

This is funny.  You are saying here "If I can't be right, you have to be
wrong too."

Historical "evidence" like the bible can hjardly be considered objective
all by itself.  Your rationale is very weak.
-- 

Mike Huybensz		...decvax!genrad!mit-eddie!cybvax0!mrh

hutch@shark.UUCP (Stephen Hutchison) (03/29/85)

In article <424@cybvax0.UUCP> mrh@cybvax0.UUCP (Mike Huybensz) writes:
>> are from <1292@shark.UUCP> hutch@shark.UUCP (Stephen Hutchison)
>> >  are from <414@cybvax0.UUCP> mrh@cybvax0.UUCP (Mike Huybensz)
>> >There are two ways to look at this claim.  If you are trying to convince
>> >me that you are not making up examples, then how can I distinguish you
>> >from a liar?
>> You look for other corroborative evidence.
>
>There is no other corroborative evidence for a subjective religious
>experience.

Baloney.  A "subjective religious experience" does not necessarily
occur in a vaccuum, Mike.  Case in point, answered prayer.  If I point
to what I consider to be an answered prayer, I do so by showing that in
fact prayer DID take place, and that an event occurred which seemed to
be in response to that prayer.  The event in response MIGHT be a
coincidence.

So, I corroborate it.  I gather up the evidence.  I take account of how
many prayers I have made or seen made.  I look at whether they have been
"answered" and I look at the form of the alleged answer.  If it looks to
me like the number of answers is below the "noise" level then I assume
that it is in fact noise, that coincidence IS the operant word here.

I ATTEST (you need not believe me, you can try for yourself) that the
number of answers exceeded coincidence.

>In other words, you depend on how good a judgement of character you can
>make.  

Yup, that's a good summary.  That is, of course, how you determine whether
or not to believe ANY testimony.

> ... You ask yourself "would this person be 100% accurate knowing that
>there was no way for anyone to check on his story, and knowing  that there
>are all sorts of rewards (from peer admiration to money)?"  Keeping in
>mind of course that few people are honest with themselves, let alone others.

You have an interesting perception of reality, Mike.  Please tell me how
you know that few people are honest with themselves.  Subjective assessment?

>Keeping in mind, of course, that many of these people WANT to have such
>experiences, and have been told to look for them by their religious
>leaders.  Keeping in mind, of course that perfectly normal people not
>infrequently confuse dreams with reality until they deduce what was the
>dream: an impossible task for experiences that are supposed to be subjective.

Actually, I agree with you that many people WANT to have such experiences.
This doesn't guarantee that they'll actually HAVE them, though.  It MIGHT
cause "false experiences" but again, if I am trying to get a character
judgement of a person, I would certainly look carefully to see if there is
any chance that they're prone to this.

>Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof.

I really admire the dogged way in which that little catch phrase gets
thrown out by everyone who wants to discredit someone elses' claims.
Claims are claims.  There is no such thing as an extraordinary claim,
merely a claim which does not fit within the framework you have constructed.
If an event is claimed which does not fit within that frame, you cannot
reject it offhand just because it doesn't fit.  If the proof is valid for
anything which fits inside the framework, it is valid for anything which
does not.  So, instead of demanding a standard of proof greater than that
which you apply to events which DO fit the framework, you look for an
alternative description of the event which DOES fit the framework, and
see if that alternative IS true, as supported by the evidence given and
as supported by any further evidence you can gather.  If you cannot do
this, then you better either expand on the framework, or admit that it
cannot be applied to everything.

> ... So tell me, have you
>measured the accuracy of your religious leader's perceptions and memories?
>Over long periods of time, and while just waking, or dreaming?
>And having established a percentage accuracy, how do you know that the
>religious experience is in the accurate category, and not otherwise?
>Or are you trying to just make a valid argument go away with some handwaving?

Of course not.  I have, however, measured my own.  I have about 80% accuracy
under normal circumstances, varying by whether I am sick, or in especial
good health at a given time.  I don't try to make any religious insights
or visions I might have had into anything special, though.  They are seldom
of that concrete a nature.  Nor do I think
your argument is necessarily invalid, merely that it is not conclusive.
The existance of an alternative, no matter how plausible, does not make
that alternative correct without further support.

What are you looking for in terms of an "accurate" experience?

>> I beg to disagree.  The resurrection of Jesus is one of the best documented
>> events in ancient history.  Further, there is no need to assume that the
>> whole Bible is true; the Gospels and the Acts are all that must be considered
>
>The resurrection of JC is supported only by the writings of ONE cabal.
>People who had lots of time to get their stories straight.  And why should
>I assume any part of the Bible to be entirely true?

Support, please.  The resurrection of JC is supported by the writings of
many different people, and at least two Gnostic churches which were in
major disagreement with the Apostolic church.  You are making a claim against
the historical validity of Biblical documents, so where do you get the
evidence to make that claim?  You assert that there was a great deal of
unity in the early church ("ONE cabal") which allowed different stories to
be changed and brought into agreement; I suggest that this was not the
case.  The Gospels differ from each other on several details. 
I wasn't saying you had to ASSUME anything.  I said you have to CONSIDER
the Gospels and the Acts.  That is, if you intend to try to poke holes
in the historical truth of the Gospels, you will have to actually LOOK
at them.

To wit:

>> When they are treated as historic documents, several things come clear:
>> 	First. the Gospels are not mythologized.  They are not written
>> 	in the style in which myths were written.
>
>Neither is "Gone With The Wind".  Surely you need another method for
>deciding whether something is a myth than style.

Not necessarily.  In a culture where the writing of myths is extremely
stylized, the fact that a document is not written as a myth becomes
a significant factor to consider.  However, I meant more than just
saying the style was different.  Mythologization is a process which
takes some time.  Adding "extra" miracles and so on are all things
that happen with mythologization.  As an example, there is an apocryphal
gospel which claims to present the life of "Young Jesus" which is
clearly mythologized.  The earliest copies we have date from >250 AD.
There are fragments of a Gospel of John which date from ~50 AD. That's
about 20 years after the fact; there were still other witnesses present
at that time who could (and would) confirm or deny details.

>> 	Second. They are not teaching fables.  They aren't written in
>> 	the language of teaching fables.  We have examples of contemporary
>> 	teaching fables to compare against, and they don't fit.
>
>Neither is "Gone With The Wind" a teaching fable.  So what?

Beg to disagree; GWTW is most certainly a teaching fable.  So what is
that the Gospels cannot be discarded as "edifying fiction".

>> 	Third.  They clearly are written as histories.
>
>So is "Gone With The Wind".  How could you tell which parts were fictional
>2000 years later?  Or even today, assuming you could only use historical
>records and evidence from that period?

Sorry, but GWTW isn't written as a history, it has a completely different
structure.  It is written as an historical fantasy with a moral, i.e. as
a teaching fable.

>> 	Therefore, we have to conclude that they are fabrications or tales
>> 	written by liars, or are histories written by honest men who were
>> 	mistaken or hallucinating, or by honest men telling the truth.
>
>I prefer to think of the bible as embroidery upon the facts.  Fine, JC was
>a real man.  But he didn't work miracles: those were tall tales.

That is an interesting claim.  If they were tall tales then they would
LOOK like tall tales.  They don't.  Tall tales would change with time,
getting more and more wild.  The versions which we have don't vary
that way.  More to the point, would YOU put your life on the line for
a tall tale, which you KNEW to be a tall tale?  There were a LOT of followers
of Jesus, who were stoned as heretics, for insisting that what they saw
was the truth, whose lives would have been saved if they had said that
it was a tall tale.  There is no evidence of any of those folk recanting
and being set to counter-testimony.

>> 	If they are fabrications, then there would have been a large
>> 	number of holes in the different accounts.  There would be a
>> 	considerable amount of physical evidence which could be used
>> 	to discredit them.  There would be witnesses and testimony.
>> 	In fact, there was no such evidence produced by the people
>> 	who were trying to discredit the Nazarene movement.
>
>The different accounts are about all that has survived the council of
>Nicea.  They were selected for consistancy.  Nor is consistancy unexpected:
>the cabal of apostles worked together closely for several years.
>>
>> 	Similarly, if the histories were mistaken, then there would be
>> 	counter-evidence produced.
>
>How do you know there was no such evidence?  What evidence would you produce?
>A witness who said he didn't see JC after the resurrection?  A rotted corpse
>that looked like any other corpse?  Trying to squash rumors and popular tales
>was not something feasible in an era before mass communication.

I agree that Nicea spent lots of time throwing out mythologizations as well
as trying to expunge the Gnostic "taint" from the approved scriptures.  But
we DO have many copies of different accounts, and many predate Nicea.
Nor are the ONLY surviving documents from those times the Christian ones.
There are Gnostic accounts, and there are some records from the Temple,
though I am unsure how extensive the latter are.

What evidence would I produce if I were trying to quash a rumor?  I would
produce a body, yes, within a few days.  The Sanhedrin, unable to do that,
claimed that the apostles stole the body; since there were guards and since
all the apostles were off moping, and since the burial was performed under
supervision by the Sanhedrin, and since there were hundreds of witnesses
who saw, in person, the resurrected Jesus, this was not believed.  If I
wished to disprove it afterwards, I would put out counter-testimony that
showed that the testimony was false.  No records of such counter-testimony
survive, not even by reference.  However, records DO show that the Sanhedrin
was attempting to prove that the Nazarites were heretics, and that Jesus
was not the Messiah.

>> >> When I add everything up, including my own experiences and a rational
>> >> look at objective evidence, believing in God makes a lot more sense
>> >> than anything else that I've heard.
>> >
>> >Objective does not equal "anything written in the Bible".
>> 
>> Nor does objective mean "anything written in the Bible is trash".
>
>This is funny.  You are saying here "If I can't be right, you have to be
>wrong too."

You claim that his evidence is invalid based on a blanket condemnation of
the Bible as non-objective.  I don't accept your assertion.  Further,
I think it is especially weak to argue by ridicule.  (Not that I haven't
indulged myself in the past :-)

>Historical "evidence" like the bible can hjardly be considered objective
>all by itself.  Your rationale is very weak.

I suppose that historical "evidence" about World War II can hardly be
considered objective?  Actually, there are criteria for determining how
believable a record is.  The Bible stands up very well when judged by
those criteria.

brian@digi-g.UUCP (03/29/85)

References:

In article <5277@utzoo.UUCP> laura@utzoo.UUCP (Laura Creighton) writes:
>game.
>1,$d
>0a

Is this for sh or csh?

Merlyn Leroy
"God Speaks In ASCII"

root@trwatf.UUCP (Lord Frith) (03/29/85)

> > You look for other corroborative evidence.

> There is no other corroborative evidence for a subjective religious
> experience.

There is if in this religious experience some revalation of the future
is offered.  Example:  I have a very realistic dream that makes a
very powerful impression on me.  In this dream someone says, "at
exactly 19:32 on Saturday, the Symbolics 3670 will crash due to a
FEP RTS error with 77777712 in the status register."  Lo and behold on
the day in question you sit before the console and the system crashes
with the very error status.  You know that it isn't your imagination
because you wrote the down this prediction and discussed it with others
long before it happened.

There are similar ways to verify the validity of subjective experience
when they involve reality and concrete proof.  Otherwise there is only
your ssubjective reality.
-- 


UUCP: ...{decvax,ihnp4,allegra}!seismo!trwatf!root	- Lord Frith
ARPA: trwatf!root@SEISMO

"And Frith made the world"

dubois@uwmacc.UUCP (Paul DuBois) (04/03/85)

> Seriously, isn't it ironic that someone whose belief system doesn't foster
> notions of a deity has presumptions about what "talking to god is supposed to
> do".  :-?

No more ironic than the presumptions manifest in your original article.
-- 
                                                                    |
Paul DuBois	{allegra,ihnp4,seismo}!uwvax!uwmacc!dubois        --+--
                                                                    |
"You're a slave either way."                                        |

dubois@uwmacc.UUCP (Paul DuBois) (04/03/85)

> >Furthermore, I find it ludicrous that a fundamentalist creationist is
> >demanding "proof" of others' religious positions.  Give me a break.
> 
> A fundamentalists I am not (unless you say so, of course).  Creationist?
> Well, I'll just say that as far as evolutionism goes I am not a true
> believer.  I don't buy the whole creationist line either.

He's probably thinking of me.  Not the first time we've been
confused with each other...

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Paul DuBois	{allegra,ihnp4,seismo}!uwvax!uwmacc!dubois        --+--
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"You're a slave either way."                                        |

laura@utzoo.UUCP (Laura Creighton) (04/06/85)

Nope, that is for the editor.  Things would have worked out bwtter if
my modem hadn't been fried due to a lightening storm at that point. The
editor returned bad status, but pnews wasn't checking, and so posted it
anyway.... grrrr....

Laura Creighton
utzoo!laura

dubois@uwmacc.UUCP (Paul DuBois) (04/09/85)

> [Tim Maroney:]
> I do criticize Christianity, and I do it often.  That is because people
> insist on saying false things about it, putting a nicer face in it than it
> really has.  For instance, would you believe that someone actually claimed
> that it was impossible for a mainstream Christian to justify the persecution
> of unbelievers using the Bible, which is full of praise for people who
> persecuted unbelievers?  I don't know where people get such nonsense, but
> I'm not about to let it go by.  Also, fundies like the late (of this group,
> that is) and unlamented Larry Bickford, Ken Nichols, Gary Samuelson, etc.,
> insist on insulting me by telling me I have to join their religion or I will
> be rightfully tortured for all eternity.

Well, I'm insulted to be left out here.  That's what I get for not
reading these newsgroups for a couple of months!

But, none of the "fundies" (name-calling is allowed, as long as we
play by the rules and do it to Christians) said you have to join their
religion, did they?

Don't join a religion, Tim.  Submit to the Christ.
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Paul DuBois	{allegra,ihnp4,seismo}!uwvax!uwmacc!dubois        --+--
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Glory!                                                              |