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Notes -
John Psmith reviewed "Believe, by Ross Douthat"
The middle section has examples of atheist scholars being wrong... but are examples of atheists scholars being wrong evidence against atheism? We know they were wrong, because atheistic scholarship has deeply-flawed-but-integral self-correction mechanisms. What self-correction have religions done, in the last 100 years? Or is this an isolated demand for rigor, because the pro-belief case is simply that some religion is inerrant, even if we don't know which (if any!) presently-practiced religion is inerrant, therefore, no religion needs to self-correct?
There's also a section on miricles, which includes:
Shouldn't we question which miracles are "diabolical" and which are "divine? And why deny another religion's morals, if you don't deny its signs and wonders of other religions? And doesn't this "prove too much," inasmuch as it's also true of conspiracy theories, cryptids (fun fact: Scotland's national animal isn't the unicorn, because someone thought it'd be funny - the Scots genuinely believed unicorns existed, at the time they chose it), and UFO sightings?
The review ends by making a strange argument promoting Christianity:
The last two paragraphs I quoted use opposing arguments to come to the same conclusion: Similarities to the "monomyth" are evidence of Truth and differences from the "monomyth" are also evidence of Truth.
Has anyone read this book? If so, does this review do a bad job relaying the book's thesis? Am I wrong to think that the thesis, as presented in the review, is unpersuasive? If I am wrong, how am I wrong?
No. This implies that everyone has evidence for miracles, and only by faith can they be denied. This is just plain false. Likewise, many who believe in miracles have only books to go on. This feels like a slightly less awful version of the "how can you not believe, when God is clearly pumping divine sensation into your system?" argument.
Evidence and proof are different things. The Eucharistic miracles, the healings given by the saints, the holy tilma, etc- these are individually weak arguments for the truth of the Catholic faith(and even non-Catholic Christians retreat to the evidence for the Catholic faith to try to prove the Christian religion in general). But when you combine them they become a pattern.
The 'it's just witnesses' argument is also spurious because this is how we know about every other historical event. Some of them had too many witnesses, some of them skeptical, to just be made up. And no, people in 1917 couldn't have faked the miracle of the sun. Nor could Joseph of Cupertino have caused himself to levitate using stage magic. Padre Pio couldn't have caused a woman's eyes to regrow. Legions of incorrupt saints come before modern embalming techniques.
This does not mean, of course, that every purported miracle is miraculous- the Roman Catholic Church itself regularly dismisses them as fake.
Uh huh, now step aside, every other religion in the world is in line behind you waiting to give the same speech.
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