Instigator / Pro
2
1465
rating
34
debates
57.35%
won
Topic
#5954

Being Agnostic Is More Logical Than Being Christian

Status
Voting

The participant that receives the most points from the voters is declared a winner.

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Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
3
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
One month
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Contender / Con
7
1500
rating
9
debates
72.22%
won
Description

This general topic has been disputed many times on this website. Just a few years ago I was on the other side of this conflict, but some of the amazing debaters on the site managed to change my mind. I'd like to see how well grounded my beliefs are now.

Merriam Webster will be used for all definitions.

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@32483242y

I'm not exactly sure what you mean by "complete faith" here. It obviously is reliant on an authority behind the sources due to the inability to test/those things that are claimed in it. Like I said in my round 1, there has to be an authority behind the bible, or it would be unreasonable to believe it.

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@MAV99

When you talk about needing to take the word of historical sources, I wanted to add that we use academic skepticism as a tool to logically determine the trustworthiness of a specific historical source (to try and avoid simply putting our trust in a historical sources word). Pro's logic would indeed lead them to believe that the holocaust happened, because historical sources from that time can be cross-referenced with one another (along with physical evidence like the architecture of concentration camps) to epistemologically verify the trustworthiness of the individual claims made by a source. When discussing which belief is more logical, it's important to acknowledge historical sources only deserve to be treated as fact when it is reasonable to do so, and should otherwise be considered with varying amounts of skepticism. The historical sources accounting Jesus's actions cannot be validated and proven reliable to the standard to logically justify placing complete faith in those sources today. For example, the idea that all authors of the gospel personally knew or witnessed Jesus's actions is heavily contested, and these things should logically be taken into consideration when judging the amount of faith we ought to place in their written accounts of his actions. I acknowledge you treat these historical sources as fact because it is required to logically maintain your preexisting belief in the religion, but it creates a kind of circular argument where you believe your belief to be more logical because you already think it's true. It may be the case that those who wrote the gospel were indeed telling the truth and it's all fact, but when considering what we should be inclined to believe following the rules of logic, the extreme claims of Jesus's actions supported by historical claims that cannot be epistemologically validated and proven reliable as we look to do today make putting complete faith into these sources less logical than being skeptical of them.

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@Owen_T

Essentially, What we see in loved ones is something God has in His perfection, so we don't lose anything as long as we have Him. While it may sound hard, it is true to say that the souls in Heaven do not care about the souls in Hell, because those souls have chosen to separate themselves from God for all eternity.

Three kinds of people:
Make things happen
Watch what happens
Wonder what happened
Guess where I put agnosticism (which has a greater scope than just religion)?