> religious experiences that are indistinguishable from hallucinations are not testable while scientific claims are testable.
No hallucination is scientifically testable. It has nothing to do with religion. Religion is not in a different category. Science can tell us what part of the brain is active, but it can't tell us what the brain is doing. In addition, I would assert that most religious experiences are not associated with hallucinations. Someone's awareness that a prayer was answered, that God is "speaking" to them through something they are reading, or feel the presence of God, for example, in a very difficult time (like the funeral of a family member), and bazillions of others have nothing to do with hallucinatory events.
> Furthermore, even if god were a proven fact, and he walked the earth and at at McDonald's, that wouldn't mean that people couldn't still hallucinate god, so to accept all "religious experiences" as factual merely because god exists doesn't follow.
It's true that no amount of legitimacy prevents people from hallucinating illegitimate things. That really has no bearing on valid religious experiences, just as hallucinations of Elvis doesn't impinge upon the historical Elvis.
> to accept all "religious experiences" as factual merely because god exists doesn't follow.
I never said that all religious experiences should be considered factual. What I said is that they are legitimate as any other experience. "In the absence of special considerations (such as hallucinations or drug use, for instance), experiences can be taken as genuine, and there is no rational reason to isolate religious experiences as being in a different category."
> They never said it was a group hallucination. They believed it was a real thing that happened.
It's still a very different kind of situation than the resurrection appearances, which happened to different people at different times and in different places and in different ways. It's was no mass hysteria or group delusion, according to the record.
> Why are you incredulous of the story of 100,000 eye witnesses but you accept the claim that Christ is god based on four gospels?
It's not just on the basis of the 4 Gospels, but on the historical record of the growth of the Church. The Church arose out of Jerusalem weeks after the crucifixion event and grew in the locale of the very center of Judaism—a religion known for strict adherence to particular practices (sacrifice, Sabbath observance, etc.) We have to be able to sufficiently (sociology, anthropology, history) explain that if the resurrection appearances were hallucinations. Such explanations fall short of credible.
Imagine claiming that a new form of polytheism was born in Mecca during Ramadan and it grew rapidly among the Muslim population in the ensuing decades. If it were true, we'd have a challenge on our hands explaining what was able to bring about that religion-cultural transformation.
There are a few indisputable facts: (1) Jesus's disciples taught he was raised from the dead and appeared to individuals/groups, (2) Jesus's disciples intended for us to interpret the resurrection as an actual event; (3) the world was changed.
> I question the authenticity of all evidence I am presented with, or at least I try to. That is the skeptical approach to life. It winds up producing good outcomes. It is not merely incredulity.
We all have a choice about how to approach new material. One is to tend to accept, one is to tend to reject, and the other is to approach it neutrally and to look for evidence before one leans in the pro or con direction. You sound like #2. I'm #3. Yours is "guilty until proven innocent." Mine is "Show me the case."
> Furthermore, shared hallucinations are considered a thing according to psychologists. I'm unsure why you are incredulous towards them.
Statistically speaking, only 7% of grieving people suffer from hallucinations. Hallucinations are individual experiences (
https://www.webmd.com/schizophrenia/what-are-hallucinations#1). There is no single documented case of group hallucinations. Besides, if these disciples were suffering from hallucinations, the body of Jesus would still be in the tomb and it would be producible.
In addition, mass hallucinations of a demonstrably physical person is unparalleled in history. There is no such thing.
If you say shared hallucinations are a legitimate thing, you need to support that.
> Christians have no such corroborating evidence, and if they exist please present them as I would like to see them.
It depends what evidence you're after. We know that Jesus was crucified by Pilate.
- Tacitus: "The founder of the sect, Christus, had been put to death by the governor of Judea, Pontius Pilate, when Tiberius was emperor."
- Josephus: "when Pilate, at the suggesting of the principal men among us, had condemned him to the cross,"
- Ignatius of Antioch: "[Jesus] was crucified and died under Pontius Pilate."
- Lucian of Samosata alluded to Jesus as "…the man who was crucified in Palestine because he introduced this new cult into the world."
- Saul/Paul of Tarsus, an enemy and antagonizer of all things Christian.
> It would certainly do a lot to prove that he existed, but it would not prove he resurrected.
The evidences of his death and those of his resurrection are different things.
> I am only talking about the hallucinations regarding people who claim to have personal experiences with god, not including the bible.
I've had personal experiences with God, but never visions, dreams, or anything hallucinatory. I've seen answers to prayer, I've felt strength and peace in situations where that is inexplicable, I've had thoughts come to mind at propitious times that were exactly what I needed at the moment, and I've been able to show love to people who have treated me wretchedly. None of these have anything to do with hallucinations.
> The bible could be a number of things.
That's true. That's why we need to look at the evidence.
- Embellishment? Jesus fed 5000 people with a single lunch box of food. There were eyewitnesses. The miracles he did were in public. It's tough to embellish when you do things publicly. Secondly, Palestine in the 1st century, and Judaism in particular, were very skeptical eras and regions. They doubted and questioned everything, as the Gospels record. You can't just assume detriment. If you think it was embellished, support your case! How do you know?
- It could be that Jesus was fictional all along. This is a tough trick to pull off in a public situation. For instance, OK, we're 30 years after Bill Clinton's and Monica Lewinsky's fling. So, make up some story about it and see how well it flies. And then start a whole movement with your position as the central piece and acquire thousands of followers. How well is that going to play on the evening news?
- Hell, maybe the guy was an alien. And you think this is more credible than the historical record?
> I'm merely pointing out other potential explanations.
I get that, but potential explanations have to be evaluated. We are right now evaluating whether Trump abused power to an impeachable offense. Of course there are a variety of potential explanations, but taking the low road isn't the most responsible way to approach the issue. We need to be good scientists, detectives, and scholars. If we're after the truth, we can't just assume Jesus is a hoax and walk away thinking we've done a good job.
> Same goes for the supposed witnesses. Perhaps they were fictional or embellished. How can you know?
We have to assess the credibility of the author and the authenticity of the rest of what he wrote.
- Is he telling the truth?
- Should we believe him, and why?
- Can he be trusted?
- Is he reliable?
- What issues does he have?
And what about the writing. Does the author show indications of mental illness? Does he seem to be a person of integrity? What else in the work is confirmable? What has been proved to be wrong? That's how you decide these things.
> You have four books made from thousands of manuscripts that were copied over centuries.
Actually we have four books that were written as four books, from which we have thousands of manuscripts rolling through the centuries. Hermas, in about AD 100, alludes to the existence of 4 Gospels.
> None of them are even dated to the first century AD when Jesus supposedly died.
As I just mentioned, Hermas alludes to 4 Gospels: "The Church rests firmly on a bench with four feet" (Vision iii.13) Irenaeus and Origen, later, referred to the four canonical Gospels with the same language.
All of the Gospels date to the 1st century.
- Ignatius of Antioch (ca. AD 30-100) quotes from Matthew, as does Clement of Rome. The Didache (100-105) quotes Matthew.
- Clement of Rome quotes from Mark; Hermas makes an allusion to a passage in Mark.
- Ignatius quotes Luke; Clement alludes to Luke. Paul quotes Luke.
- There is a fragment from the Gospel of John (P52) said to be from 125, though some estimate it as early as 100.
All of the Gospels are filled with early theology, early terminology and vocabulary, and address situations that were in the 1st but not the 2nd century.
> Some of these early manuscripts are in complete tatters and you have only a small piece of paper available to make your case, which, as you can imagine, only covers a small section of the bible.
This is correct, and yet we have far better documentation for the New Testament than for ANY ancient document. If we reject the NT manuscripts because of the fragments, we reject all ancient historical documents.
And, by the way, we have 2 complete manuscripts (codices) of the entire NT dating to AD 300-350: Sinaiticus and Vaticanus. By comparison:
- Homer's Iliad was composed in about 750 BC. Our oldest manuscript or fragment is AD 150, 900 years later.
- Herodotus's History was written in 430 BC. Our oldest manuscript or fragment is AD 950, roughly 1500 years later.
- Plato's Republic was written in about 380 BC, and our oldest manuscript or fragment is AD 900.
- Julius Caesar's Gallic Wars? Written in 52 BC, our oldest manuscript or fragment is AD 850.
- Aristotle's Metaphysics? Written in 335 BC; our oldest manuscript or fragment is AD 1100.
- Tacitus's Annals: Written in AD 14-68; our oldest manuscript or fragment is 850.
The NT has FAR better attestation than any other ancient document. We can actually make a very good case for its content.
> For all Christians know, Jesus's corpse rotted in the ground in the tomb and the disciples made up the stories about Jesus's resurrection decades after the corpse decomposed.
This is not true to history. The disciples started preaching the resurrection 7 weeks after Jesus's crucifixion. Were his body still in the grave, it would be simple to produce. If the stories were made up, it would be easy to discredit them. They were being made up in Jerusalem, the place of his death and burial, within a month and a half of his death. It hardly gets easier than that if it's made-up stories.
Paul writes a creed (that was not his vocabulary, so he got it from somewhere else) in 1 Corinthians 15.3-6. It is widely admitted by scholars (even hostile ones) that this creed to which Paul is referring was circulating in the Christian community within 2-5 years of Jesus's death. That tells us that within 2-5 years there was a unified piece of affirmation that had solidified into a formula of faith that was common among churches. We're not talking decades, but only a handful of years. Even the Jesus Seminar (a very anti-biblical group) puts it no later than AD 33. That's like me claiming that Muhammad Ali is still alive. Or Fidel Castro. That's just not a claim anyone would get away with.