I don't know exactly how Allison would respond to this. I suspect he would say something like "I think my interpretation is better grounded than alternatives, and I am prepared to defend that claim even if it is ultimately not coercively demonstrable by appeal to neutral, public criteria." — Esse Quam Videri
With the resurrection, God vindicates the executed one. The system that killed him is exposed and violence is judged, not justified. Seen in this light the meaning of the resurrection becomes: "liberation is costly because the world violently resists it — and God sides with the one who bears that cost". That is not blood-fetishism, but moral realism. — Esse Quam Videri
The New Testament sometimes uses sacrificial imagery, but that imagery is metaphorical, drawn from Jewish covenantal language and morally reworked, not mechanically applied. When early Christians say Jesus “gave himself,” the emphasis is on self-giving, not divine requirement. A key shift happens here: God is not the one demanding blood; humans are the ones shedding it. That’s the inversion many later atonement theories obscure.
If the story ended on Friday the cross would simply be another example of justified brutality: suffering would be ennobled and violence would win.
But the resurrection functions as a reversal of meaning: the executed one is vindicated, the judgment of history is overturned, the logic that “might makes right” is exposed as false. — Esse Quam Videri
Again, I would say that this is probably overly reductionistic and perhaps even a bit uncharitable. — Esse Quam Videri
The crucifixion (and the resurrection) were seen primarily as a symbolic condemnation of violence, not a sacralization of it. — Esse Quam Videri
I'm guessing that Allison would concede that his affinity for Christianity is rooted in his cultural background. — Esse Quam Videri
That said, he also seems to think that the Christian tradition captures something unique that helps him to make sense of the world in a way not replicated by other traditions, and that the resurrection plays a role in that. — Esse Quam Videri
There are no rational grounds for believing this to be true. Religion, in general, deals with this successfully and easily overcomes i — Astorre
Allison would likely reject he NOMA label. — Esse Quam Videri
This is probably an unconscious response to your honesty. — Astorre
Again, that may apply to some forms of atheism, but it is not a sufficiently consistent line of thought.By calling atheism "anti-religion," I'm declaring that it is the same construct for understanding the world as religiosity. The only difference is that a religious person (religious, not a sincere believer) constructs their understanding of the world by allowing for the presence of God, whereas an atheist constructs their understanding of the world by consciously excluding God. — Astorre
Why have you drawn attention to yourself? I — Astorre
As for me personally, neither is surprising, since I construct my understanding of the world based on feelings. — Astorre
With regards to (3) specifically he seems to say that belief in the resurrection is more akin to committing to a total vision of reality or interpreting history through a larger horizon. He often frames belief as a reasonable risk in light of the moral vision of Jesus, the coherence of Christian hope and the way the resurrection belief "fits" into a total viewpoint, etc. — Esse Quam Videri
Why doesn't an atheist miss a single thread about Christianity? — Astorre
At the same time, I'd like to ask you personally: do you think atheism differs from indifference? — Astorre
An atheist always needs to be convinced of atheism, whereas someone who is indifferent doesn't. — Astorre
You've moved to a teleological account. Teleology explains what counts as flourishing. It does not explain why flourishing is obligatory. — Banno
In addition, one cannot act otherwise than in accord with the structure of reality. Both kicking the pup and feeding it are possible; Either is "in accordance with the structure of reality itself". "Acting in accordance with the structure of reality itself" tells us nothing about which to choose. — Banno
A real founder doesn’t make miracle reports automatically credible. So, I’m not relying on “Jesus wasn’t real.” I’m asking whether the testimony for a bodily resurrection is strong enough even if we assume some historical origin. — Sam26
On the Gospels, the anonymity and the gap in time matter here, not because “anonymous” means “false,” but because it complicates firsthand character, traceability, and corroboration — Sam26
And yes, the “Legend” option is relevant. It’s one of the ordinary alternatives that testimony has to be able to resist if it’s going to rise above conviction. Legends don’t require fraud. They require time, transmission, interpretive pressure, and communities that preserve meaning even when details shift. — Sam26
Even granting a stable core, “Jesus died, the followers proclaimed he was raised, and there were claims of appearances,” the consistency question turns on what happens when we ask for recoverable particulars. — Sam26
But the result is to remove any normative value from what is good, and to make it a mere fact - the will of god. The account fails to explain normativity. — Banno
Yep. It's a common Christian response to the Euthyphro.
Why ought we adopt that game? — Banno
all morality comes from our evolution
— Questioner
which passes for popular wisdom in today's culture. — Wayfarer
Even if we had before us is the undoubted word of god, it does not follow that we ought do as he says.
It remains open for us to do as the book says, or not. — Banno
That we have evolved in a certain way tells us nothing about how we ought behave. Even supposing we are disposed to act in a certain way by evolution, it does not follow that we ought act in that way. It remains open that we ought act in a way contrary to evolution.
The second is the more general point that while we can find out how things are by looking around at the world, we can't use that method to find out how things ought to be. More generally, while science tells us how things are, it cannot tell us how things ought be. — Banno
I'm currently writing a book Why Christianity Fails using this epistemic model. Specifically, I analyze the testimonial evidence for the resurrection and demonstrate the weakness of the evidence. — Sam26
Whence this idea that there is a clear demarcation line between online and real life? — baker
Or do you think that people somehow miraculously totally change the way they talk to people when the conversation is face to face?
That online, they, for example, jump to conclusions, but IRL, they dont?? — baker
there is a significant percentage who hold cartoon views of religion and their arguments often fail to understand the positions theists may hold.
— Tom Storm
Understood. — Questioner
I'm sorry, what criticism was that? — Questioner
Yes, there are some good lessons from theistic texts. I think also that you underestimate atheists when you posit that they all blindly follow Dawkins. If anything, atheists are independent thinkers. — Questioner
Where did I say I was an atheist? — Questioner
How arrogant to think that only Christians could come up with the idea of values being imprinted upon the heart! — Questioner
1) What we call immorality are practices by others which we aren’t able to understand in terms that allow us to justify them according to our own values. As a result, we blame them for our own puzzlement.
2) Cultural history takes the form of a slow development of interpersonal understanding such that we progressively improve our ability to make sense of the motivations of others in ways that don’t require our condemning them, precisely because we see their limitations as having to do with social understanding rather than arbitrary malicious intent. Advances in the social sciences in tandem with philosophy and the arts contribute to this development. — Joshs
So, you are saying that goodness comes from God and we know this because the Bible tells us it's so?
I think the more likely explanation is that we evolved something called biological altruism. — Questioner
It's likely borrowed from Paul writing in Romans where he says even of ignorant gentiles that morality is "written on their hearts".
— Tom Storm
No, as a people of oral traditions, their history and moral codes, ideas of justice, etc. were engraved on their hearts long before the Europeans came along. They did not need to "borrow" the phrase from the Europeans. — Questioner
But still depends on an external source for empathy - a god - and empathy is not that but something we developed as we evolved as a social species. — Questioner
I recall a quote from an 18th century Indigenous person - who said to a colonizer - "You white folk need a Big Book to tell you what is right, but what is right is engraved upon my heart." — Questioner
Empathy came first, religion followed.
But religion got itself all tied up with all kinds of hypocrisies. And, humans just got smarter, and reject fairy tales as fact. — Questioner
we need to remind those who give us news that their job requires them to investigate the stories, vet them, and then tell us the whole story without bias. — Athena
I think learning to accept and live with the elusive nature of the self/subject/'I' is a fundamental life lesson. — Wayfarer
