(2) If some observation corresponds to some Bible-specific proposition, then it is evidence that Christianity is true. — Hallucinogen
Asylums are rife with such "true ... evidence".(5) There are prayer-induced experiences of observations that correspond to Bible-specific propositions, therefore they are evidence Christianity is true. — Hallucinogen
We can meet people who have had direct experiences (during prayer) of Mohammad and Allah. Are they true too? — Tom Storm
All religions contain people convinced they have had direct and personal experiences of gods, angels, demons, spirits, etc. All religions also have their miracle stories. — Tom Storm
, from such disparate and contradictory sources — Tom Storm
How exactly do we determine which of these stories (...) are true and which are hallucinations, mistakes, or fabrications? — Tom Storm
(5) There are prayer-induced experiences of observations that correspond to Bible-specific propositions, therefore they are evidence Christianity is true. — Hallucinogen
My argument is about gathering evidence for a religion, not proving God.“because I experienced God, I know God is true.” — Fire Ologist
Yes, it's just evidence. It provides that person with an individual basis to interpret the spiritual world.That argument only works for that one person. — Fire Ologist
For those of us who haven't had such experiences, one could build a model from the internally-consistent religious experiences other people have had. All of them seem to involve a metaphysical basis of life, certain metaphysical operations such as prayer, a distinction between good and evil, and so on. This permits us to build a global model.but without firsthand experience of this prayer induced evidence, the praying one is asking the other scientist/logicians to take his word on it. — Fire Ologist
I'm not sure what you mean, do you mean to contradict the argument?Someone giving a specific account of a prayer leading to proof of a Christian proposition in themselves, that is evidence of faith at work. — Fire Ologist
Scientists have established methods for investigating subjective phenomena, such as hallucinations, out of body experiences, neuropathic pain and other private experiences that lack an adequate scientific model.But the link between Christianity and prayer-induced experiences is as invisible to the scientist — Fire Ologist
Yes, so since religions have certain aspects in common, there doesn't seem to be anything stopping those personal experiences having subjective qualitiies specific to the experiencer, so long as universal features aren't contradicted. — Hallucinogen
How exactly do we determine which of these stories (...) are true and which are hallucinations, mistakes, or fabrications?
— Tom Storm
Using a model that establishes the criteria for each category. — Hallucinogen
St Faustina Helen Kowalska saw apparitions of Jesus Christ in the 1930s, which have served as the basis for a popular devotion.
Marguerite-Marie Alacoque had visions of Jesus in which He showed her His Sacred Heart
Marie-Julie Jahenny had visions of Jesus' Heart. — Hallucinogen
Scientists have established methods for investigating subjective phenomena, such as hallucinations, out of body experiences, neuropathic pain and other private experiences that lack an adequate scientific model. — Hallucinogen
Someone giving a specific account of a prayer leading to proof of a Christian proposition in themselves, that is evidence of faith at work.
— Fire Ologist
I'm not sure what you mean, do you mean to contradict the argument? — Hallucinogen
That argument only works for that one person.
— Fire Ologist
Yes, it's just evidence. It provides that person with an individual basis to interpret the spiritual world. — Hallucinogen
The believer trusts God. That can only look reasonable to someone else who trusts God. — Fire Ologist
(1) Evidence is a correspondence between some proposition and some observation of reality.
(2) If some observation corresponds to some Bible-specific proposition, then it is evidence that Christianity is true.
(3) If praying induces experiences for a biological reason, then prayer-induced experiences are not observations of reality but hallucinations.
(4) Prayer induces experiences for a non-biological reason, therefore prayer-induced experiences are observations of reality.
(5) There are prayer-induced experiences of observations that correspond to Bible-specific propositions, therefore they are evidence Christianity is true. — Hallucinogen
St Faustina Helen Kowalska saw apparitions of Jesus Christ in the 1930s, which have served as the basis for a popular devotion. — Hallucinogen
Faith goes where fact dare not, bridging many a void. — DifferentiatingEgg
Why take that sick child to a hospital if you know that God can make him whole? — Vera Mont
There is an abundance of such testimonies in interview form, from people alive today who have prayed and had such visions — Hallucinogen
Conversely, the Christian vison confirms that Islam is not true and Jesus is God. How do you resolve this psycho-cultural conundrum? — Tom Storm
I am wondering if you are arguing that all religions are equally proven true if followers have specific religious experiences? — Tom Storm
It would be far more convincing if those people had visons or experiences of a god outside of their cultural expectations — Tom Storm
like Kali or an Australian Aboriginal creator spirit. — Tom Storm
The fact that someone in a Christian country sees Christian vision just taps into expectations. Hallucinations or psychological experiences tend to be tied to the culture you know. — Tom Storm
Can you cite reputable studies? — Tom Storm
Is this intended to be an argument? — bert1
Is (4) an assumption? — bert1
Granting (4), doesn't this apply to other religions as well? — bert1
Are you as happy for this line of thinking to support other religions than Christianity? — bert1
Perhaps you think that all religions are culture-specific approaches to one spiritual reality? — bert1
You are not saying any of this is about what's true, it's merely evidence for the person having the experience. — Tom Storm
People believe all kinds of absurdities based on bad evidence. — Tom Storm
Someone giving a specific account of a prayer leading to proof of a Christian proposition in themselves, that is evidence of faith at work. — Fire Ologist
Yes, because a logical argument has to show something multiple third parties can use to see the same thing, to see whatever is the conclusion of the argument — Fire Ologist
I’m saying to the third party scientists running tests on believers and taking as objects things like Christian propositions, and prayer-induced experiences, all the scientists are left with (if they believe in the honesty of the test subject) is someone who is demonstrating faith. — Fire Ologist
They don’t see the reason that test subject sees a reason to connect the Christian proposition to the prayer. You don’t see the reasons as a third party, you just see their reasons (that the scientific observer didn’t directly access) — Fire Ologist
and would be better to call this evidence of what faith is, namely, someone in the act of believing something) rather than any proof about Truth of the thing they believe (how the christian proposition relates to their own prayer.) — Fire Ologist
(5) There are prayer-induced experiences of observations that correspond to Bible-specific propositions, therefore they are evidence Christianity is true — Hallucinogen
Such scientific studies are not difficult to find. Examples; — Hallucinogen
Those two things aren't mutually exclusive. — Hallucinogen
Well, you're free to explain if you want to. — Hallucinogen
This doesn't seem to be relevant to the argument. — Hallucinogen
“Prayer induced experiences” - what is that to you? — Fire Ologist
I’d like to see how you distinguish “prayer induced experiences” from “experiences of observations”. — Fire Ologist
“Bible-specific propositions” - probably just need an example, one that cashes out with the other terms using an example would help. — Fire Ologist
“Christianity is true”. Do you mean objectively, verifiably true, like the earth revolves around the sun type truth? — Fire Ologist
I think I need to see an example that shows how a person’s prayers are answered so to speak in a way that verifies a connection between the prayer and the observable experiences of that person — Fire Ologist
If you can't figure out what's wrong with #2, you are not thinking or engaging in good faith. — Lionino
It is comical that God intentionally bothers to mysteriously appear to random people at random times — Lionino
yet stays quiet when a little Nepali child is being ripped to shreds by a Bengali tiger. — Lionino
Curing children from cancer is somehow a violation of free will — Lionino
You are scurrying through abstracts like a politician to find convenient statements — Lionino
You first need to distinguish evidence of Christianity from interpretations of "Christianity" — sime
Do you really wish to argue that mystical visions are externally related to Christian concepts and present inferential evidence that those Christian concepts denote 'facts'? — sime
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