Patterns of Evidence: The Red Sea Miracle “Without Paying”

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  1. Correspondent: Bob Enyart Live
  2. Info: Bob Enyart hosts the creation/evolution program Real Science Radio, the news talk show Bob Enyart Live, and Theology Thursday and pastors Denver Bible Church.

Patterns of Evidence: The Red Sea Miracle is a movie starring Barry Beitzel, Manfred Bietak, and Jason Derouchie. One of the greatest miracles in the Bible is Moses and the Israelites trapped at the sea by Pharaoh's army, when God / 6,5 of 10 star / release Date=2020 / Documentary / &ref(https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BMWM4NDg0NDEtNDAwNi00ZjU4LWE5ZTYtOTc5YmQzYjFkYTY0XkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyNTE2MDEyODM@._V1_UY113_CR0,0,76,113_AL_.jpg)
Glory be to the most high our Heavenly Father the Lord Jesus the saviour. the alpha and the omega. Patterns of evidence the red sea miracle watch full length movie. This is part 2 of 2, containing the appendices to the main post, which you can read by clicking HERE. Appendix One: Howland = Ser Shadrich: The Mystery Knight Parallel There are an incredible number of parallels between ASOIAF's Vale subplot?in which three hitherto unknown hedge knights (Sers Shadrich of the Shady Glen, Morgarth the Merry, and Byron the Beautiful) are poised to attend a rigged tourney being held by a former Master of Coin in the shadow of his white castle for the ulterior purpose of arranging a wedding with treasonous implications?and The Mystery Knight, in which three hitherto unknown hedge knights (Sers Glendon Ball, Maynard Plumm aka Bloodraven, Ser Kyle The Cat) attend a rigged wedding tourney being held by a former Master of Coin at his white castle for the ulterior purpose of starting a rebellion. The finale of my series on Tyrek Lannister will contain an extensive discussion of said parallels. Here, I wish only to point out that Shadrich being Howland Reed creates a number of delicious parallels between him and the three hedge knights of the Mystery Knight that don't exist if Shadrich is just Shadrich. Given my belief that GRRM deliberately contrives to make our story "rhyme" with itself and especially with its invented "history", I find this unsurprising, fascinating, and revelatory. Name Games The three hedge knights from The Mystery Knight are introduced as follows: "I am Ser Kyle, the Cat of Misty Moor. Under yonder chestnut sits Ser Glendon, ah, Ball. And here you have the good Ser Maynard Plumm. " (tMK) The epithets "Glendon Ball" and "the Cat of the Misty Moor" clearly riff on "Howland Reed, the Mad Mouse of the Shady Glen". "Glendon" blatantly recalls "the Shady Glen ". The rhyme between the monikers "The Cat of the Misty Moor" and the "the Mad Mouse of Shady Glen" is beyond blatant. The names "Glendon Ball" and "Howland Reed" follow the same pattern: Both last names are common, one-syllable nouns with a double-letter: Ball, Reed. One first name contains "lend", the other "land". Both first names begin with a four-letter one syllable noun: Glen and Howl. Howland and Glendon Parallels Parallels between Howland/Shadrich and the three knights go far beyond these name games. We meet Ball as he sits under a "chestnut" tree. We meet Shadrich astride a "chestnut courser. " Ball is called "The Bastard of the Pussywillows. " Pussywillows and Reeds go hand in hand?reeds and willows are paired throughout ASOIAF. (SOS A II, FFC tIC, B VIII, DWD Tyr III) Dunk's thoughts about Ball? And he was young. Sixteen, might be. No more than eighteen. Dunk might have taken him for a squire if Ser Kyle had not named him with a Ser. (tMK) ?"rhyme" with Sansa's thoughts about Shadrich: Ser Shadrich was so short that he might have been taken for a squire, but his face belonged to a much older man. (WOW Ala I) Similarly, Ball's hair is dark brown, whereas everybody expects Fireball's son to have red hair, while Shadrich has red hair, whereas most readers assume Howland Reed has brown hair like Meera. Two Tricksters: Shadrich/Howland & Ser Maynard Plumm/Bloodraven Plumm is introduced as " the good Ser Maynard Plumm". Hibald twice refers to " good Ser Shadrich". (FFC B VI) Maynard Plumm does not "chance the lists. " Nor will Shadrich, who tells Randa and Sansa that he will not joust. (WOW Ala) Shadrich looking "much older" than Sansa expects and showing "wrinkles" and "a hardness behind the eyes" parallels the unglamored Bloodraven, who is "older than Dunk remembered… with a lined hard face". (tMK) The name "Maynard" is redolent of "Reynard", the name of the red fox trickster of medieval legend I earlier mentioned in relation to the fox-faced Shadrich. Reynard is a figure GRRM knows all about, given that "Reynard Reyne" has a "sly tongue" and is "charming and cunning". (Westerlands; TWOIAF) Maynard is a trickster figure, and so is red-headed, foxy "Shadrich", assuming I'm right that Shadrich is Howland. Bloodraven is of course intimately associated with the weirwoods to which Shadrich's red-eyed white sigil alludes. (Dunk meets "Maynard", Kyle and Ball "amongst the weirwood stumps", a phrase which by the way recalls the "amongst the reeds" line from Brienne's story I connected to Shadrich earlier. ) Finally, Bloodraven is apparently a magic-user of some power, as he's glamored himself as Plumm. If anyone in ASOIAF is a magic-user of some power, it's Howland Reed, who "learned all the magics of my people", but "wanted more", leading him to visit the Isle of Faces and the green men, of whom it's said: All the tales agreed that the green men had strange magic powers. (SOS B II) The parallel is thus far better if "Shadrich" is Howland Reed and thus a comparable magician to Bloodraven. Shadrich and Kyle the Cat of Misty Moor Both Shadrich and Kyle speak of themselves as being their sigil animals: "Your common mouse will run from blood and battle. The mad mouse seeks them out. " (FFC B I) Ser Kyle smiled a silken smile. "The cat who wants his bowl of cream must know when to purr and when to show his claws, Ser Duncan. " Both Kyle and Shadrich are gingers: Ser Kyle has "flamboyant ginger whiskers"; Shadrich has "bristly orange hair"/"a shock of orange hair". There may be some word play here, too. Whiskers are usually bristly, and flamboyance can "shock" staid sensibilities. (FFC Ala II, B I; TMK) "The Misty Moor" sounds very much like a description of the Neck. I suspect Kyle is as he is in part to hint that the ginger knight Shadrich might be from a misty moor of sorts, because he is Howland Reed. Appendix Two: Howland Reed and the Bones of Ned Stark What follows assumes you agree that Ser Shadrich is indeed Lord Howland Reed of Greywater Watch. Given that Shadrich rides a horse like Sansa's and tells Brienne he is looking for Sansa, and given that his interactions with "Alayne" are sly and knowing and see him catch her when she is falling, it seems likely he is endeavoring to protect the daughter of his liege lord and friend, Ned Stark. But what, exactly, is Howland doing when Brienne first meets him on the road to Duskendale, when he's supposedly escorting a merchant named Hibald, his six "serving men", and their wagon? Three hours later [Brienne and company] came up upon another party struggling toward Duskendale; a merchant and his serving men, accompanied by yet another hedge knight. The merchant rode a dappled grey mare, whilst his servants took turns pulling his wagon. Four labored in the traces as the other two walked beside the wheels, but when they heard the sound of horses they formed up around the wagon with quarterstaffs of ash at the ready. The merchant produced a crossbow, the knight a blade. "You will forgive me if I am suspicious, " called the merchant, "but the times are troubled, and I have only good Ser Shadrich to defend me. Who are you? " (FFC B I) A Portentous Niggardly Merchant on a Grey Mare In-world, Hibald and his men may be what the seem. Hibald's "grey mare" is a textual match for the "grey mare" of the merchant from ACOK Arya II, who like Hibald? "Hibald is as niggardly as he is fearful. And he is very fearful. " ?is a cheapskate: The next morning, a sleek merchant on a grey mare reined up by Yoren and offered to buy his wagons and everything in them for a quarter of their worth. Hibald may thus be unaware that Ser Shadrich is Howland Reed. But even if in-world Hibald is "no one, truly, " so to speak, the name "Hibald" is a metatextual hint to readers that his escort "Ser Shadrich" is in fact transporting the bones of Ned Stark?which he intercepted at Greywater Watch after Catelyn sent them north in ACOK?to the Quiet Isle. How so? History Class!! In order to explain how the name "Hibald" could possibly connote that Shadrich is moving Ned Stark's bones in AFFC Brienne I, we need to talk about the real-world history of Great Britain during the so-called Heptarchy or Seven Kingdoms period, specifically as regards an Anglo-Saxon King of the North named Oswald and a saintly monk named (you guessed it) Hibald. (Sources for what follows include: wikipedia entries for Heptarchy, Kingdom of Northumbria, Humber, Kingdom of Lindsey, The Fens, Isle of Axholme, Oswald of Northumbria, Osthryth, Oswy, Osric of Deira, Oswine of Deira, Æthelred, Bardney Abbey, and Hibald; St. Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English Nation The Seven Kingdoms (of Anglo-Saxon Great Britain) In the 7th century, much of the island of Great Britain was divided into something that will sound very familiar to readers of ASOIAF: "seven kingdoms" ruled by seven kings, an arrangement later historians dubbed the Heptarchy. These seven Anglo-Saxon kingdoms (as well as other, smaller petty kingdoms and sub-kingdoms) later consolidated into the kingdom of England, much as the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros were consolidated under Targaryen rule. Northumbria: "The North" of the Heptarchy One of the seven kingdoms of the Heptarchy was Northumbria (itself forged c. 604 from the kingdoms Deira and Bernicia). Northumbria was, as the name implies, the northernmost kingdom in Anglo-Saxon Great Britain, just as "The North" was the northernmost of Westeros's Seven Kingdoms. Northumbria was also home to Hadrian's Wall, which GRRM acknowledges inspired the Wall of Westeros. The Humber: The "Saltspear" of the Heptarchy The name Northumbria came from the Anglo-Saxon for "the people north of the Humber". Technically a tidal estuary, the Humber is in effect a long inlet off the North Sea, easily navigable by deep-sea vessels, much like the Saltspear is a long inlet off the Sunset Sea navigable by ironborn longships. During the Heptarchy, the Humber was seen as forming the natural boundary between Northumbria and the southern kingdoms, much as the Saltspear helps define the N
Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length free. It did seem like a waste of time. Something to make a little money on. I got tired of the process and finding no substance. Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length video. Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length hair.
I'm SOOOO glad to hear from the Wyatt family & this channel! This research is Faith affirming & enCOURAGE-ing to stand up for Jesus. Please continue updates. I met Ron in Ukiah CA in 1983, I think. his presentation was a humongous faith booster! And I've followed the research every step ever since, having read all the books. I'm sad but not surprised at the church dissing him & Rene Noorbergen, whose books I devour & hoard?. Thanks much for the updates. I do watch the Caldwells on Michael Rood's channel. I buy everything to do with Ron's research. Praise God.
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Patterns of Evidence: The Red Sea Miracle Watch full length. God says look you will find my word is true. Amen. Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length 2017. Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length online. Must of been Noah's Ark as no one else in the world had built a boat on that grand mass scale up to that time period. So all these things about athiests and evolution out of the window. Thanks for the video delphos. I believe this is a true confirmation of the crossing of the Red Sea. It brings back memories of the civil war artifacts I dug years ago. When I was young I had no idea that civil war artifacts could be found intact. It's an amazing feeling when you dig up history. From my experience, I believe without a doubt that the artifacts shown on this video are from Pharaohs army. God bless you.
Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length hd. Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length tv. I was wondering why Ron Wyatt wasn't mentioned. Patterns of Evidence: The Red Sea Miracle Watch Full length. Series Introduction and Guide Historical Context: Old? Yes. Apocryphal? Perhaps. Historic, consequential, and memorable? Perhaps without peer. I think a pseudo-lyric from a Disney classic can best sum this one up: Tale as old as time Song as old as rhyme Moses and the Lord Much of the world's population is familiar with the contents of this speech and their supposed speaker. Many have made the guidelines laid forth in this text the guiding principles of their everyday lives. So, let's recap. Born sometime around 1500 BCE, Moses was a Hebrew born in Egypt during a time when the country's ruling Pharaoh had decreed all male Hebrew children were to be killed. After being sent down the Nile by his mother in the hopes he would survive, he was found and adopted by Pharaoh's daughter and raised as part of Egypt's ruling family. As a young man, Moses killed an Egyptian he saw abusing a Hebrew slave and subsequently fled Egypt to Midian. After living as a shepherd, he found God in the form of a burning bush, who commanded him to return to Egypt and free the Hebrews. In the form of all classic underdog tales, Moses was initially reluctant due to his lack of confidence in his own abilities, going so far as to say to God, "I am slow of speech, and of a slow tongue. " Not, one would think, ideal speechmaker material. However, taking his brother Aaron as his herald, Moses would return to Egypt to carry out his task. Understandably for a guy leading a country which relied on the slave labor of Hebrews to keep it running, Pharaoh wasn't initially too keen on Moses' demand. But, ten plagues later, including the final plague which resulted in the death of every Egyptian firstborn, Pharaoh relented. Moses led the Israelites from Egypt towards the coast. However, fickle Pharaoh changed his mind and sent the whole of the Egyptian army chasing after them. Unfortunately for Pharaoh, God parted the Red Sea for the Hebrews and then sent the waters crashing back once they had safely crossed, drowning the entire Egyptian military. From here, Moses led his people to Palestine. There, atop Mount Sinai, God gave Moses the Ten Commandments inscribed on two stone tablets, the rules by which the Hebrew people were to live. Moses descended the mountain and called the Israelites together. There, surrounded by desert, with a people who trusted him to lead them to safety, he began to speak. The Speech: link to text 1 And God spoke all these words: 2 “I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of Egypt, out of the land of slavery. 3 “You shall have no other gods before me. 4 “You shall not make for yourself an image in the form of anything in heaven above or on the earth beneath or in the waters below. 5 You shall not bow down to them or worship them; for I, the LORD your God, am a jealous God, punishing the children for the sin of the parents to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me, 6 but showing love to a thousand generations of those who love me and keep my commandments. 7 “You shall not misuse the name of the LORD your God, for the Lord will not hold anyone guiltless who misuses his name. 8 “Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy. 9 Six days you shall labor and do all your work, 10 but the seventh day is a sabbath to the LORD your God. On it you shall not do any work, neither you, nor your son or daughter, nor your male or female servant, nor your animals, nor any foreigner residing in your towns. 11 For in six days the LORD made the heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them, but he rested on the seventh day. Therefore the LORD blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy. 12 “Honor your father and your mother, so that you may live long in the land the LORD your God is giving you. 13 “You shall not murder. 14 “You shall not commit adultery. 15 “You shall not steal. 16 “You shall not give false testimony against your neighbor. 17 “You shall not covet your neighbor’s house. You shall not covet your neighbor’s wife, or his male or female servant, his ox or donkey, or anything that belongs to your neighbor. ” Rhetoric and Oratory: This is an interesting speech to analyze for a number of reasons, not least of which is that it may never have been spoken at all. It is certainly possible that these words were never delivered by any orator before being written down, let alone that they were delivered by Moses himself, first prophet among the Abrahamic religions. However, they are presented to us as a speech, and it is in that ostensible form that they have convinced readers of the Bible for many centuries, so it seems appropriate to treat it as one would a recorded speech. Use of the four modes of persuasion: This is tricky, and it illustrates some of the difficulties one can face when trying to put clean labels on every section of a speech's (or any other method of persuasion's) arguments. First, what is/are the message/messages Moses is trying to get across? In this case, it's pretty simple: listen to what God is saying here. This makes things a little bit fuzzy, since Moses is effectively acting as God's mouthpiece rather than as an independent speaker. Generally, when a speaker invokes a religious figure, it's considered pathos. We don't typically think of faith in a deity as something that is physically experienced. It's something we feel. In the same way, a pastor giving a speech about some theological topic doesn't have ethos because we believe he's got a mainline to God, but because he's spent many years studying his craft. This is, er, different. The Israelites have not only proof enough that Moses does have a mainline to God--not included in the text is the immediate thunder and lightning that appear behind Moses at the close of his speech--but have seen very tangible benefits to obeying the Lord in their freedom from slavery and the literal miracle of the parting of the Red Sea. So in this instance, it's difficult to separate in many cases where Moses is using ethos, pathos, and logos, particularly since he is rarely giving any reasons for why the Hebrews ought to do something. For example, let's look at the following line: I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of Egypt, out of the land of slavery. Clearly, this is ethos. "Look, my whole job is to protect and provide for you, and look, clearly I've protected and provided for you. " It's also quite obviously pathos as well, though. The Israelites would have felt enormous gratitude towards whoever freed them from bondage. But it's also logos, as there seem to be clear and obvious benefits for the audience which stem from listening to God--as well as the potential for drastic consequences such as those visited upon the Egyptians. Given the very physical nature of the punishments and rewards the Old Testament God is giving out, I'm tempted to say this all leans ever so slightly more towards logos than the other two, although they're definitely there. We can see places where this is perhaps a little more apparent: I, the LORD your God, am a jealous God, punishing the children for the sin of the parents to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me, 6 but showing love to a thousand generations of those who love me and keep my commandments. This is a pretty clear example of a reward/threat dichotomy, which is almost as straight logos as it gets in most instances; "Do what I say and I'll make your life better, don't do it and I'll make your life worse. " Again, however, the lines are a little fuzzy. Overall, I'd say this is something like 32/32/36 in terms of balance, although it might as well be 100/100/100 in terms of how intertwined they are here. Kairos is also extremely evident. The Israelites have just been saved by God (and by extension, Moses), are riding an all-time high, and are about to come off that high once they realize they're now alone in a vast desert wilderness. This is the perfect time for an authority figure who's already earned their trust to step in and provide them with directions. Oratory: There are a few things to look at here. First is the interesting capitalization on the word "LORD" throughout the speech. This implies Moses was shouting the word, or at least speaking it with significantly more emphasis than he was everything else. Put quite simply, volume or vocal emphasis, well, emphasizes. It draws attention. It makes things stick out. Maybe you're just floating along, listening to a set of rules, when suddenly BAM!, you get hit in the face with a deity and remember you should be paying attention and making sure you know what to obey because you really owe that guy. There's also a fair bit of repetition in here, as is typical of many religious texts. This is in large part due to the fact they're meant to be preached rather than just spoken (preaching is almost like singing, and you can think of the repetition like a song's refrain), but in this case it also makes sense from an oratorical perspective. The aforementioned "LORD" is frequently followed with "thy God, " driving into the brains of the assembled the understanding that this deity is that which they now owe their faith to. We also have our very first sighting of anaphora, or the repetition of a word or set of words at the beginning of successive sentences, at the beginning and end in the form of "Thou shalt. " Here's a pro tip about writing or speaking that if you don't already know, you've definitely subconsciously noticed: humans, love patterns. Our brains are drawn inexorably to them like moths to a candle. It's why we enjoy puzzles so much, and why images like a row of perfectly parked cars with one a couple feet askew bother most of us so much. We are lulled into a kind of attentive tranquility by repetition--to
How much greater is his faith that believe and has not seen. God's word is true. Regardless what you find. You can't pick and choice from the bible, what you want to believe. Either you believe all of bible or believe none of it. God said it so it happened. What worth is your faith if it all subject on what you find. YHWH is Great! He used ONLY ONE man to take his people from Egypt,and only ONE man to discover all those remains untouched. And only One man, His Son to Save human soul. Allelujah.
Saudi will protect that mountain because they believe prophet moses musa really existed and that event did happen. THE BESSTTT. Patterns of evidence the red sea miracle watch full length english. Thanks. I replied before I saw this post. Watching in late April, 2019. This is so incredibly amazing and wonderful that we get to see it through someone elses eyes. Praise our awesome God. Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length trailer.
I laughed at how atheists gets offended by real evidence of the Bible just like presented in this video. I also love how these atheists awaits for their hell of fire on their next life. I also love how Moses and God cleaned up the wicked on slavery times and atheists gets angry on the bible just because their idol pharaoh was engulfed by giant waves of sea then went straight down to the hell of fire. Even without evidence. I can tell Bible is telling the truth because everyone doesn't want to be slaved and righteous people will always end up getting saved by God again and again in all generations anytime and anywhere, no matter where it would happen. And also, the same for wicked die and die again in all generations anytime and anywhere, no matter where it would happen and no matter what era they are in, the hell of fire awaits them.
Israel Finkelstein and other so called experts can't dig the dating. In a way hillarious but also tragic. It is noteworthy that the ORIGINAL Hebrew actually calls the body of water the Reed Sea or more properly the Sea of Reeds and NOT the Red Sea. Egypt had much to say in their literature fables about the crossing of the field (wadi) of reeds and is well worthy of both research and discussion as it relates to the Exodus. Patterns of Evidence: The Red Sea Miracle Watch Full lengths. Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length film.
Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length song. Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length 2016. They knew how to make biblical movies back then. It is all good. The return of Jesus will give evidence to it all.
Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length episode. I find this fascinating. Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length episodes. Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length season. Bible is not clear where pharaoh died. However Quran gives a deep insight into what happened which has been recently found to be true.
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The evidence is overwhelming! I can't help to feel pain for the world that dont want to recognize there is a God, even when they can find the evidence if they wanted to, in that day there will be no excuses and that thought makes feel pain and sadness for those who make all efforts possible to deny this things and keep all of this concealed to people. I'd like to know if I can find this material in spanish so I can be able to share it with all of my friends.
Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length album. I met Ron Wyatt as a teenager and have been researching these discoveries ever since! It's amazing to see how God led him to discover the real Mount Sinai in Arabia. It's sad to see the vultures out there in the past and still to this day who seek to make a name for themselves. Thankfully those seeking Truth will see thru those efforts. Keep posting videos.
Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length movies. Thank you so very much Tim. all your findings are confirmation of my understandings. but it has been hard over my 80 years to find those who would both believe and study the timelines. Thank you. Wow that is amazing. Patterns of Evidence: The Red Sea Miracle Watch Full lengthy. Worlds best most satisfying, understandable,best decoding and brief story of history i have ever seen thank you. Patterns of evidence: the red sea miracle watch full length full. ? ? Posted by bot 20 minutes ago comment 100% Upvoted Log in or sign up to leave a comment log in sign up Sort by no comments yet Be the first to share what you think! More posts from the blurayReleases community Continue browsing in r/blurayReleases r/blurayReleases Blu-ray Releases 5 Members 9 Online Created Jan 14, 2020 Restricted help Reddit App Reddit coins Reddit premium Reddit gifts Communities Top Posts Topics about careers press advertise blog Terms Content policy Privacy policy Mod policy Reddit Inc © 2020. All rights reserved.
Logic & Fallacies Copyright © Mathew. All rights reserved The Concise Oxford English Dictionary defines logic as "the science of reasoning, proof, thinking, or inference. " Logic will let you analyze an argument or a piece of reasoning, and work out whether it is likely to be correct or not. You don't need to know logic to argue, of course; but if you know even a little, you'll find it easier to spot invalid arguments. There are many kinds of logic, such as fuzzy logic and constructive logic; they have different rules, and different strengths and weaknesses. This document discusses simple Boolean logic, because it's commonplace and relatively easy to understand. When people talk about something being 'logical', they usually mean the type of logic described here. What Logic Isn't First, logical reasoning is not an absolute law that governs the universe. Many times in the past, people have concluded that because something is logically impossible (given the science of the day), it must be impossible, period. It was also believed at one time that Euclidean geometry was a universal law; it is, after all, logically consistent. Again, we now know that the rules of Euclidean geometry aren't universal. Second, logic is not a set of rules that govern human behavior. Humans may have logically conflicting goals. For example: John wishes to speak to whoever is in charge. The person in charge is Steve. Therefore John wishes to speak to Steve. Unfortunately, John may have a conflicting goal of avoiding Steve, meaning that the reasoned answer may be inapplicable to real life. This document only explains how to use logic; you must decide whether logic is the right tool for the job. There are other ways to communicate, discuss and debate. Arguments An argument is, to quote the Monty Python sketch, "a connected series of statements to establish a definite proposition. " Many types of argument exist. Deductive Arguments Generally deductive arguments are viewed as the most precise and the most persuasive; they provide conclusive proof of their conclusion, and are either valid or invalid. Deductive arguments have three stages: premises, inference, and conclusion. Stage One: Proposition A proposition is a statement that is either true or false. The proposition is the meaning of the statement, not the precise arrangement of words used to convey that meaning. For example, "There exists an even prime number greater than two" is a proposition. (A false one, in this case. ) "An even prime number greater than two exists" is the same proposition, re-worded. Unfortunately, it's very easy to unintentionally change the meaning of a statement by rephrasing it. It's generally safer to consider the wording of a proposition as significant. It's possible to use formal linguistics to analyze and re-phrase a statement without changing its meaning, but how to do so is outside the scope of this document. Stage Two: Premises A deductive argument always requires a number of core assumptions. These are called premises, and are the assumptions the argument is built on; or to look at it another way, the reasons for accepting the argument. Premises are only premises in the context of a particular argument; they might be conclusions in other arguments. You should always state the premises of the argument explicitly; this is the principle of "audiatur et altera pars. " Failing to state your assumptions is often viewed as suspicious, and will likely reduce the acceptance of your argument. The premises of an argument are often introduced with words such as "Assume... ", "Since... ", "Obviously... " and "Because... ". It's a good idea to get your opponent to agree with the premises of your argument before proceeding further. The word "obviously" is also often viewed with suspicion. It occasionally gets used to persuade people to accept false statements, rather than admit that they don't understand why something is 'obvious'. So don't be afraid to question statements which people tell you are 'obvious' -- when you've heard the explanation you can always say something like "You're right, now that I think about it that way, it is obvious. " Stage Three: Inference Once the premises have been agreed upon, the argument proceeds via a step-by-step process called inference. In inference, you start with one or more propositions which have been accepted; you then use those propositions to arrive at a new proposition. If the inference is valid, that proposition should also be accepted. You can use the new proposition for inference later on. So initially, you can only infer things from the premises of the argument, but as the argument proceeds, the number of statements available for inference increases. There are various kinds of valid inference - and also some invalid kinds, which we'll look at later in this document. Inference steps are often identified by phrases like "therefore... " or "plies that... " Stage Four: Conclusion Hopefully you will arrive at a proposition that is the conclusion of the argument - the result you are trying to prove. The conclusion is the result of the final step of inference. It's only a conclusion in the context of a particular argument; it could be a premise or assumption in another argument. The conclusion is said to be affirmed on the basis of the premises, and the inferences from them. This is a subtle point that deserves further explanation. Implication in detail Clearly you can build a valid argument from true premises, and arrive at a true conclusion. You can also build a valid argument from false premises, and arrive at a false conclusion. The tricky part is that you can start with false premises, proceed via valid inference, and reach a true conclusion. For example: Premise: All fish live in the ocean Premise: Sea otters are fish Conclusion: Therefore sea otters live in the ocean There's one thing you can't do, though: start from true premises, proceed via valid deductive inference, and reach a false conclusion. We can summarize these results as a "truth-table" for implication. Premise Premise Inference Conclusion False False Valid True or False True True Invalid False True True Valid True If the premises are false and the inference valid, the conclusion can be true or false. (Line 1) ?If the premises are true and the conclusion false, the inference must be invalid. (Line 2) ?If the premises are true and the inference valid, the conclusion must be true. (Line 3) So the fact that an argument is valid doesn't necessarily mean that its conclusion holds -- it may have started from false premises. If an argument is valid, and in addition it started from true premises, then it is called a sound argument. A sound argument must arrive at a true conclusion. Example argument Here's an example of an argument which is valid, and which may or may not be sound: Premise: Every event has a cause Premise: The universe has a beginning Premise: All beginnings involve an event Inference: This implies that the beginning of the universe involved an event Inference: Therefore the beginning of the universe had a cause Conclusion: The universe had a cause The proposition in line 4 is inferred from lines 2 and 3. Line 1 is then used, with the proposition derived in line 4, to infer a new proposition in line 5. The result of the inference in line 5 is then re-stated (in slightly simplified form) as the conclusion. Spotting arguments Spotting an argument is harder than spotting premises or a conclusion. Lots of people shower their writing with assertions, without ever producing anything you might reasonably call an argument. Sometimes arguments don't follow the pattern described above. For example, people may state their conclusions first, and then justify them afterward. This is valid, but it can be a little confusing. To make the situation worse, some statements look like arguments but aren't. For example: "If the Bible is accurate, Jesus must either have been insane an evil liar, or the Son of God. " That's not an argument; it's a conditional statement. It doesn't state the premises necessary to support its conclusion, and even if you add those assertions it suffers from a number of other flaws which are described in more detail in the Atheist Arguments document. An argument is also not the same as an explanation. Suppose that you are trying to argue that Albert Einstein believed in God, and say: "Einstein made his famous statement 'God does not play dice' because of his belief in God. " That may look like a relevant argument, but it's not; it's an explanation of Einstein's statement. To see this, remember that a statement of the form "X because Y, " can be re-phrased as an equivalent statement, of the form "Y therefore X. " Doing so gives us: "Einstein believed in God, therefore he made his famous statement 'God does not play dice'. " Now it's clear that the statement, which looked like an argument, is actually assuming the result that it is supposed to be proving in order to explain the Einstein quote. Furthermore, Einstein did not believe in a personal God concerned with human affairs -- again, see the Atheist Arguments document. Fallacies There are a number of common pitfalls to avoid when constructing a deductive argument; they're known as fallacies. In everyday English, we refer to many kinds of mistaken beliefs as fallacies; but in logic, the term has a more specific meaning: a fallacy is a technical flaw that makes an argument unsound or invalid. You can criticize more than just the soundness of an argument. Arguments are almost always presented with some specific purpose in mind -- and the intent of the argument may also be worthy of criticism. Arguments that contain fallacies are described as fallacious. They often appear valid and convincing; sometimes only close inspection reveals the logical flaw. Below is a list of some common fallacies a
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