willhud9 vs Byron. Formal debate comment thread
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hackenslash wrote:A nice summation.
Mick wrote:It is just an uninformed, venomous screed with zero substance.
lobawad wrote:I think Wilhoud and Byron are doing a good job of presenting the argument as whole in colloquial terms and perceptions- that is, the debate is a good representation of what two intelligent "normal people" who care in a non-trivial way about the consequences of what they're saying might be arguing in "real life".
The argument is about belief and the Christian faith. Some appeals that would not fly in a vigorous setting are perfectly okay here. It would be inappropriate and even dishonest to exclude emotional appeals from the debate.
Wilhoud's argument from Morality is clearly fallacious (quantifier shhift fallacy and illict inversion, for those who attend to such things). It can dismissed on formal grounds. Byron's counter commits the informal fallacy of argumentum ad consequentiam and cannot be categorically dismissed.
Having already given great value to "hope for things unseen", Wilhoud cannot simply brush away Byron's appeal to consequences as fallacious: he has already acknowledged the optative mood as a legitimate modality in the debate.
And so on...
Calilasseia wrote:This thread is for comments on the Formal Debate: Can Christianity Be Rationally Defended?.
Willhud wrote:But underlying all the small variants of morals we happen upon a basic structure or framing of basic principles which human cultures have held since humanity began. It is that basic structure which is known as the Moral Law. Incidentally, that Moral Law matches in agreement with the God of Christianity and His Law.
Paul in the Epistle to the Romans wrote: For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse.
Willhud wrote:My opponent than goes on to talk about several negative sides to the Christian God and I have to ask where he got the notions from? The Bible? And even if the Christian God was as malicious as my opponent has made Him out to be, that does not in any way disprove the notion of God.
LoneWolfEburg wrote:So far, the debaters are somewhat talking past one another.
willhud9 wrote:My opponent than goes on to talk about several negative sides to the Christian God and I have to ask where he got the notions from? The Bible?
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