This example doesn't really work because God cannot be touched, smelled, tasted, seen, heard, or sensed in any other capacity.
The blind men in that story must have been some new form of autistic.
Quote from: Vincent Adultman on October 15, 2014, 12:44:13 PMThis example doesn't really work because God cannot be touched, smelled, tasted, seen, heard, or sensed in any other capacity.It also implies that the skeptic knows what God looks like. He sees an Elephant, the full picture, while the religious only see parts. how can a non-believer see more of God than religious people?He cannot. He wouldn't see anything.
Quote from: Rocketman287 on October 15, 2014, 12:53:32 PMQuote from: Vincent Adultman on October 15, 2014, 12:44:13 PMThis example doesn't really work because God cannot be touched, smelled, tasted, seen, heard, or sensed in any other capacity.It also implies that the skeptic knows what God looks like. He sees an Elephant, the full picture, while the religious only see parts. how can a non-believer see more of God than religious people?He cannot. He wouldn't see anything.How does the religious man know? God hardly appears in children's picturebooks.
Quote from: Rocketman287 on October 15, 2014, 12:53:32 PMQuote from: Vincent Adultman on October 15, 2014, 12:44:13 PMThis example doesn't really work because God cannot be touched, smelled, tasted, seen, heard, or sensed in any other capacity.It also implies that the skeptic knows what God looks like. He sees an Elephant, the full picture, while the religious only see parts. how can a non-believer see more of God than religious people?He cannot. He wouldn't see anything.Nobody sees anything, regardless of their faith.
Quote from: RC5908 on October 15, 2014, 12:36:22 PMThe blind men in that story must have been some new form of autistic.the summary of the story is basically:>religious people are only seeing "parts" of God>skeptics can see ALL of God........in spite of being nonbelieversI found this like a week ago, and laughed. Who uses this, and takes this seriously?This is a TERRIBLE assertion.
Quote from: RustingFloor on October 15, 2014, 12:56:33 PMQuote from: Rocketman287 on October 15, 2014, 12:53:32 PMQuote from: Vincent Adultman on October 15, 2014, 12:44:13 PMThis example doesn't really work because God cannot be touched, smelled, tasted, seen, heard, or sensed in any other capacity.It also implies that the skeptic knows what God looks like. He sees an Elephant, the full picture, while the religious only see parts. how can a non-believer see more of God than religious people?He cannot. He wouldn't see anything.How does the religious man know? God hardly appears in children's picturebooks.This assertion was made by a skeptic, im assuming.He calls religious people "blind". He also claims to see what they cannot.The problem is, the assertion is referring to God as the Elephant, not something else.The skeptic claims to be able to see more of God than the religious, that they see parts where he can see the whole thing. Which makes no sense because the skeptic doesn't believe in God.
Quote from: Vincent Adultman on October 15, 2014, 12:58:09 PMQuote from: Rocketman287 on October 15, 2014, 12:53:32 PMQuote from: Vincent Adultman on October 15, 2014, 12:44:13 PMThis example doesn't really work because God cannot be touched, smelled, tasted, seen, heard, or sensed in any other capacity.It also implies that the skeptic knows what God looks like. He sees an Elephant, the full picture, while the religious only see parts. how can a non-believer see more of God than religious people?He cannot. He wouldn't see anything.Nobody sees anything, regardless of their faith.Then the assertion is totally off. Because it is saying the skeptic sees more of God.If God isn't real, HOW can they see more of something nonexistent?
The religious see more of God than the skeptic, for one by simply believing he exists.That's a start. Anything on top of that, just increases their lead over the skeptic.
Quote from: Rocketman287 on October 15, 2014, 12:56:02 PMQuote from: RC5908 on October 15, 2014, 12:36:22 PMThe blind men in that story must have been some new form of autistic.the summary of the story is basically:>religious people are only seeing "parts" of God>skeptics can see ALL of God........in spite of being nonbelieversI found this like a week ago, and laughed. Who uses this, and takes this seriously?This is a TERRIBLE assertion.Is that how you read it? I read it as "all religious people pray to the same god unknowingly." Either way, this is grandma's Facebook copypasta tier.
Quote from: Rocketman287 on October 15, 2014, 01:01:05 PMQuote from: RustingFloor on October 15, 2014, 12:56:33 PMQuote from: Rocketman287 on October 15, 2014, 12:53:32 PMQuote from: Vincent Adultman on October 15, 2014, 12:44:13 PMThis example doesn't really work because God cannot be touched, smelled, tasted, seen, heard, or sensed in any other capacity.It also implies that the skeptic knows what God looks like. He sees an Elephant, the full picture, while the religious only see parts. how can a non-believer see more of God than religious people?He cannot. He wouldn't see anything.How does the religious man know? God hardly appears in children's picturebooks.This assertion was made by a skeptic, im assuming.He calls religious people "blind". He also claims to see what they cannot.The problem is, the assertion is referring to God as the Elephant, not something else.The skeptic claims to be able to see more of God than the religious, that they see parts where he can see the whole thing. Which makes no sense because the skeptic doesn't believe in God.A skeptic wouldn't claim to see god in the first place. If he did he wouldn't be a skeptic, now would he?
Quote from: RustingFloor on October 15, 2014, 01:06:07 PMQuote from: Rocketman287 on October 15, 2014, 01:01:05 PMQuote from: RustingFloor on October 15, 2014, 12:56:33 PMQuote from: Rocketman287 on October 15, 2014, 12:53:32 PMQuote from: Vincent Adultman on October 15, 2014, 12:44:13 PMThis example doesn't really work because God cannot be touched, smelled, tasted, seen, heard, or sensed in any other capacity.It also implies that the skeptic knows what God looks like. He sees an Elephant, the full picture, while the religious only see parts. how can a non-believer see more of God than religious people?He cannot. He wouldn't see anything.How does the religious man know? God hardly appears in children's picturebooks.This assertion was made by a skeptic, im assuming.He calls religious people "blind". He also claims to see what they cannot.The problem is, the assertion is referring to God as the Elephant, not something else.The skeptic claims to be able to see more of God than the religious, that they see parts where he can see the whole thing. Which makes no sense because the skeptic doesn't believe in God.A skeptic wouldn't claim to see god in the first place. If he did he wouldn't be a skeptic, now would he?So we are in agreement. Neither of us find this assertion plausible.
SpoilerYou won't take my anecdotal evidence, but I've seen plenty. Not God Himself for I would die, but I've seen Him work.
Quote from: Rocketman287 on October 15, 2014, 01:02:44 PMSpoilerYou won't take my anecdotal evidence, but I've seen plenty. Not God Himself for I would die, but I've seen Him work.This goes back to the assumption game where you survived a survivable condition and attributed your survival to god rather than the doctors who helped you.
This story doesn't make sense seeing as skeptics don't see any proof of god.