Lion IRC
Contributor
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2016
- Messages
- 5,138
- Basic Beliefs
- Biblical theist
Pro-lifer, Christian apologist, former skeptic, philosopher.
...shared a birthday with Richard Dawkins (26th March)
Died 19th May, very soon after having being diagnosed with sarcoma.
Ravi Zacharias' great rhetorical method was to use his opponents own method of reasoning against them. (Technically, an ad hominem argument, albeit NOT a formal logical fallacy.) He also delivered the standard Christian/theist apologetic arguments with a lot more human emotion and passion which made him a popular apologist rather than a technical/intellectual apologist.
I liked him. But sadly, on the atheosphere, internet atheists seemed to fixate, not on his philosophical arguments, but rather his personal life. (Whether he should or shouldnt have called himself a PhD. Whether he did or didnt have an inappropriate relationship with a woman.)
Frederick Antony Ravi Kumar Zacharias. A man who rose from obscurity thanks in large part to the New Atheist movement. If it wasn't for Dawkins, Hitchens, Harris and Dennett, I probably never would have heard of him.
The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few...
...shared a birthday with Richard Dawkins (26th March)
Died 19th May, very soon after having being diagnosed with sarcoma.
Ravi Zacharias' great rhetorical method was to use his opponents own method of reasoning against them. (Technically, an ad hominem argument, albeit NOT a formal logical fallacy.) He also delivered the standard Christian/theist apologetic arguments with a lot more human emotion and passion which made him a popular apologist rather than a technical/intellectual apologist.
I liked him. But sadly, on the atheosphere, internet atheists seemed to fixate, not on his philosophical arguments, but rather his personal life. (Whether he should or shouldnt have called himself a PhD. Whether he did or didnt have an inappropriate relationship with a woman.)
Frederick Antony Ravi Kumar Zacharias. A man who rose from obscurity thanks in large part to the New Atheist movement. If it wasn't for Dawkins, Hitchens, Harris and Dennett, I probably never would have heard of him.
The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few...
...and you would need to engage in philosophical analysis to determine whether philosophy was or wasn't useful in addressing existential 'why' questions. And you would be left asking Mr Hawking philosophical questions like 'why' he thinks philosophy is dead.
Christian apologist Ravi Zacharias uses a lovely rhetorical device to demolish post-modern, relativism. He presents an anecdote about how he and a Hindu are debating absolute truths and the superiority of Eastern religions which embrace many paths rather than a "Jesus Only" path.
Zacharias insists he is right. His opponent says no you're not. Zacharias sticks to his guns. His opponent becomes even more adamant. They continue at loggerheads. Then his opponent gradually starts to see why the "many paths" philosophy is self-refuting.
"...even a Hindu looks both ways before crossing the road."