Flipper
New member
Yes, props to the new Postee Of The Day. I'm sure Ravi Zacharias will be thrilled to learn of his elevated status on TOL.
Well done for making an attempt at a rewrite though, Clete. Superficial though it was, it was more than some of the Christian plagiarists who have frequented this site.
Compare and contrast:
Ravi Zacharias, "Jesus Among Other Gods":
Clete Pfeiffer's POTD:
I will allow you some points for tailoring the argument to predestination, but not many.
Ravi Z does enjoy telling that little story. But I can't help wonder how many debates and arguments he leaves out of his otherwise pleasing sermons; the ones in which he took lumps and bruises. He's good, but there are better. I might also add that his side of the argument effectively shortcircuits boolean logic, which means that in Zarcharias World, none of the computers work.
Anyway, well done for spotting it first, Christians! It would have been pretty embarrassing if you had to be informed of the arguments of your leading thinkers by some kind of an atheist.
Well done for making an attempt at a rewrite though, Clete. Superficial though it was, it was more than some of the Christian plagiarists who have frequented this site.
Compare and contrast:
Ravi Zacharias, "Jesus Among Other Gods":
So he brought the professor of psychology along with him. He said, "Ravi, there are two kinds of logic," (actually, he's wrong: there are more.) "One is the either/or logic. If you make a statement that is true, the opposite of it is false. It is called the Law of Non-Contradiction. The same question at the same time, meaning the same thing, cannot elicit two opposite answers. If you ask my wife, 'are you expecting a child?' and at the same time if she says yes, and I say no, what will you say?
"You'll probably say, that's the wrong question, they have a weird sense of humor, she's not his wife, or she hasn't talked to him. You wouldn't walk away saying 'thank you'." Why not? Because the same question at the same time, meaning the same thing, cannot elicit two opposite answers. That's the either/or logic - the Law of Non-Contradiction - you cannot contradict yourself."
...
So finally he established: Either/Or Logic, the Law of Non-Contradiction, is Western. Both/And logic, the Law of Dialectic, is Eastern. Karl Marx used it: take the employer and the employee, put them together, you get the classless society. Nobody ever shows you one, but at in theory they talk about it. So there it is: Either/Or logic is Western, and Both/And logic is Eastern.
I said, "Sir, have you finished?"
He said, "Yes."
I said, "What you are telling me is this: when I am studying Hinduism, I either use the Both/And system, or nothing else. Is that right?"
Do you know what he said? He put his knife and fork down and he said, "The Either/Or does seem to emerge, doesn't it?"
You see, he was using Either/Or logic to prove the Both/And logic. And the more he tried to clobber the Law of Non-Contradiction, the more it clobbered him. The psychologist said, "I think, John, this discussion is over; let's go back."
So what I say to you, Ladies and Gentlemen, is this: Jesus' claim was reasonable. The question is, was he right?
Jesus' claim was reasonable. All religions are exclusive. I looked at that professor and said, "Sir, I've got some shocking news for you: Even in India, you look before crossing the street. It is either the bus, or you, not both of you." It has nothing to do with Eastern and Western; it's what best reflects reality.
Clete Pfeiffer's POTD:
The law of non-contradiction simply states that two contradictory statements cannot both be true at the same time in the same context. Either one is true and the other false, or they are both false. Both cannot be true simultaneously. Now, if someone tried to deny this and said, "The law of non-contradiction is false," he would have a problem. Without the law of non-contradiction, there is no such thing as true or false, because this law itself draws the line between true and false. So we can't call it false without assuming that it is true.
Some, especially those involved in eastern religions deny this simple truth. Rather than holding to the western idea of an ‘either, or’ logic, they embrace a ‘both, and’ logic and they have very elaborate lines of thought that lead them to conclude that a ‘both, and’ form of logic is a superior means of determining truth. They flatly reject any western criticism of their religious beliefs that are based upon an ‘either, or’ form of argument. They say that the ‘both, and’ form of logic is the only way in which their system can be understood. You seem to be making this same claim about predestination and free will. Your argument in a nutshell is that the issue of predestination and free will is not an ‘either, or’ proposition but rather it is a “both, and” sort of an idea. And you insist that the ‘either, or’ logic is invalid. And there in lies a major problem with the ‘both, and’ logic. Those who hold to it must insist that one use either the ‘both, and’ logic or nothing at all. You see, the ‘either, or’ logic always emerges. The harder you try to fight against it, the more it beats you up! Even the Hindu looks in both directions before crossing the street, because he intuitively knows that it is either the bus or him, not both him and the bus.
I will allow you some points for tailoring the argument to predestination, but not many.
Ravi Z does enjoy telling that little story. But I can't help wonder how many debates and arguments he leaves out of his otherwise pleasing sermons; the ones in which he took lumps and bruises. He's good, but there are better. I might also add that his side of the argument effectively shortcircuits boolean logic, which means that in Zarcharias World, none of the computers work.
Anyway, well done for spotting it first, Christians! It would have been pretty embarrassing if you had to be informed of the arguments of your leading thinkers by some kind of an atheist.