tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-62541863675305077812024-03-13T08:00:58.814-07:00Lunacy LogThis blog is devoted to the rebuttal and repudiation of the false religion propogated by Jacob Stein in his Jewish Philosopher blogUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger30125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-18211933001927324442010-02-07T02:12:00.000-08:002010-02-07T02:57:45.126-08:00The Argument By DesignRecently, JP has had a long string of posts which in different ways state the same old argument: We see life on earth. Since life, and the conditions for allowing life, are so improbable, our presence here must have been by design. In JP's case the designer is god. His <a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2010/02/natural-laws-prove-there-is-god.html">recent post </a>is more of the same.<br /><br />The refutations of this argument have been numerous. Basically, the design argument results from a fatal flaw in the understanding of chance and probability. This same error led to similar claims about the "Torah Codes", which have been repudiated by mathematicians. I would like to specifically focus on these fallacies.<br /><br />1. The design argument ignores the fact that an improbable event will actually probably occur when there are a high number of trials or repetitions. We have to account for the entire field of possibilities. This is similar to the tossing of a coin. The chances of getting 10 heads in a row with tens tosses is slim. However, with a million tosses it becomes much more likely, and if a million different people do a million tosses it becomes even more likely-- and does not require any outside intervention or design. Thus, with life, with every microsecond of every day for hundreds of millions of years becoming a trial or coin toss, multiplied by every gene on the surface of the earth, we get an astronomical number of trials, or oppurtunities for mutations. The odds of favorable mutations and evolutionary changes becomes ever more likely, even highly probable.<br /><br />2. Another flaw is that of the predetermined outcome. I would like to credit Second Son with <a href="http://2nd-son.blogspot.com/2010/01/search-judaism-critique-chapter-four_24.html">this analogy. </a> Basically, rarity is not proof of anything. My chances of winning the jackpot of the state lottery are exceeedingly small. So is everybody else's, before the lottery. However, somebody does win. If I then take the winner, and say: well, his chances were so low, say 1 in 50 million to win, and yet he won anyway, it most have been by design or divine intervention-- that would not be valid logic or appropriate use of probability. Similarly, when creationists absurdly behold the "after the fact" reality of an improbable event (like the earth and life on it), they are conceptually and cynically misusing the concepts of probability.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-79178384102570194552010-01-15T00:06:00.000-08:002010-01-15T00:40:30.057-08:00Natural Disasters and GodI know I'm not the first to ponder this subject, nor will I be the last.<br /><br />But it seems that just when we can start to forget about the last disaster and beginning to enjoy "basking in god's light" as JP would say, disaster strikes again. The catastrophe in Haiti is a painful reminder of the fine, almost invisible line between normal, organized and happy life, and total chaos. 30 seconds seperated them.<br /><br />Each time something like this happens, I think, "how can they really believe in god?". But they do. We humans have a tremendous ability to rationalize, deny, sublimate. We focus our energies on what needs to be done, and deceive ourselves in any way necessary in order to allow ourselves to go forward. So we choose the believe that the dead have gone to a better place. Or that the disaster happened for some good reason. Or, horrifyingly, that the victims deserved their fate. And then there's natural hypocrisy: when the disaster doesn't happen to us, when its far, far away, we don't even have to ask these uncomfortable questions. In that case we are satisfied with the naturalistic explanation. Shit happens. God doesn't really care about them anyway. Only when it happens to us, we search for an answer.<br /><br />I think that on the Day of Reckoning, God will hold us accountable for having believed in Him. He'll say, "you idiots, I gave you all of the signs that I don't exist. Natural and man made disasters causing untold pointless suffering. A big brain which was able to unlock the secrets of nature and explain almost everything without the need for "miracles". I gave you "The Big Silent Treatment", refusing to communicate with you or answer your prayers. I even showed you that my Holy Book was a fraud.<br /><br />Yet you stubbornly persisted in your irrational and evil beliefs, and used them to screw other people. Shame on you.<br /><br />You go straight to Hell.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com11tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-37635103232500697642010-01-03T00:49:00.000-08:002010-01-03T01:07:35.436-08:00Ten Discoveries that Pull the Carpet from Underneath Revealed ReligionAs I commented on a recent post by <a href="http://jewishatheist.blogspot.com/2009/12/bind-of-orthodoxy-tolerance-and-toevah.html">Jewish Atheist about homosexuality</a>, I had the idea of collecting in one post some of man's greatest recent discoveries and developments, which strike at the heart of revealed wisdom, and give intellectual underpinning to atheism. I won't go into the classic arguments and proofs (like the existence of evil, etc), but just stick to scientific and sociological developments. OK, here I go. In your comments feel free to add more.<br /><br />1. The germ theory of infectious disease.<br /><br />2. The neurochemical basis of mental illness<br /><br />3. The discovery of fossils and evolution (I know thats a lot in one basket)<br /><br />4. Cracking the genetic code.<br /><br />5. The documentary hypothesis<br /><br />6. The discovery of Ugaritic texts in Syria<br /><br />7. The granting of equal rights to women<br /><br />8. The acceptance of the ligitimacy and rights of homosexuals<br /><br />9. The Big Bang<br /><br />10. The acceptance of brain death as actual death<br /><br />As I noted in my comment, 2 additional discoveries are "waiting to happen":<br /><br />11. Discovering the neurophysiological basis of consciousness and the mind<br /><br />12. Discovery of life on other planets.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com19tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-41886125554889541072009-12-13T22:04:00.000-08:002009-12-13T22:08:04.876-08:00A Challenge to JPHere is a thought experiment for the likes of JP:<br /><br />We know that you believe that the Torah was written by God.<br />Theoretically speaking, what evidence could you think of, that would prove to you, that the Torah, AS WE KNOW IT, was conceived of and written by men?<br /><br />I ask myself the same question in reverse-- what would prove to me unequivocally that the Torah, as is, was written by God?<br /><br />Proofs for me would be the at least one of the following:<br /><br />1. God explicitly revealing himself nowadays, unequivocally, and telling us that he wrote it.<br /><br />2. That nature would somehow transform itself, so that the "supernatural" miracles described in the Torah would be seen nowadays.<br /><br />3. That we would be provided unequivocal evidence of life after death, soul, or whatever.<br /><br />4. As an alternative to #3--that nature changed such that justice is preserved in this world.<br /><br />(Notice that all of these things are conditions described by some commentators as Messianic times)<br /><br />I purposely omit arguments from the documentary hypothesis, since theoretically a God would write the book however he wants-anachronisms and all. This thought experiment deals with the text as is.<br /><br />What do you say, JP? What would convince you? Remember: the more spectacular the claim, the stronger the evidence must be.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-43443828416105746562009-11-23T04:01:00.000-08:002009-11-23T04:03:21.490-08:00I'm on a breakJP's postings have been getting kind of repetitive and boring. I am finding it tedious to attempt to rebut the same things over and over.<br /><br />Meanwhile I'll occasionally check in on his blog to see if he comes up with anything original or interesting. If so, I'll respond here.<br /><br />Thanks for following my blog.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-29125804489544373552009-10-20T22:40:00.001-07:002009-10-22T09:36:33.031-07:00JP's Anti-Zionist RhetoricThe Heredi communities, in the US and Israel, are not monolithic. Some are less Zionist than others. For example, Israel's Sefardi heredi community is very zionistic and tends to be politically nationalistic. On the other hand, some Ashkenazi communities are not so enthusiastic about the State of Israel, to say the least. Some Hasidic sects, such as toldot aharon or neturei karta, and violently anti-zionist.<br /><br /><br /><br /><a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/10/israel-holocaust-20.html">JP's self-righteous but wrong-headed approach to Israel </a>is often heard by members of the ashkenazi ultra-orthodox community. As is well known, most of the ultra-orthodox world, as well as the reform movement, was opposed to the creation of a Jewish state, but for different reasons. The reform movement was busy assimilating and saw no point in promoting the zionist project which would separate Jews from the gentiles of the world. The orthodox were opposed for ideological and practical reasons.<br /><br /><br />JP, as we know, is in the business of making unprovable predictions and using them as evidence in his arguments. We read things like, "If atheists prevail, humans will self-destruct". Or, "skeptics and atheists will burn in hell", etc.<br /><br />Now he makes a prediction about Israel.<br /><br />"Without the support of the US in ignoring the UN, I don't think it has much chance."<br /><br />People said that 60 years ago, and Israel is infinitely stronger militarily, economically and diplomatically than it was then. Current events are a blip on the screen. The Arabs have gotten stronger only with their terrorist weapons (ie rockets) and their oil wealth that can't militarily defeat a country.<br /><br />Regarding Iran, even if they get a nuclear weapon, Israel can destroy them many times over, and therefore it is likely that they won't use it. (just as Saddam didn't use WMDs on Israel).<br /><br />To be sure, the next war in Israel might be nasty, with civilians taking a big hit. But that doesn't defeat a country.<br /><br />In the 21st century, assymetric guerilla warfare in urban areas is the norm, and defeats and victories are moral and psychological. This is what Israel and the West are dealing with now. No more pitched tank battles and aerial dogfights. Now its house to house combat, and rockets on civilians. Israeli is coping better with this threat than any other country.<br /><br />Many people have predicted that a holocaust in America is only a matter of time. (I don't believe this prediction nor JP's). So I've given up on predictions, and I don't listen do anybody else's either.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-43482011411233188652009-10-01T23:58:00.001-07:002009-10-02T00:07:42.985-07:00More JP Idiocies<a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/10/has-science-fizzled-out.html">With breathtaking ignorance and idiocy</a>, JP has declared the death of science.<br /><br />The fallacy of his argument is that he picks and chooses what he considers to be progress, while ignoring all of the other inconvenient facts. This is typical of all of his arguments.<br /><br />Sure, life expectancy increase has slowed. And with limited resources, scientists and governments have to prioritize. With remote technology there's no need to send a man to Mars, since we can learn more from robots. He totally ignores the change in human lifestyle as a result of communications and travel, which has increased man's mobility and wealth many fold since the 60s.<br /><br />In the medical field many things are treatable now that were hopeless in the 60s, including certain cancers, deafness, blindness, paralysis, amputations etc. Doesn't he think that LASIK surgery is revolutionary? What about cochlear implants? The Internet?<br /><br />Because information has exploded, it is less concentrated in the hands a few scientists than in the past. So while you have Nobel prize winners and leaders in many fields, it becomes difficult to identify intellectual giants like Einstein and Darwin.<br /><br />JP, along with his fundamentalist friends, are truly afraid that science may make religion irrelevant one day.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-44257779638099093462009-09-21T03:57:00.000-07:002009-09-21T04:35:40.571-07:00Stein's Dirty TricksOne of Jacob Stein's favorite techniques is quoting out of context. <a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/09/darwin-and-death-panels.html">In this post </a>JP misrepresents Charles Darwin as promoting a philosophy of racial supremacy and discrimination. If one simply follows the link in his post and reads a few lines before and after the quotation, it becomes obvious that JP is lying. In many of his post posts and comments he intentionally confuses between a descriptive, scientific theory of natural selection and a political philosophy of racism and "survival of the fittest".<br /><br />What is even more ludicrous is that this claim comes from a man who believes in and defends the biblical "ethic" of wiping out of Amalek and the seven nations in Canaan.<br /><br />Stein is a straw man too good to be true...I still wonder if he is a closet atheist and his blog is just a gag.<br /><br />Let's give Stein a little of his own medicine and include a juicy quote from his post:<br /><br />Stein says that, "we should probably start investing in companies producing <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zyklon_B">hydrogen cyanide</a> and crematoria."<br /><br />There it is! Stein thinks we should have another holocaust. Yea! Boy, some Torah morality!<br /><br />I know it's out of context, its just demonstrates what a dishonest and brainwashed person Stein really is. Stein's little bag of dirty tricks include ad hominem attacks, overgeneralizations, straw man arguments and outright lying. One would assume that in a real, moderated debate in which he was forced to defend his religious beliefs, he would be disqualified or suffer humiliating defeat. I recall some time back a fellow named Avi used to comment on his blog, and offered to debate JP but to no avail.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-10070685779227574242009-09-18T00:48:00.000-07:002009-09-18T02:27:49.870-07:00Is Atheism Just Another Religion?A very common claim by <a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/09/atheism-is-great-guest-post.html">theists like JP </a>is to say that atheism is just like a religious belief, in the sense that it is no more rational or logical than classic religious beliefs. In doing so he attempts to put atheism, along with "darwinism" and evolutionary biology on the same plane as other authority-based claims. This is disingenuous and hollow, and here is why:<br /><br />At a meta-cognitive level people's ways of looking at the world are influenced by many factors, including psychological and environmental factors. In this sense, any of a person's beliefs, preferences, and knowledge could be said to be subjective and be based on "belief". This causes confusion between the term "belief" in its psychological meaning, and the word "belief" in its more formal meaning-- an element in a set of predetermined assumptions and rules associated with organized faith.<br /><br />For example, I can believe that Jesus Christ was our messiah and savior. I can "believe" this in the sense that I see this as true--the "psychological" form of belief. This assertion is one of many in the Christian faith, so we can see it as a religious belief as well. I can also NOT believe that JC is my savior. In this case I "believe" that JC being my savior is not true, but we would not say that my non-belief is "faith" or "belief" in the dogmatic or religious sense. Just as I don't believe in Thor or Zeuss, I can also not belief in the fundamentalist Hebrew God, and yet it would be incorrect to say that I have a "faith" in my nonacceptance of these assumptions.<br /><br /><br />Some might claim that atheism is relatively recent in history and is therefore a deviation from the default assumptions, and therefore it is atheism that should be considered "faith based" and has the burden of proof. But this argument is fallacious for several reasons. Many historical beliefs about the physical world, including the fields of astronomy, physics, medicine and chemistry were the "default" until they were disproven. Additionally, "non-atheism" includes a very large collection of incompatible faiths and traditions. Therefore, lumping all "theists" beliefs together, then claiming that any skeptic who rejects any one or all of those beliefs as being a "believer" in a novel "belief" called "atheism" is dishonest and a misuse of the word. And as demonstrated by the flying spaghetti monster, the celestial teapot, or Christian claims about Jesus, the burden of proof rest squarely with the likes of Jacob Stein and his cohorts to prove their claims. It does not rest with me to reject it.<br /><br />So if I don't accept Jesus as my savior, and reject Thor as a God, I would be a skeptic. All Jews are skeptics, from the point of view of Christians and Muslims. So why if I reject ALL religious claims, not just some of them, am I a "believer" in "atheism"? It is like JP is saying, "take your pick, but you have to choose at least ONE faith based claim, and that always makes more sense than the 'atheist' belief".<br /><br />Another common distortion that JP uses is that atheists also have their "authorities", making them no different than religionists. He ridicules Darwin, Dawkins, and others as being atheist authorities. The truth is that they became authorities because their ideas have survived the test of time and scrutiny of peer review in the academic world. Besides, atheists don't blindly accept a scientific idea just because an expert says so, unless his ideas survive this scrutiny. As far as talmudic rabbinic authorities, their assertions have been rejected by the vast majority of Jews and non-Jews alike, so these people are "authorities" only to a tiny self-selected minority of humanity. We can acknowledge that there is also controversy and disagreement in the scientific community, but this is part of the process of inferential reasoning. We posit theories to explain what we see, and we test to see if the theory holds up. If it doesn't, it is rejected.<br /><br />The fact that Orthodox Jews, along with various other minority groups in the world, continue to cling to their faith is a sociological phenomenon, which says nothing about the truth or falsehood of their claims.<br /><br />The rejection of these or other religious claims, due to more plausible scientific explanations for what we see, could hardly be called a "faith" any more than the germ theory of disease or quantum physics. To rehash:<br /><br />1. Atheism is not authority based like religion.<br />2. Atheism is not a belief like religion, since rejection is not a belief.<br />3. Atheism is a reasoned alternative to the hundreds of different and contradictory theist theories in explaining the world and life, and in fact explains our observations much better.<br />4. The burden of proof is on the theist, not the atheist.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com21tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-36692195658516100792009-09-13T00:21:00.000-07:002009-09-13T02:33:21.792-07:00JP's Phallacies-- a RehashNo, it's not a spelling mistake. Its just a joke about JP's obsession with sex.<br /><br />I'm going to briefly recount JP's false arguments "proving" god and the divine origin of Torah, along with a 1-line rebuttal.<br /><br /><strong>Claim</strong>: There is no morality without God or the Torah.<br /><strong>Rebuttal</strong>: People make laws to make livable societies, while individual guilt, conscience, and empathy are part of human nature (except for psychopaths), and give an evolutionary advantage in helping perpetuate our genes.<br /><br /><strong>Claim:</strong> The watchmaker analogy proves that there was a Creator.<br /><strong>Rebuttal: </strong>The watch is not analogous to biological material, which we observe to grow, replicate and change itself without "intelligent" intervention.<br /><br /><strong>Claim: </strong>The mass revelation claims made in the Torah could not have been fabricated.<br /><strong>Rebuttal:</strong> Yes they can, as can be all claims made by other religions.<br /><br /><strong>Claim: </strong>The feeling of free will and self-awareness proves that we have an immortal soul.<br /><strong>Rebuttal: </strong>That we have those feelings says nothing about what causes those feelings.<br /><br /><strong>Claim: </strong>Atheism produces immorality and degeneracy.<br /><strong>Rebuttal</strong>: As a proportion of the population, violence in the world is decreasing, as the world is becoming more secular. (Proof: average lifespan has increased despite wars)<br /><br /><strong>Claim: </strong>The Torah contains unique wisdom that could only have been written by God<br /><strong>Rebuttal: </strong>The Torah contains plenty of mistakes (factual errors, contradictions and anachronisms) as well as customs and stories copied from neighboring peoples.<br /><br /><strong>Claim: </strong>The Torah and Judaism don't change.<br /><strong>Rebuttal: </strong>The Talmud and subsequent rabbinic interpretation completely changed Judaism, nullifying some laws and adding new ones.<br /><br /><strong>Claim: </strong>The oral law is from God and was given to Moses<br /><strong>Rebuttal: </strong>The Bible itself contradicts this in many places. The Talmud at times completely twists the words of the Torah.<br /><br /><strong>Claim: </strong>Justice is administered through the afterlife and hell.<br /><strong>Rebuttal: </strong>Absolutely no evidence for this other than rabbinical statements in post biblical times.<br /><br /><strong>Claim: </strong>Skeptics most prove their skepticism, i.e. that God doesn't exist or didn't write the Torah<br /><strong>Rebuttal: </strong>The flying spaghetti monster and celestial teapot arguments demonstrate that the burden of proof is on the believer, not the skeptic.<br /><br /><strong>Claim: </strong>Evolution is an unproven theory promulagated by atheist crackpots.<br /><strong>Rebuttal: </strong>The overwheming scientific evidence (direct observation+inductive reasoning) shows that it is correct, and it is held to be true by the vast majority of biologists and has stood the test of scientific scrutiny. (Had it not withstood this scrutiny it would have been dropped long ago like blood-letting or exorcism).<br /><br />Having said all of this it may still be rational for a person to believe in God and OJ, as long as he recognizes that it is a leap of faith for which there is no proof. I wouldn't call all of the religious people on earth "irrational", unless their faith brings them to do destructive actions to themselves or others.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com27tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-9289600022969770142009-09-10T09:53:00.000-07:002009-09-10T13:08:08.117-07:00The Soul DelusionPeople much smarter than I, and certainly smarter than JP, including the great philosophers, have long debated the mind/body problem. It is difficult for us to fathom that we are essentially just bags of organic material. The mind/body issue is parallel to the question of whether life itself is just a collection of chemical reactions, or is there some other non-physical essence that adds another layer to our existance.<br /><br /><a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/09/soul-our-greatest-gift.html">JP claims </a>that the soul exists based on 2 observations. First, our self-awareness. We feel ourselves to exist, as something inside us but separate from our bodies. This is a very compelling argument. Rene Descarte eloquently argued for dualism, that the mind and the brain were essentially separate entities. Most modern philosophers acknowledge that the mind is comprised only of the material physical brain. This self-awareness, although a non-physical concept, is simply a function of the brain.<br /><br />JP's second claim is that our sense of "free will" proves the existence of a soul.<br /><br />I think much depends on how one defines a soul, and herein lies the problem. If one asserts the existence of a soul, then he is required to define and describe what he is talking about. JP likens the soul to a radio transmitter, with the brain as a receiver. This is certainly an interesting analogy, but it is nonetheless a silly assertion for which there is no evidence. It is sort of what people who claim to have clairvoyance claim. In fact, the evidence would mitigate against such a "transmitter". Besides the obvious distinction from radio waves, which can be measured and observed indirectly, consider the following problems and contradictions inherent in this argument:<br /><br />1. Where was the soul before the person was born? Did it always exist? Was it born when the person was born? If so, why doesn't it die when the person dies?<br />2. When a person is mentally ill, or incapacitated, is the soul similarly mentally ill? Since JP asserts that a person's free will and self-awareness are part of the soul, when a person doesn't have these things, does the soul continue to exist and have free will?<br />3. What about non-humans? Do they have souls, too? Although they don't have the same level of thought and self-awareness as we do, they certainly have feelings, desires, and fears.<br /><br />Basically, the argument for a soul is like Bertrand Russell's celestial teapot. Its an authority-based assertion without evidence, that cannot be tested and is not falsifiable, and therefore the burden of proof is on he who claims the existence of a soul, not one who denies it. Before the advent of modern cell biology and biochemistry, man could not fathom many physiologic processes in animals. They seemed like magic. Now we understand them, and they can be readily explained on the basis of known physical laws. Morever, these explanations are specific and readily testable, and can be used to make predictions. We can posit a chemical explanation for a certain disease, then test the effect of a drug that we know affects this process and observe its effect on the disease. Similarly, neurobiology is steadily unlocking the biological and electrochemical basis of many cognitive functions, such as mental illness, memory, sensation, and emotions. <br /><br />Interestingly, the biblical and rabbinic ancients, who claimed to be connected to the spiritual world and thus in possession of the knowledge that a "soul" exists, don't answer these questions. Why? For the very simple reason that they were ignorant. They simply didn't know. They were guessing, because they understood so little about the physical world around them.<br /> <br />If I can explain these phenomena on the basis of physical principles, what good does it do to add an additional "layer" to the explanation by adding a "soul"? This is Occam's Razor. A soul is simply unnecessary in order to explain things. JP will answer of course, that the Torah and rabbis tell us that there is a soul, an afterlife, and hell, because he has to. For without an afterlife, it is obvious that there is no justice on this earth, so justice must be served in the afterlife. It is also a good scare tactic which was used by the rabbis against ignorant ancient people, to coerce them into compliance. JP also likes to use it as a threat against us skeptics, who are condemned to burn in hell forever. Perhaps it helps as a consolation to him, thinking that there will be a heavenly reward for all of the sacrifices he has made in his own personal life on behalf of an imagined god.<br /><br />Another claim that comes up repeatedly in JP's post is that without God or Torah, there is no morality, no conscience, leaving us to be just a brutal and viscious people. This assertion is blatantly wrong and ignores everything that we have learned in the past 100 years about psychology and sociology. Man has a conscience, and it has nothing to do with religion. I do not deny that people can have violent impulses, or that they do bad things. But as a social animal, he has evolved modes of thinking and behaviors that help the species survive as a group and perpetuate their genes. These traits include empathy and self-sacrifice for loved ones and close friends. Morality extends this natural empathy, by social agreement, to larger groups-- community, co-religionists, or a nation. The traits of conscience and morality give survival advantage and in fact support the theory or natural selection.<br /><br />JP's claims about having no guilt or conscience without god, would suggest that he is a psychopath. Pyschopaths have a personality disorder, in which they have no natural empathy towards other people, and thus no conscience or guilt in regards to causing other people to suffer. Research has shown that these people suffer from <a href="http://www.cerebromente.org.br/n07/doencas/disease_i.htm">defects in a specific parts of their brains</a>. So I challenge JP to deny being a psychopath, by acknowledging that he, along with other normal people, have natural feelings of empathy, guilt and conscience, having nothing to do with God. For if Jacob Stein denies this, he is in fact a psychopath (as well as being woefully ignorant about psychology and many other things).Unknownnoreply@blogger.com24tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-40642959481891352132009-09-04T07:44:00.000-07:002009-09-04T07:58:04.341-07:00The Miracle of a cellular telephoneIn response to <a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/09/liver-worlds-most-miraculous-chemical.html">this post</a>, I propose the following:<br /><br /><br />The cellular telephone is a modern man-made miracle. People on opposite sides of the earth can talk to each other as though they are in the next room. The device is made up of tens of thousands of interconnected microscopic parts, that work together with a global antenna network, to allow people to communicate. A few additional observations about this miracle:<br /><br /><br />1. 200 years ago such a device was unfathomable. If two distant people claimed to communicate with each other, it could only be through spirits or divine intervention.<br /><br /><br />2. As far as I know, no god had ever succeeded in making a cell phone.<br /><br /><br />The fact that JP cannot fathom an artificial liver has no bearing on the question of whether or not the liver is "divine" or natural. 200 years ago flying wasn't possible, and a modern jetliner would have been unimaginable.<br /><br /><br />The liver and other body organs are indeed remarkable structures, whose complexity we are still understanding. Yet ultimately JP's argument boils down to the watchmaker analogy, which I have already rebutted in a <a href="http://notjewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/08/lets-rebut-watchmaker-analogy-once-and.html">previous post</a>.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-57228646554877647982009-09-03T00:22:00.000-07:002009-09-03T00:25:32.123-07:00Before Rosh HashanaBecause this blog is intended to repudiate JP's claims in a fair manner, and not to use harassment, I decided to remove my post "Is JP an Atheist?".Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-34418033413928175262009-08-31T23:14:00.000-07:002009-09-01T12:26:57.985-07:00The Safety of AnonymityBesides JP's not-so-subtle obsession with drugs and sex, he has recently aimed his guns at the anonymity afforded by the internet.<br /><br />I think that his arguments in <a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/08/why-i-dont-respect-anonymous-bloggers.html">this post </a>, and in the subsequent comments, represent JP's dying breaths. In medical parlance we call it agonal breathing. As the circular reasoning, logical fallacies and ad hominem arguments that he uses have grown old and tired even to JP himself, he has resorted to one last desperate attempt to discredit his detractors-- that anonymous bloggers (mainly the atheist/skeptics kind) are all lying criminals.<br /><br />The main asserion in JP's post is clearly false because it is based on the logical fallacy of generalization. Nonethess, I think the idea of anonymity and its attractiveness on the internet does warrant some thought.<br /><br />First, I think that there are different levels of anonymity. There are the truly anonymous "feedbackers", the kind who comment on news articles and blogs for whom there is no possibility of identification. Some bloggers may fall into this category as well. Lets call this level 1. Then there are bloggers like myself, who express opinions and reveal information about themselves, without revealing their full identifying information. Anybody with enough determination would be able to find out who we are. In addition, when somebody legitimately wishes to initiate contact with me, he or she can by requesting my email. I'll refer to this as level 2.<br /><br />Mentally healthy people do not always say what they think. This is human nature. We evolved the ability to not blurt out everything that we are thinking. This function is localized in the frontal lobes of our brains. This is a social skill, sometimes it helps us, and other times it doesn't. Sometimes what we think may offend certain people, so we choose not to say it. We don't tell people that they are ugly, or that we think they are idiots. We won't tell a coworker that he has body odor. Or we don't tell them that their religion is a lie, even if we think this. Sometimes we may tell something to some people and not others. There "others" might be people who our opinions won't offend, or those people that we don't particularly care about. JP argues that this type of opinion is not worthy of expression. I would argue that the internet and blogging gives us the "other"-- the targets of expression are those who won't be offended by our opinions, or , if they are offended, can choose not to read it. That is the whole point of the internet. This is truly egalitarian freedom of expression, even for non-professional writers.<br /><br />Level 1 anonymous writers are at greater risk for writing blatantly offensive, racist and bigoted opinions. Nonetheless, most newspapers have continued to allow anonymous feedback, sometimes with filtering. We level 2 anonymous are generally more cautious, and I don't think that we write blatantly offensive or racist things that advocate persecution or violence against people. Ironically, it is JP himself, an non-anonymous blogger, who openly expresses violently homophobic and religiously biggoted opinions. He also falsely and maliciously accuses skeptics of drug abuse and prostitution. If he is truly "non-anonymous", it would be interesting to ask if he would be willing to walk around with a placard espousing his views about the racial origins of blacks in the streets of Harlem. I suspect not, because he, too, "filters" his message and chooses who hears what.<br /><br />So JP's claims regarding anonymity are not only false but represent the height of hypocrisy. He is more of a fraud than any of his "anonymous" antagonists. I would tend to agree with the opinion of many that JP is just an unhappy, insecure and angry man. His blog affords him the opportunity to spew his hate in all directions, and in so doing he misrepresents Judaism. The purpose of this blog is to discredit JP, and therefore I will continue to expose his fraudulent and malevolent posts.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com12tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-78129530716505839212009-08-22T11:18:00.000-07:002009-08-22T13:05:08.186-07:00SufferingI'm glad that JP<a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/08/kindness-of-suffering.html"> took a stab </a>at the problem that suffering poses to Judaism and to religion in general. In so doing he exposes the ugliness and irrationality of his beliefs, and gives me the perfect opportunity to thoroughly repudiate and refute his claims.<br /><br />Lets begin with the title "the kindness of suffering". How twisted can you get? It makes a joke of the English language and the meaning of "kindness", which is usually to the benefit of the recipient. It implies that without this supposed "kindness", we'd be worse off. We should thank god that he punishes us, where would we be otherwise!<br /><br />I actually agree with JP's comment about media distortion of reality. Its a plain fact that bad news sells. No newspaper or TV channel would survive financially if it reported mostly the good things that happen.<br /><br />He then claims that "He is also just. Every sin is punished and the punishment is always big." I don't know where he got that. The Torah and Talmud specify different types of punishments, some more severe than others, for different sins. JP might be trying to explain the otherwise inexplicable catastrophic things that happen to seemingly good people, thus justifying for example, killing a baby with cancer because the parents weren't strict in the laws of muktsah. But this is contrary to the biblical narrative and rabbinic interpretation. God didn't destroy Sedom because of tax evasion or giving inexact change.<br /><br />JP admits that the "punishment" is often far removed from the "sin", sometimes coming even in the afterlife. At the same time he compares it to spanking a child, which is done for behavior modification. This is a ridiculous analogy. The father administering discipline does not HARM the child. He inflicts discomfort at the time of misbehavior so that the child will learn. JP's God, on the other hand, inflicts gross harm on people, and does it in such a way that neither they or anybody else know what the sin was, nor, if in the JP's Hell, can they do anything about it. Think about the 3500 year history of God's behavior modification program for the Jewish people. What an abysmal failure! For millenia god must repeatedly inflict, with loving kindness, catastrophes upon the Jewish people. JP doesn't even address the issue of suffering of gentiles, I guess because they don't matter at all.<br /><br />JP also refers to God's "anger". What's the deal, then? Is punishment due to a divine temper tantrum or an attempt to improve people's behavior?<br /><br />Thus, JP's concept of the divine hand and suffering is immensely childish and internally contradictory. It appears to be the product of a mentally disturbed person, or one who hasn't gotten past the emotional age of a toddler. Instead of JP's father/god analogy, I think a more apt one might be to a drunken, abusive father, who because of his erratic self-destructive behavior, bad temper and violent demeanor drives away his family. But some people, like JP, the enablers, stand by Him, prefering the abuse to being all alone without Him.<br /><br />In Judaism there are much more rational and mature ways of dealing with suffering, but that will perhaps be a subject of another post.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-83462757619926304962009-08-20T11:36:00.000-07:002009-08-20T11:40:52.831-07:00Now I UnderstandIt was 28 years ago. Both my future wife and I had just spent a year in yeshiva in Israel. We were young and idealistic. As we were planning the wedding, the subject of seating at the chupah came up. My wife and I wanted separate seating for men and women, as advised by our rabbis. My very liberal future in-laws were incensed. They told us in no uncertain terms that they would not be separated during the service. I couldn't understand at the time what the big deal was. You can't be separated from your wife for a half hour?<br /><br />Fast forward to the present. Our neighbors here in Rehovot are very nice people. We aren't real close friends, but we're good "neighbor" friends, so to speak. We were invited to their daughter's wedding. The family is dati leumi, national religious, like most of our neighbors. The girl is engaged to a yeshiva guy, with a big kipah srugah. Although no mention was made on the invitation, I found out that the whole wedding, including the meal, would be separate for men and women.<br /><br />Although my wife will be there for the chupah to say mazal tov, I decided not to attend the wedding. About 3 months ago I attended a similar separate simcha, and I left early, feeling awkward and somewhat offended. I decided then that I would not go to separate seating weddings.<br /><br />When I attend simchas, especially of those with whom I am not very close, my wife is my companion. I have to sit through a long meal, with music so loud you can't talk, and I like to be with my wife. So why do they force married couples to sit separately? Because they are afraid of the single boys and girls mixing. I think that this is really obnoxious, dumb, and inconsiderate. There is no halachic requirement for it, either. It is just the latest example of pseudo-frum heredi practices polluting the modern orthodox world. I find it offensive and primitive. It is saying that the men can't control themselves around women, and therefore keep the women out of sight.<br /><br />I suppose that if this was a wedding of a close friend I would have to swallow my lumps and attend. But otherwise I feel no inclination to go to such an event.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com12tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-58271828652970341952009-08-17T11:34:00.000-07:002009-08-17T21:51:52.742-07:00A Loving GodIn Jewish Philosopher's <a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/08/happiness-rising.html">latest post</a> he extols the peacefulness and gratitude that comes from contemplating God's goodness, which culminates in love for god, and his creatures (only the ones who love god like him, of course).<br /><br />I personally would find it difficult to love a psychopathic mass murderer, which is what Mr. Stein's god is. I imagine that the young starving children being led to the Nazi gas chambers might have a little trouble contemplating their love and awe for God, as well as the millions world wide who die of disease, famine, natural disasters or war. Even if this god is the one who grants life in the first place, what kind of sick joke is it to create creatures, only to torment and kill them?<br /><br />I find it much easier and more comforting to contemplate with awe, a naturalistic and Darwinian reality, with all of its complexity, flaws, and magic.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-15973478101290256352009-08-09T03:06:00.000-07:002009-08-09T03:38:28.769-07:00"We're Going to Play a Game"Those of you who have seen the Saw movies recognize the title of this post as the chilling introduction to each of Jigsaw's sadistic experiments with his victims. I thought that the first two movies were among the most frightening movies that I have seen. But anyway, back to JP bashing...<br /><br />Let's do a mental experiment. Let's assume the Kantian idea of categorical imperative, and that one's ethical position is only ethical if applied to everybody. Imagine that all Jews were like JP. Or even better, the world was actually governed by JP's philosophy. What would the world look like?<br /><br />We would have god-driven holocausts every few years as punishment for man's sins.<br /><br />We would relentlessly pursue homosexuals and give them the death penalty.<br /><br />We would be prosecuting and stoning blashphemers, heretics, atheists and anybody else who abandoned religion.<br /><br />Children would be made ill or killed because of their parents heresy.<br /><br />Many, or most of our loved ones who have died, would continue to exist as souls who are burning forever in hell, or at best, just floating around with the other dead people.<br /><br />No modern economy could exist because interest would be illegal.<br /><br />Since the Torah and rabbis are the sole and ultimate source of knowledge, there would be no need for scientific research and development, and therefore all of our scientific, technological, and medical state of affairs would be rolled back thousands of years.<br /><br />One half of the human population, the women, would be relegated to serve the other half of the population. Any immodestly dressed woman is asking to be raped, since we know that men can't control their urges. Therefore, women must make sure not to entice men. They would not be allowed to vote, hold public office, or in any way have authority over a man. Young girls could be involuntarily married off at their father's will.<br /><br />It would make life in Iran look like paradise.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-27283892512945904802009-08-05T01:48:00.000-07:002009-08-05T22:02:50.937-07:00Let's Rebut the Watchmaker Analogy Once and for AllThis will consist of two parts.<br /><br />First, we can use the "who cares?" argument. Remember my post on the mass revelation argument? Its the same thing. Something that may or may not have happened a long time ago-- what relevance does it have for us? If life got here from evolution, so be it, and, perhaps we can learn from the biological principles how to possible better our lives now. And if life got here suddenly, when one day, the uncreated Yahweh went "poof!", so what? Who gives a flying f**k? Do the animals have to bow and express gratitude to their creater? Why should we? Since this Yahweh no longer seems to exist, perhaps he died or went to sleep, or moved on to something more fun. Who cares?<br /><br />With regard to the watchmaker argument itself:<br /><br />1. It is an analogy, the weakest form of argument. Since we know non-organic machines are man made, by analogy, life forms, with their apparent complexity and purposefulness, must have been created. But non-organic machines are different than life forms (we see that they replicate,, grow, change, evolve, which machines can't), therefore the analogy is invalid.<br /><br />2. The analogy is powerful psychologically, because our brains are wired to see purpose and cause. When we see a watch, a priori we know it is a man made object. So we tend to attribute these elements of cause and purpose to all other entities that we see. By example, when ancient man saw lightening or thunder, he could easily argue that they were coming from the gods' anger, a very logical extrapolation from other human experiences. Loud noises and bright lights come from people or animals doing things. Yet when we learned that there is an alternate, non-creator explanation, we abandoned the gods explanation.<br /><br />Can you guys come up with other powerful, succinct rebuttals?<br /><br /><em>[Bloggers note: sorry about the previous typos, I have made corrections to the post.]</em>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-35274608029729425622009-08-03T11:05:00.000-07:002009-08-04T03:28:06.239-07:00JPism, the World's Most Ridiculous ReligionJP's <a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/08/worlds-worst-religion.html">latest post </a>gives us the perfect opportunity to mock and repudiate JP’s religion, which is NOT Judaism.<br /><br />Basically this is what he believes:<br /><br />Once upon a time, there was this very irascible, petulant god. Let’s call him Yahweh. We don’t know how Yahweh got here (did he make himself?), but anyway, he was sitting around for billions of years making worlds and repeatedly destroying them, along with millions of species of living things, including human like creatures. Then after billions of years, about 6000 years ago, he made a man called Adam. Then he made a woman from the man’s rib. (Meanwhile there were many other species which had males and females, some of which had no ribs).<br /><br />Then Yahweh, starts to make a bunch of big mistakes. Things didn’t go as planned. He had to destroy all of the living things he created once, along with various other acts of destruction and punishment. Later, Yahweh and his helpers found man threatening, so they had to disperse them and confound their speech so they couldn't become like gods. Yahweh was very disappointed.<br /><br />Now skip ahead 2500 years. About 3500 years ago, Yahweh decided to set some rules, and apply them to a tiny nation called Israelites. These rules included killing homosexuals, apostates, blasphemers, idol worshippers, witches, and gatherers of wood on the Sabbath. The Israelites were to exterminate the non-Israelite inhabitants of their land. He also included some other ritual laws, which he evidently copied from some other god’s books. He required his people to kill animals in order to assuage His anger and avoid punishment. There were also some social laws, which reflected social reality at the time.<br /><br />But, despite Yahweh being all knowing and his laws perfect, the laws just didn’t work out so well. The Law didn't stand up the test of time. People couldn’t follow all of the rules, and since Yahweh stopped talking, they couldn't even remember them all (since he supposedly prohibited his people from writing down the details). So His chosen people were doomed to failure. His first prophet, Moses, even tells the people that they will fail and be punished for it. But despite the problematic nature of the Law, Yahweh kept torturing and punishing His people for not following it. Furthermore, circumstances changed, so that this supposedly perfect Torah law had to be changed as well. So the “Oral Torah” was invented, which allowed his people to do what they thought was right, while saying that Yahweh told them to do it that way. So they could add and cancel laws as needed, or change them to reflect reality. In JPism this Oral Law, with all of its myriad details, was supposedly given to Moses in the desert, and transmitted to the people, even though it could not be written down and therefore would be impossible to preserve.<br /><br />In JPism certain nasty Torah laws are still valid, others not. For example, we don’t do Levirate marriage or child slavery or sacrifices any more. Nor do we burn witches. However, apostates, homosexuals, and users of pornography are still worthy of death. In JPism, Yahweh is a very homophobic, sex-obsessed and sadistic god, who enjoys creating people only to destroy them. He even killed 6 million of His chosen people, including children, because many of them prefered science and reason to primitive beliefs. He is the world's worst mass murderer. Perhaps He gets off on this. <em>Ironically, JP likes to blame Nazi atrocities on atheist ideology, but JP himself has plainly stated that he believes that it was God punishing the Jews.</em> <em>In other words, it is JPism and Torah that advocates mass murder. </em>Furthermore, Yahweh ignores 99.9% of humanity since they are not Jews and thus don’t matter. Therefore he allows untold suffering to be visited upon their innocents as well.<br /><br /><strong><em></em></strong><br />Just for fun, I will now paraphrase from JP's post about atheism:<br /><br /><strong><em>This is the basic belief of JPism, the world's most irrational and destructive religion. This religion is merely an absurd myth, not based on a shred of science (or any other evidence), created to permit us to persecute people that we don’t like or don’t agree with us. It justifies the suffering and death of untold millions. Various forms of JPism exist today, in certain forms of Islam or Heredi Judaism. </em></strong><br /><strong><em></em></strong><br />I invite my readers to compare this post with JP's, and decide for themselves which ideology is more irrational and immoral.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-63097252646176839772009-07-29T12:56:00.000-07:002009-07-29T13:11:55.182-07:00Is JP delusional?I was actually surprised to see the video of the debate between Shmuely Boteach and Christopher Hitchens in <a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/07/interesting-parallel.html"><span style="color:#000099;">JP’s latest post</span></a>. I think that Boteach does a decent job defending Judaism, but less so theism in general. Although Hitchens powerfully argues for atheism, I feel that Hitchens’ militant anti-religious stand is not helpful and distracts from the important message, which should be about humanistic morality. Hitchens fails to distinguish between purely religious tenets and culture or customs that accompany people who practice religion. Just as any people have customs and practices peculiar to them, so do Jews, and they shouldn’t be faulted for that. This assumes that we consider Jews as a nation or a people, not just people who practice the religion. Furthermore, he does indeed use straw man arguments against Judaism, using marginal/extremist positions or Biblical era Hebrews as representing what Judaism is today. This would be like dismissing modern day European culture or values because of slave trade from 200 years ago. Jews and Judaism evolved, just as other cultures have, and we don’t need to be taking shit for what we presumably did to Amalek 3000 years ago.<br /><br />Having said that, I cannot help myself but laugh out loud at how JP twists the meanings of words in a pathetic attempt to accuse others of what he is guilty. For example, throughout his posts, JP repeatedly attempts to discredit atheism by calling its proponents drug addicted sex fiends and Nazi holocaust deniers. This would be classic ad hominem—attacking the character rather than the idea. But JP, with breathtaking idiocy, tries to use this term to refer to our asserting the fact that, in comparison to modern times, ancient man understood little about the world around him and had poor awareness of history given the lack of writing. Since many aspects of religion involve history and nature, early man’s ignorance of these subjects obviously affects the reliability of his knowledge and insights into the world, including religious insights. They weren’t stupid, they were just ignorant and therefore unreliable historians. This isn't an ad hominem attack, its just history.<br /><br />So take your pick. JP is either an idiot or delusional.<br /><br />According to Wikipedia, the definition of “argument from ignorance”:<br /><br />A logical fallacy in which it is claimed that a premise is true only because it has not been proven false, or is false only because it has not been proven true. The two most common forms of the argument from ignorance, both fallacious, can be reduced to the following form:<br /><br />• Something is currently unexplained or insufficiently understood or explained, so it is not (or must not be) true.<br />• Because there appears to be a lack of evidence for one hypothesis, another chosen hypothesis is therefore considered proven.<br /><br />I think that this pretty much summarizes JP’s argument for his Judaism. Since Hitchens drinks, atheism must be wrong, and therefore JP’s ultra-extreme fundamentalist Judaism must be right.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-14092709731555687122009-07-28T03:32:00.000-07:002009-07-28T03:55:59.444-07:00Heredi DoublespeakJP's <a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/07/fully-enjoying-our-children.html">most recent post </a>starts off with an almost reasonable, mudane tone, about the importance of appreciating our children. Can't argue with that. Nor can I argue with the virtue of doing good deeds.<br /><br />But then, Oh Oh, then comes the clincher. Couched in this seemingly benign, humanistic message, lies another JP lunacy. When we perform commandments, we are "increasing God's glory in the world". Furthermore, according to JP, increasing God's glory in the world has a higher priority than our children. JP has previously said in his comments that if his children did not accept the Torah he would cut them off, and this is consistent with this post.<br /><br />This is typical Avigdor Miller ultraorthodox mumbo jumbo.<br /><br />Can anybody tell me what it means to "increase God's glory in the world?" Is this biblical God missing glory, so that if somebody puts on tefillin, or if JP bashes gays, His glory is increased? What if a non religious, humanistic organization feeds hungry children in Africa. Does that increase or decrease God's glory, or is God neutral?<br /><br />If I had to choose between "God's glory", or my children's welfare, I'd take my child any day. This is the root of the immorality of JP's religion--God comes before human beings.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-16252636460876384232009-07-22T09:07:00.001-07:002009-07-22T09:14:36.002-07:00More JP Lunacy<span xmlns=""><p><span style="font-family:Georgia;">I think that JP is going through a crisis of faith. There is no other explanation for the increasingly <a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/07/is-history-bunk.html"><span style="TEXT-DECORATION: underline;color:blue;" >desperate and absurd arguments </span></a>he is making for proving the truth of the Torah.<br /></span></p><p><span style="font-family:Georgia;">The first error in his post is the obvious logical non-sequitur:<br /></span><span style="font-family:Georgia;"></span></p><p><span style="font-family:Georgia;">1. Some historical documents are accurate.<br /></span><span style="font-family:Georgia;">2. The Torah is a historical document.<br /></span><span style="font-family:Georgia;">3. Therefore the Torah is accurate.<br /></span></p><p><span style="font-family:Georgia;">This absurdity would dictate that we accept as truth any faith's claims, including the the <a href="http://www.firstpeople.us/FP-Html-Legends/AbenakiCreationStoryandTheImportanceofDreaming-Abenaki.html"><span style="TEXT-DECORATION: underline;color:blue;" >Native American Abenaki creation story of the earth's land mass being formed from a big turtle.</span></a><br /></span></p><p><span style="font-family:Georgia;">Furthermore, as some have said, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. The Torah makes quite a few extraordinary claims.<br /></span></p><p><span style="font-family:Georgia;">An<span style="color:#3333ff;"> </span><a href="http://www.daatemet.org/articles/article.cfm?article_id=10"><span style="color:#3333ff;">excellent article on the Da'at Emet site</span></a> summarizes very nicely the archeological evidence for the dating of the Torah. The author notes: </span></p><p style="MARGIN-LEFT: 36pt"><span style="font-family:Arial;color:black;">"To determine the date when the Torah was written, a working research hypothesis must rest on a coordination of what was told with the findings. The likelihood is that the author knew his own period, but not the distant past nor the future. Thus, for example, when one wants to determine the date of the book of Daniel, one follows the story to see up until which point it matches historical fact and when it stops. At the transition is when the time of authorship is set. " </span></p><p style="MARGIN-LEFT: 36pt"><span style="font-family:Georgia;"></p></span><p><span style="font-family:Georgia;">Based on the biblical inaccuracies, anachronisms, and contradictions, historians place the authorship around the 7th century BCE. Events recorded from that period and beyond more or less correspond to history as we know it.<br /></span></p></span>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-60595513900113682942009-07-15T12:07:00.000-07:002009-07-16T04:47:16.233-07:00More on Mass Revelations-the killer argument against?JP continues to banter on in his post and comments about the Kuzari argument, and equating non-believers with holocaust deniers and believers in conspiracy theories. Most of you who have followed discussions such as these have seen the following counterarguments:<br /><br />1. There are other examples of claims of mass revelations but without any historical basis.<br /><br />2. There is no independent corroborating evidence.<br /><br />3. All religions started with a myth which spreads, and people believed it.<br /><br />While these are good arguments, they are subtle and also subject to endless debate by believers who will make all kinds of claims to circumvent them. So I tried to think of something else.<br /><br /><br />I think that I have a novel way of rebutting this argument. I call this the "who gives a shit argument". Here it goes:<br /><br />We argue about the past, because anything from the past no longer exists. It isn't here now, so we can argue in circles forever whether or not something existed. The important question is, what does it matter now? Now apply this to any religious claim. Lets take the revelation at Sinai. I'm not saying it happened, but for argument's sake let's say it did. But where did it go? God revealed himself 3500 years ago, then disappeared. There is no revelation now. Did the Holy One, Blessed Be He, go on vacation? Did He die? Did He convert to another religion? Is He sleeping? Did he say "I don't give a shit about the world?" So if the revelation no longer exists, why should I care? Does it matter to me now?<br /><br />Think about how we Jews apply this to other religions claims. Of course, we usually claim that their stories are false, but that, of course, is unprovable because they relate to events in the past, which as I said, can't be DISPROVEN with certainty. We can't prove that Joseph Smith DIDN'T find the Golden Plates and translate them. We can't disprove the claims of Mohammad. We simply wave it off as irrelevant, without going through much of an exercise to prove or disprove it. We say, "who cares?" Of course, other religions do this to Judaism, too. The original Christians, of the Holy Land, may have believed that there was a revelation, but that it was no longer relevant (in their present). They had something new. So the revelation didn't matter, it was just history.<br /><br />There is another aspect. Suppose someone did see a UFO. Most of us people don't give a shit. We're the non-believers. Maybe they saw something, maybe they didn't. The ones who do care become the Believers. In ancient Judea, not everybody believed in revelation or Torah. (That is clear from archeology and the Torah text itself). The ones who accepted the claims, we called "Jews". The ones who didn't, we called heathens or Christians. We didn't start off with Jews who believed in nothing and suddenly someone came along and made up a story. It happened in reverse order. The believers became Jews. This is a powerful element of the rebuttal, because the Kuzari argument emphasizes that credibility of Jews regarding their own story, but it ignores all of the people who DIDN'T accept or believe it or care about it. The Kuzari argument hinges on that ALL Jews accepted the story. But by definition only those who believed in the story were called Jews. In otherwords, we can define Jew as "he who believed in the Torah revelation story and cared about it". Gentiles were "those who didn't believe or care about the Torah revelation story". What would the Kuzari say about all of those ancient inhabitants of the land who said, "the Torah revelation story is bullshit"? We know they existed. Ditto for the Christian and Muslim stories.<br /><br />An interesting element in all religions is that many of their claims are either things in the past or in the future, neither of which exist now. But, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence which in the case of religion, is lacking. If they make claims about things now (or in recent, verifiable history) , they would be subject to verification or being disproven. But by emphasizing some unknown future or hazy past they can claim whatever they want. <br /><br />What do you guys think?Unknownnoreply@blogger.com17tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6254186367530507781.post-63773774567751149892009-07-14T08:12:00.000-07:002009-07-14T08:22:57.639-07:00Heredi MoralityMany of JP's posts, like <a href="http://jewishphilosopher.blogspot.com/2009/05/more-reason-and-rationalism.html">this one </a>like to poke fun at the morals of atheists, and extol the perfect nature of a Torah society.<br /><br />For your not so pleasurable reading, you can read <a href="http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3746520,00.html">this </a>and<a href="http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3746339,00.html"> this </a> to get a little glimpse of what is going on in the ultraorthodox community.<br /><br />What is disturbing, more than the crimes themselves, is the resistance and outright defiance in these communities to own up to their problems, as in <a href="http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-3746514,00.html">this story</a>. (Sorry, only in Hebrew. It tells of thugs from the Mea Shiarim area vandalizing the social services office nearby, because of the abusive mother from their community who was arrested there).<br /><br />My point in these stories is not to say that Heredi people are bad, its just that they are at best no better than anybody else, and worse, since they deny their problems and refuse to cooperate with authorities, perpetuate the problem. This has occured in some high profile cases in New York as well.<br /><br />So all of you skeptics, Kofrim, apostates--be proud! We're better than them!Unknownnoreply@blogger.com13