From: Brian Holtz [brian@holtz.org] Sent: Thursday, October 25, 2001 8:50 PM To: James Patrick Holding Subject: RE: Christianity: arguments against; questions for > > you want to go further and say that this heavenly > > realization will for every person in heaven yield an > > emotional state better than the happiest state one can > > experience on earth? > > Not particularly. This is unclear. You don't particularly want to go further, or it's not particularly the case that every person in heaven will be thusly happy? > > in heaven. At what point are our heavenly minds so > > rewired that heaven is indistinguishable from a > drug-induced stupor? > > How about, rational faculties still being intact? Is there no point at which a hypothetical wholesale rewiring of our preferences and happiness criteria on entry into heaven becomes comparable to drug-induced artificial ecstasy? > > pre-Renaissance world, or not? Are you saying that the > > progress in learning was anywhere near as steady before > > the Renaissance as after? > > "Prgress in learning" has always and will continue to vary Non-responsive. > > notable about modernity is not the variety of fringe > > thinking but the consensus around mainstream thinking. > > Very generalized assertion. Very easy to make. It's even easier to duck an issue by making the facile observation that widely-scoped assertions are generalized. Are you not familiar with the Kuhnian notion of paradigms, or instances like the Standard Model in physics or the Modern Synthesis in biology? > Knowledge may be dangerous, but when it lacks sharp edges it > really doesn't catch my interest. I guess you measure "sharp edges" by insults given, evasions employed, and questions ducked. Your five emails to me included these insulting comments: Those are some pretty simplistic questions. Please!! They make me LAUGH. I am not moved by such meanderings. My greatest fear is death by boredom. Generalizing gibberish. Such chauvanism! Then quite honestly, you know very little. Start reading the authors I have given you. That is the sort of response I would expect from a questioner with an inflated view of his own importance. ;-) Why, I couldn't imagine you actually going to a library yourself, now could I? You may want to write in clearer language instead. if you don't mean what you say, make sure you know what you are saying. Here is a sample of your evasions: If more time was spent on such speculation, the critics would complain I can speculate until the end of time, and every moment would be wasted doing so. I have not chapter and verse in hand. And I have higher detail-priorities than to indulge those who won't do their own legwork. It's as much as I feel like spending time on, with 25+ more messages in my box each day and little in the way of a threat factor evident. Here is the sum total of the substantive answers to my original questions that you were able to generate over your five emails: I often think of Heaven in terms of an alternate universe or dimension. God as an infinite source provides the energy.. A mere realization that all is as it should be.. our deeds here will pale in significance -- shame will be of no issue or moment.. I actually don't think there will be an end to [learning] Here are some of the questions and challenges from me that you've ducked: the great Christian thinkers were (as far as I know) not interested in exploring how Christianity might be falsified, or what they would do if they had no hope of salvation. If you know otherwise, please enlighten. were either uninterested in (or afraid of) considering questions about e.g. our intellectual life in heaven. Again, whip out the great Christian thinkers' answers if you know of any. they tended not to discuss deeply the psychological or physical nature of our expected experience in heaven. If my impression is mistaken, please cite at least one such specific discussion. I want to know what *you* in particular anticipate. If there is some Christian thinker whose analysis you agree with, just mention it. If you're claiming that the great Christian thinkers dealt with the issue of the comparitive present and future success of the world's various religions in the marketplace of ideas, then by all means share your references. how Christianity might be falsified, or what they would do if they had no hope of salvation. I'm skeptical that you can produce any citations of such discussions in the great Christian thinkers. I still challenge you to cite a single case of the ancient authors comparing progress toward a Christian consensus with progress toward any other scientific or philosophical thesis. If you have a non-simplistic physical theory of heaven, I'd like to hear its details. Is God as an infinite energy source the full extent of your complex theory of physical heaven, or is there more? :-) does one have good days and better days in heaven? Can we on earth know what "should" be? If so, how? If not, how can we know that we'll like how things "should" be? What determines what "should" be? Is the way things "should" be contingent on God's whim, or is God constrained by objective criteria of goodness that are beyond his power to change? or does my heavenly happiness assume that I will have different criteria for happiness?" If so, how different might those criteria be? For example, am I guaranteed not to find "happiness" in everlasting pools of fire? > You may write once more but don't expect an answer. As shown above, I haven't been getting much in the way of answers from you anyway, so I might as well wait to see if you write an article for your site responding to my questions. :-) Also, I invite any constructive criticism you might have of my capsule summary of the primary arguments against Christianity: http://humanknowledge.net/Thoughts.html#ArgumentsAgainstChristianity brian@holtz.org Knowledge is dangerous http://humanknowledge.net