As Jan points out, he believes it just happens by magic.
Liar Liar, pants on fire!
See how they run for shelter, and lie through their teeth, so they can maintain their delusion.
Jan.
As Jan points out, he believes it just happens by magic.
https://www.quora.com/qemail/track_...766073&stories=4104077436&uid=LGxX9t21OZT&v=0Interesting. I'll look for that study. As an agnostic, that's the result I would have expected. It would be interesting to know how devout the people doing the praying were.
But this still isn't my question. I want to know how it is supposed to work according to those who believe it works. I can't get a straight answer to that.
I recently received an email from a relative saying that he was praying for me (to get well). It got me thinking. Will his prayers affect my prognosis? If so, how? Will god be more likely to speed my healing process because someone prayed for me? If I had more people praying for me, would I get better more quickly? If so, isn't the system rigged? What about people who have fewer or no people to pray for them?
And if prayer will not affect god's behavior, then what's the point?
Thanks, BlueSky, for the thoughtful reply. (I was about to abbreviate your name, but, well, ...)When our requests line up with what God wants or likes, He is more likely to reply. He has a plan, and is willing to help in fruition of this plan. He does not answer always the way we want, but he does answer. Even a non answer is an answer, when the totality of scripture is consider. I’ve seen this happen more times than I can count. The key is to know his will is from scripture. That’s the starting point. If we don’t know scripture we don’t know his will or the big picture is. Scripture is his message to us.
No. (And, in some studies the prayed-for actually got worse).Does B actually get better
Thanks, BlueSky, for the thoughtful reply. (I was about to abbreviate your name, but, well, ...)
My question is not about whether god answers prayer, but if prayer works. Let me see if I can clarify.
I am specifically and exclusively asking about prayer by one person for the benefit of another. If Person A prays that Person B will get better, what happens? Does B actually get better and, if so, how does that work?
Most (all?) of your examples appear to be about a person praying for themselves -- that is, for something that they want for themselves. I am not interested in that. Can you shed any light on the situation above where A prays for B.
Yes, the reality is, we always don’t get want we want. God sees the big picture. He works every out in the end for those who love him, and sometimes this does not align with what we want. Same idea with kids, they ask, but we see the big picture.No. (And, in some studies the prayed-for actually got worse).
Imagine if you worked in a major company and were VERY close to the CEO.
One day, you asked him or her to help another employee with something. If the CEO liked you very much, they would be more inclined to do what you asked, if it was within their power to do so, and even more so, if it aligned with the companies mission. Make sense?
Same idea with God.
No, you answered with magic. Look:Liar Liar, pants on fire!
See how they run for shelter, and lie through their teeth, so they can maintain their delusion.
... how do you believe it works?
Because God allows it to
I would appreciate it if people would not attack and belittle the answers from those who believe. I am not interested in proving anyone right or wrong. I just want to understand how those who believe see it. If those of us who do not believe belittle those who do, it will be much harder for them to participate in the discussion.So basically it works via selection bias, and through unfalsifiable processes... if it works, that's evidence of prayer working... if it doesn't then that's God seeing the big picture that we can't see?
Well, this is a science forum. It is our right and responsibility to call out flawed logic, should we encounter it. Unfalsifiability is a keystone of rational analysis.I would appreciate it if people would not attack and belittle the answers from those who believe.
A couple of points:Well, this is a science forum. It is our right and responsibility to call out flawed logic, should we encounter it. Unfalsifiability is a keystone of rational analysis.
Yes, I can, and I just did. Besides, you did not answer "in kind". BlueSky's comments seemed sincere to me and he never once attacked or belittled atheists or even religion haters. I believe he was trying his best to answer my questions. I sincerely hope that you have not thrown a monkey wrench into the works.I grant that may not be the kind of answer that's useful to you, but you can't fault people on a science discussion forum for answering in-kind.
Jennifer asked how it works. Your response contains no how whatever; it's simply because.
That's magical. The fact that you attribute magical activity to God makes it no less magical.
What you would have needed to do, Jan, to address Jennifer's question, is describe the mechanism by which God hears prayers and decides how to dole out fixes.
Which ones?
What criteria?
How soon? etc.
That's what she's after.
But you don't have those answers, as you admitted.
What you would have needed to do, Jan, to address Jennifer's question, is describe the mechanism by which God hears prayers and decides how to dole out fixes. Which ones? What criteria? How soon? etc. That's what she's after.
But you don't have those answers, as you admitted.
Other than Jan, where have I done this? I'm not deliberately trying to derail the thread.
- There is a big difference between asking questions and belittling. This is my thread. If you want to belittle what people believe, do it somewhere else.
The question was "how does it work". Your answer was "because it does." That's not a "how" answer; that's magic.How did I answer with, “magic”
Indeed. Your questions are judgemental - and biased - to believers like yourself: "Do you accept God?" etc. You're preaching, not discussing.I think her interest in prayer, and God are suspect, or she would gladly answer my questions
BTW, not germane to the discussion, but Jan self-identifies as a he.I originally thought Jan was sincere and had something useful to offer, but since her first post, she has gone completely off the rails.