Hey Hey Yahweh, How Many Kids ...

19 comments
The number of children dying in the name of Jesus just keeps going up. As documented in multiple different cases here on DC, there is simply no reliable way for a believer to differentiate rationality from irrationality within the mindset of religion.

Yet it keeps happening over and over. The most recent case is the worst of the lot, for it appears this child wasn't even ill. He was starved to death at the age of 1 because he refused to say "Amen" after meals.

After denying Javon Thompson food and water for two days because he wouldn't say "Amen" after meals, the one-year-old's caretakers waited for a divine sign that their message had been heard: a resurrection.

For more than a week, police say in charging documents describing the scene, the child's lifeless body lay in the back room of an apartment. Queen Antoinette, the 40-year-old leader of a group that called itself 1 Mind Ministries, brought in her followers and told them to pray. God, she said, would raise Javon from the dead.

Instead, Javon's body began to decompose.

The boy's mother, 21-year-old Ria Ramkissoon, and four other people authorities say are members of the group face first-degree murder charges in his death. But Ramkissoon's mother and attorney say that she was brainwashed by a cult and acted only at the group leader's will


You can read the whole awful story for yourself.

The questions I continue to have for believers:

1. What test should "rational Christians" use to differentiate texts in the Bible that should be taken figuratively from texts in the Bible that should be taken literally?

2. How are believers to use their faith? Should they expect supernatural intervention from God on their behalf during their lives, or is this also figurative?

3. At what point can we differentiate rational religion from child abuse and murder? For example, was Abraham's sacrifice of Isaac good, or was it torture? If a modern parent did this to a child, would we allow that child to stay with that parent?

The Rise and Fall of Todd Bentley

15 comments
On Friday, August 15, the Board of Directors of Fresh Fire Ministries issued a press release, announcing:
We wish to acknowledge, however, that since our last statement from the Fresh Fire Board of Directors, we have discovered new information revealing that Todd Bentley has entered into an unhealthy relationship on an emotional level with a female member of his staff. In light of this new information and in consultation with his leaders and advisors, Todd Bentley has agreed to step down from his position on the Board of Directors and to refrain from all public ministry for a season to receive counsel in his personal life.
For the past couple weeks, there had been controversy and consternation at a previous announcement that Todd Bentley, a Canadian faith healer who had been on a rocket ride to worldwide fame and acclaim in Pentecostal circles for leading the "Lakeland Revival", was official separating from his wife Shonnah under the guidelines provided for by Canadian Law. With the announcement that "Brother Todd" had been involved in an "unhealthy relationship" with another woman, and was stepping down from public ministry, Bentley's start had crashed to earth even faster than it had risen.

Brother Todd, Revivalist Healer
And risen it had. When Bentley showed up in Lakeland, Florida in the first week of April this year, he had travel plans to return at the end of that same week. As it turned out, Brother Todd would stay in Lakeland for the better part of six months, leading a revival that would draw hundreds of thousands to Florida and spawn satellite revivals in places as far away as England and South Africa. Earlier revivals like the Toronto Blessing and the Pensacola Outpouring of the early-mid 1990s did not exploit the Internet; the Lakeland revival was not just daily services with 10,000 attendees to witness "healings" and the "outpouring of the spirit", it was streamed to the world, with Pentecostals all over the planet logging into watch, chat, and get "healed" right through their cable modems.


After a long session of worship music, Brother Todd would get up, and the "healings" would begin. Bentley's signature move was a shout of "Bam!", as he pushed/hit/kicked the faithful into a state of spiritual ecstasy, leaving the anointed writhing on the floor in convulsions, or simply catatonic, "slain in the spirit", in the language of the Pentecostal (watch this video, for example).

Aching joints were miraculously healed. Intestinal problems disappeared. Wheelchair-bound people were miraculously able to walk, or at least not fall down as they stood on the stage with the assistance of a couple fellow believers on either elbow. Cerebral palsy, ruptured discs, spinal problems, all healed, the Revivalists claimed, through the anointing of Todd Bentley, and the outpouring of the spirit he was presiding over in Lakeland (see example report from CBN here from the height of the revival frenzy).

The miracles accumulated and multiplied, and by late June and July, reports where making their way back to Lakeland that Todd's work had unleashed the ultimate work of the spirit -- the raising of the dead (see, for example, this video, this video, or this video ). Brother Todd eventually claimed more than a dozen cases of people being raised from the dead as part of the revival he led. At its peak, the throng exalted in reports like this from Bentley, reading a letter recounting one such resurrection (from this video ):

"My dear brother died, so the medical world thought yesterday. We requested at our all-night wake that GodTV would be on, the revival would be on. And we declared that our brother would not be embalmed. At 2:19 am my brother began to stir in his coffin. My brother sat up in the coffin, praising God and Reverend Todd Bentley. My dear brother all day has been telling us about his journey to heaven and how he thought he would never come back. He thought he would never come back here on the earth to be with us, but then he heard our beloved Reverend Todd and his voice pulling his spirit out of heaven. All of us at the funeral home began screaming and shouting fro more fire. Thank God for the revival on GodTV."

Brother Todd, False Prophet
For all the heady events in Lakeland, the revival was not without its critics within the church. Christian cessationists like the Calvinist bloggers over at TeamPyro have rejected the legitimacy of Bentley and his revival from the outset. Other mainstream Christian continualists like John Piper have now taken time to speak out against the Lakeland Revival, but as Frank Turk notes at TeamPyro, only after the fact, in light of Bentley's fall from grace due to his marital infidelity. How come frauds like Bentley cannot be identified and decried before they've duped tens of thousands of believers and brought shame, ridicule and cynicism to the faith? With Bentley's revelation of his betrayal of his wife and the impending end of their marriage as a result, even many of the once-fervent revivalists have now concluded that Bentley was a fraud all along (see this thread at the Charisma magazine forums, for example). While Bentley's star was on the rise, the gullible hopped on the bus to Florida and the rest of Christianity just watched, silent for the most part, managing a frustrated frown here and there.

It's no mystery why people like Todd Bentley can manage to rise to prominence and world-wide notoriety, despite the frustrations of Christian cessationist "skeptics" like Frank Turk. It's hard for a man with a glass worldview to throw stones, after all. Some forms of Christianity are much more level-headed, evidence-based and skeptical then others, but fundamentally, the epistemology of even the most skeptical Christian makes that term an oxymoron, useful only for gauging various degrees of credulity in a group that is profoundly credulous at its base.

I was a 'healing skeptic' when I was a Christian. Over the years, at many points where I expressed my skepticism about claims of miraculous healings, proponents of the miracles regularly pointed out that I wasn't in a position to say what God had or had not done in healing Aunt Martha, and moreover, if it was divine healing, by denying the miracle, I was denying the power of the Holy Spirit -- a kind of non sequitur as arguments go, and a rather transparent ploy to bring the fear of blasphemy on the doubter. But despite these problems, the core of their retort was a powerful one: Christianity is a subjective discipline, and one Christian cannot appeal to objective analysis of another without undermining their own claims to faith and knowledge of God. Ultimately, I appealed to revelation and supernatural intervention -- externally unverifiable intervention -- as the justification for my belief. I could point to some historical testimonies in scripture and claims about the lives of Christ and his followers, and some intuitive senses I had about God's existence as a brute fact, but without the appeal to my perception of the Holy Spirit's intervention in my life, my basis for belief could not hold up to scrutiny.

Defenseless Against Frauds
Such are the wages of a worldview based on the primacy of subjective experience. Christians who are skeptical of claims like those made by Todd Bentley and friends have to resort to the same kinds of defense for our own claims as Brother Todd does for his. Despite the differences I, or Frank Turk, or John Piper might have had with Bentley, we all embrace the same worldview, and see reality as subject to the magical, unpredictable, and impassible nature of God. For Christian's this is God's universe, and exegetical quibbles aside, God can do anything he wants and does what he pleases. If God wants to miraculously transform some teeth in a revivalist's mouth into gold (see here ) while just a couple miles away, young children languish in St. Joseph's children's hospital, suffering from brain tumors and all manner of other agonies, well, God can do what he wills, after all. To be a Christian is to give up the right to ask why, for many important questions.

With Bentley's fall from grace, people are disowning him right and left, and making much of the misgivings and doubts they had all along, even if they weren't announced or articulated at the time. Christian critics from the beginning, though, can complain all they'd like, and suppose they are "prophets" themselves of a kind, full of "discernment" regarding Bentley. When pressed, however, their skeptical verdicts ended betraying their debt to the stolen concepts of skepticism and evidence-based analysis, which, if applied consistently, debunk them as thoroughly as they debunk Brother Todd. Cessationism is a way to insulate and isolate their own credulity, to stuff all the magic back into the first century, reducing the footprint of exposure to critical analysis. Of course God doesn't shower God dust, miraculously given, down on the worshippers at Ignited Church! But of course the disciples could heal at will! Brother Todd can't do what the disciples did in the book of Acts, because that was then, and this is now.

All of which is a bit of uncomfortable special pleading. Bentley may be laid low for now, but Benny Hinn carries on, flitting hither and yon across the planet on his private jet working miracles and healing in the name of Jesus, as do many others, even if some of them have to console themselves with a first class seat on a commercial flight rather than the pampered leathers and chrome of Hinn's Gulfstream. The rest of Christianity is powerless to mount any substantial critique of Bentley, Hinn, et al. There can be no "Christian James Randi", that exposes Brother Todd, because Christianity, even the "skeptical" kind, is predicated on credulity and subjectivity. Frank Turk wonders how Brother Todd can get away with being such a hypocrite, and shows his own hypocrisy in doing so. This is why so much BS is always being tolerated and ignored in Christendom. It's an ideology built on credulity toward fantastic, unbelievable claims, even for the most conservative believer.

Gen. 2:16-3:24: Adam and Eve Were Mentally Incompetent

97 comments
This an article to show that Adam and eve did not know the difference between good and evil before they ate the fruit of the tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil therefore could not understand the consequences of what they were doing. It uses a timeline and a matrix for analysis. Points in time are defined and used to document the point along a timeline where one event occurred in relation to another. It concludes that since Adam and Eve were missing a vital element in decision making, were uneducated, had no life experience to speak of and had no reason not to trust anyone, they were mentally incompetent to be held accountable for disobeying God and causing the punishments of Sin and Judgment to be given to every human thereafter.

Another interpretation of "Fall of Man" story is that the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil is really the tree of all knowledge where the terms Good and Evil are used as a merism ("bookends" or "upper and lower limits") to express a range, in the same manner as the term "young and old". This is considered a common usage in Biblical Poetry. I don't use this interpretation for this document but it wouldn't change the conclusion anyway.

Keep in mind when you read this, that since Adam and Eves situation is counter-intuitive, meaning that no-one but a person with a mental handicap or a child knows what it is like not to understand the difference between good and evil. It may be hard to avoid slipping into a "normal" frame of reference when discussing their state of mind before they ate the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil (K, G & E)

TIMELINE OF EVENTS
GENESIS 2:16
Time 01 - Warning about the Tree of G&E
Here is where people become accountable for knowing about the tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. At this point they still do not know the difference between good and evil and have never had any other relationships with anyone else except God whom they trust completely. God was being ambiguous and therefore deceptive by saying "you will surely die". He wasn't exercising the principle of clarity in communication.

16 And the LORD God commanded the man, "You are free to eat from any tree in the garden;
17 but you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat of it you will surely die."

T02 - God decides to make a helper for Adam from the animals
18 The LORD God said, "It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper suitable for him."

T03 - Adam names the animals and tries to pick a helper
19 Now the LORD God had formed out of the ground all the beasts of the field and all the birds of the air. He brought them to the man to see what he would name them; and whatever the man called each living creature, that was its name.
20 So the man gave names to all the livestock, the birds of the air and all the beasts of the field.
But for Adam no suitable helper was found.

T04 - Adam did not choose a helper so God decides to make one for him from his rib, effectively making him the first mother.
21 So the LORD God caused the man to fall into a deep sleep; and while he was sleeping, he took one of the man's ribs and closed up the place with flesh.
22 Then the LORD God made a woman from the rib he had taken out of the man, and he brought her to the man.
23 The man said,
"This is now bone of my bones
and flesh of my flesh;
she shall be called 'woman,'
for she was taken out of man."
24 For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and they will become one flesh.

T05 - They were naked and felt no shame.
25 The man and his wife were both naked, and they felt no shame.

GENESIS 3: THE FALL OF MAN

T06 - Eves first experience with someone she shouldn't trust.
Eve is now introduced to her first experience with someone whose intent may be to decieve her and possibly manipulate her, and she doesn't know the difference between Good and Evil. There was evidently no warning about the snake. There are several default reasoning schemes that people commonly use and seem to present naturally. It takes education and experience to be able to overcome these. Presumably, since Eve and Adam were human, uneducated and with no life experience to speak of, they were susceptible to most if not all of these. A partial list of Cognitive Bias and Factors of Persuasion relevant to Adam and Eves situation taken from one of my other articles follows.
- People like stories and are willing to give the teller of the story the benefit of the doubt about the truth of it.
- People are more likely to believe a story if it comes from someone they like.
- People are more likely to believe a story if it fits with what they already believe or want to believe.
- People look for confirmation of what they already believe and disregard things that contradict.
- People are more likely to believe a story if it comes from an authority.

1 Now the serpent was more crafty than any of the wild animals the LORD God had made. He said to the woman, "Did God really say, 'You must not eat from any tree in the garden'?"
2 The woman said to the serpent, "We may eat fruit from the trees in the garden,
3 but God did say, 'You must not eat fruit from the tree that is in the middle of the garden, and you must not touch it, or you will die.' "
4 "You will not surely die," the serpent said to the woman.
5 "For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil." Eve took this as new valid information and acted on it. According to the context of the story, it should not be possible to know that disobeying God was Evil. She had no concept of Good or Evil.

The snake told the truth. Even if his intent was to get Eve and Adam to disobey god, he still exercised the principle of clarity better than God did. And Eve did not have any experience with "Bad people" or know the difference between "good and evil" people. Eve gave the snake the benefit of the the doubt, she evidently did not dislike him, what he said fit what she wanted to believe and she undoubtedly took it to be authoritative about the Tree. She exercised her naturally occurring reasoning schemes.

T07 - They eat the fruit.
Neither Eve or Adam had any wisdom or knowledge of good and evil at this point, she trusted the snake because she did not have any reason not to. There is no indication that they had any idea about lying. Adam and Eve both had built in cognitive biases that come into play here, such as trusting what others say, and Desire was apparently built into Eve as described in Gen. 3:6.

6 When the woman saw that the fruit of the tree was good for food and pleasing to the eye, and also desirable for gaining wisdom, she took some and ate it. She also gave some to her husband, who was with her, and he ate it. The bible says, through inference, that she was missing wisdom. She wanted to gain wisdom.
7 Then the eyes of both of them were opened, and they realized they were naked; so they sewed fig leaves together and made coverings for themselves.

T08 - God calls for Adam and Eve to come out of hiding
8 Then the man and his wife heard the sound of the LORD God as he was walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and they hid from the LORD God among the trees of the garden.
9 But the LORD God called to the man, "Where are you?"
10 He answered, "I heard you in the garden, and I was afraid because I was naked; so I hid."
11 And he said, "Who told you that you were naked? Have you eaten from the tree that I commanded you not to eat from?"
12 The man said, "The woman you put here with me—she gave me some fruit from the tree, and I ate it."

Because it was likely that he would trust her.

13 Then the LORD God said to the woman, "What is this you have done?"
The woman said, "The serpent deceived me, and I ate."

Because it was likely that given the opportunity, this would happen.

T09 - God distributes the punishment establishing the origins and explanations of several things
14 So the LORD God said to the serpent, "Because you have done this,
...OMITTED FOR BREVITY...
15 And I will put enmity
...OMITTED FOR BREVITY...
16 To the woman he said,
...OMITTED FOR BREVITY...
17 To Adam he said, "Because you listened to your wife and ate from the tree about which I commanded you, 'You must not eat of it,'
...OMITTED FOR BREVITY...
18 It will produce thorns and thistles for you,
...OMITTED FOR BREVITY...
19 By the sweat of your brow
...OMITTED FOR BREVITY...

T10 - Adam names Eve
20 Adam named his wife Eve, because she would become the mother of all the living.

T11 - God makes clothes for them
21 The LORD God made garments of skin for Adam and his wife and clothed them.

T12 - God realizes the fact the Adam might eat the fruit of the Tree of Life
22 And the LORD God said, "The man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil. He must not be allowed to reach out his hand and take also from
the tree of life and eat, and live forever."

T13 - Banishment
23 So the LORD God banished him from the Garden of Eden to work the ground from which he had been taken.

T14 - Closes Eden off
24 After he drove the man out, he placed on the east side of the Garden of Eden cherubim and a flaming sword flashing back and forth to guard the way to the tree of life.

HYPOTHESIS MATRIX
This is a Hypothesis matrix testing the hypothesis that Adam and Eve didn't know the difference between Good and Evil when they disobeyed God. The data are labeled with a "C" for consistent with the hypothesis, "A" for Ambiguous (it doesn't make a difference but is worth mentioning), and "I" for Inconsistent. The hypothesis that is least inconsistent with the data is the better hypothesis.
Data Didn't Know Did know
God is all knowing A A
God is all powerful A A
T01 Gen. 2:16 Adam can eat the fruit of the Tree of Life, but he doesn't. Evidently he is not interested in it or maybe he doesn't realize what it means. God may have known that he wouldn't eat it although what God says at T12 in 2:22 contradicts his supposed omniscience. C I
T01 Gen. 2:17 Commands the man not to eat the fruit of the Tree of K, G&E or he will surely die, but neglected to tell him the truth which is that he will know the difference between good and evil and as a result will realize that he is naked C I
Until man eats the fruit he will not know the difference between good and evil C I
T02 Gen. 2:18 Adam was alone and has never had any experience with anyone he shouldn't trust C I
T06 Gen. 3:4-5 The snake could not have known the difference between good and evil unless it had acquired it from somewhere. If it did, then it had the advantage over Eve. If it didn't know the difference between good and evil then it did nothing wrong by telling Eve the truth. In any case It was smarter than Eve because it knew that she would not literally die. The serpent clearly described what would happen with the Tree of K, G&E better than God did. This is where Eve got the truth about the tree. C I
T07 Gen. 3:6 Eve trusted the serpent, evidently because she didn't know not too, she didn't know that dying was bad, or that disobeying god was bad. The desire was built into her and Humans have or acquire cognitive biases that must be unlearned. C I
T07 Gen. 3:7 After they ate the fruit, their eyes were opened and they knew that being naked was bad. This is a cultural rule, not a natural one. C I

The Hypothesis that "Adam and Eve did not know the difference between a good and an evil act" is the least inconsistent with the data, therefore, I conclude that they were not at fault. They were following the natural cognitive processes that they were born with (untempered by education), and when prompted by a new agent, they innocently did what it suggested. To suggest that Adam and Eve were somehow immune from cognitive biases that have been shown to be commonly naturally occurring in humans is pure speculation. Since it has been demonstrated by the timeline that Adam and Eve were missing a vital element in decision making, were uneducated, had no life experience to speak of and had no reason not to trust anyone, they were mentally incompetent to be held accountable for disobeying God and causing the punishments of Sin and Judgment to be given to every human thereafter.

Further Reading on Cognitive Biases and Persuasion Principles
The Role of Persuasion and Cognitive Bias In Your Church

Denyse O'Leary: God is Evidently Quite Emotional

10 comments
The wonders of the modern apologetic techniques never quite stop being amusing. In a recent post on her blog, Mindful Hack, Denyse O'Leary discusses a new book by two philosophers. The book, entitled Answering the New Atheists: Dismantling Dawkins' Case Against God is authored by two philosopher cum apologists, Dr. Scott Hahn and Dr. Benjamin Wiker.

The book is certainly not written for a scholarly audience and what Denyse O'Leary takes from it is a delightful twist on the idea of intercessory prayer studies. As readers know I believe intercessory prayer as a concept to be deeply flawed. However, the best studies of intercessory prayer have also found it to be useless, or possibly harmful. The philosophers address this thusly:

The error of the double-blind prayer experiment is that it treats God like some kind of natural cause rather than as a personal, rational Being. In doing so, God is being unjustly subjected to a humiliating attempt to manipulate Him by an experiment. In short, the experiment is an insult, and any rational being, superhuman or not, would treat it as such. That does not, of course, mean that praying for healing itself is an insult; we are speaking only of framing such prayer in the context of a manipulative experiment. (p. 57)

I had to read this three times to be sure that it was actually written out by people who claim to be philosophers, but yep, there it is. Read it again yourself just to make sure you get the gist of it.

My summary: God isn't your monkey. You hurt his feelings when you test him.

I wonder if these fine philosophers, or Ms. O'Leary have read their Bibles. From what I can see of the Bible it's got numerous opportunities for God to have his feelings hurt, but he never seems to. Let's go through some of those times when Yahweh should have felt insulted, although I'm sure this list is not exhaustive.

First, in Exodus we see the story of Moses. God has Moses turn his staff into a snake and turn his hand leprous. Moses shows these signs to the Israelites so that they will believe. Then he does some of the same tricks for Pharoah in Exodus 7:

Yahweh said to Moses and Aaron, "When Pharaoh says to you, 'Perform a miracle,' then say to Aaron, 'Take your staff and throw it down before Pharaoh,' and it will become a snake."

So Moses and Aaron went to Pharaoh and did just as Yahweh commanded. Aaron threw his staff down in front of Pharaoh and his officials, and it became a snake. Pharaoh then summoned wise men and sorcerers, and the Egyptian magicians also did the same things by their secret arts: Each one threw down his staff and it became a snake. But Aaron's staff swallowed up their staffs. Yet Pharaoh's heart became hard and he would not listen to them, just as Yahweh had said.


God's feelings were definitely not hurt during this test of his powers.

Next we get to Elijah and the priests of Baal in 1 Kings 17. Elijah challenges 450 priests to a contest, deliberately hurting God's feelings according to these philosophers. He mocks Baal repeatedly and then has the bull he's going to incinerate doused in water to make the event that much more amazing. Elijah was evidently the Doug Henning of his time. Finally Elijah goes for it:

At the time of sacrifice, the prophet Elijah stepped forward and prayed: "O Yahweh, God of Abraham, Isaac and Israel, let it be known today that you are God in Israel and that I am your servant and have done all these things at your command. Answer me, O Yahweh, answer me, so these people will know that you, O Yahweh, are God, and that you are turning their hearts back again."

Then the fire of Yahweh fell and burned up the sacrifice, the wood, the stones and the soil, and also licked up the water in the trench.

When all the people saw this, they fell prostrate and cried, "Yahweh -he is God! Yahweh -he is God!"


Finally we get to the New Testament. While the NT is littered with stories of miracles proving God's existence or the true discipleship of one or another apostle, the best single "test" of God in the NT from my point of view is the story of Ananias and Saphira in Acts 5. Ananias comes in and gives less than he owes to Peter. Peter tells him that he lied to God and then as if to prove the point, God strikes him dead.

The story gets better when his wife comes in:

About three hours later his wife came in, not knowing what had happened. Peter asked her, "Tell me, is this the price you and Ananias got for the land?"

"Yes," she said, "that is the price."

Peter said to her, "How could you agree to test the Spirit of the Lord? Look! The feet of the men who buried your husband are at the door, and they will carry you out also."

At that moment she fell down at his feet and died. Then the young men came in and, finding her dead, carried her out and buried her beside her husband. Great fear seized the whole church and all who heard about these events.


Yes, evidently in the 1st century CE, when God was tested he struck people dead out of rage. But now, the 21st century, he just gets his feelings hurt and pouts.

Now it is entirely possible that the God that Drs. Hahn and Wiker are defending is not the Jewish or Christian God. If they are not theists however, they would typically not believe in a deity who answers intercessory prayer to start with, and so I think that it is likely the paragraph quoted is indeed a defense of the God of theism. Therefore I think it is simply incoherent to imagine that his nature has changed from the wrathful Yahweh who strikes people dead, burns stones, bulls, water and dirt, and then has wood-snakes eat other wood-snakes. Do they now really believe he has become a pusillanimous, sensitive gentle being who can't be called out without causing him emotional pain?

Thanks Denyse, that one was a blast!

Scot McKnight and Conversion Theory: Why Apostates Leave the Church

12 comments
[Written by John W. Loftus] Evangelical New Testament scholar Dr. Scot McKnight has written a very interesting book on conversion theory, called Finding Faith, Losing Faith: Stories of Conversion and Apostasy (with Hauna Ondrey, one of his “finest students”). Here is my review of it: In this book the authors have written four detailed chapter length studies of people who have converted: 1) away from the church to agnosticism/atheism; 2) away from the synagogue to the church, 3) away from the Catholic church to evangelicalism; and 4) away from evangelicalism to Catholicism. McKnight argues that all conversions go through the same process, and even if none of them are identical, they fall into similar patterns. (p.1). His goal is to describe the conversion process with hopes that the patterns that emerge can be used to explain them, with the further goal that scholars and pastors “will work out the implications of conversion theory in the pastoral context.” (pp. 231-236). He writes: "If mapping conversion theory shows anything…it shows the need for grace, humility, and openness to one another as we listen to and learn from one another’s stories. The sincerity of each convert’s (often opposite) experience underscores the need to learn from one’s another’s experience rather than denounce the other’s experience.” (p. 236) While most of us here at DC describe our leaving the faith as a “deconversion,” (which is the usual nomenclature) McKnight argues instead that leaving the Christian faith follows the same pattern of conversion itself. Deconversion stories are about "leaving from," instead of "coming to," but a deconversion follows the same process as a conversion. He writes: “All conversions are apostasies and all apostasies are therefore conversions." McKnight quotes approvingly of John Barbour in his book, Versions of Deconversion, that there are four lenses with which people see their own conversion stories:
"they doubt or deny the truth of the previous system of beliefs; they criticize the morality of the former life; they express emotional upheaval upon leaving a former faith; and they speak of being rejected by their former community.” (pp. 1-2)
Since he deals with several of the Bloggers here at DC (with some notable exceptions in Dr. Hector Avalos, Joe Holman, and Valerie Tarico) let me focus on this particular chapter of his as an example of what he does in the rest of the book (pp. 7-61). In his first chapter he provides an “anatomy of apostasy,” and he includes most of the recognized apostates and debunkers, including me (who’s story he highlights), Ed Babinski, Ken Daniels, Harry McCall, Charles Templeton, Robert M. Price, Dan Barker, Farrell Till, and many others. McKnight observes there is almost always some sort of crisis for the person. “Each, for a variety of reasons, encountered issues and ideas and experiences that simply shook the faith beyond stability.” “Guilt,” for instance, “drove Christine Wicker, a journalist, who covers the religious scene in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, from the faith (seen in her well-written memoir, God Knows My Heart). For us apostates there was also a crisis of “unnerving intellectual incoherence to the Christian faith," and he quotes me as saying: “I am now an atheist. One major reason why I have become an atheist is because I could not answer the questions I was encountering.” There are five major elements that are combined to cause the adherent to question the viability of his or her faith, McKnight claims. One) Scripture became part of the problem for us. McKnight writes of Kenneth Daniels that “while on the mission field, he became convinced the Bible could not be inerrant or infallible, walked away from the mission field and became an agnostic.” Of Farrell Till, he “became a skeptic and at the heart of his departure from orthodoxy was a critical approach to Scripture.” Of Ed Babinski, whom he said is “an indefatigable recorder of those who have left fundamentalism,” his problem “was the Bible’s record of Jesus’ predictions and Paul’s own expectations that he think did not come true that undid the truthfulness of the Bible. He pursued every angle he thought necessary to support his faith but his doubts could not be satisfied. ‘I became,’ he confesses, ‘disenchanted with Christianity in toto, and became an agnostic with theistic leanings.’” McKnight, who is a conservative himself, seems to lay blame for our rejection of the Bible because we held to “a rigid view of Scripture.” When we “encounter the empirical evidence of the sciences, particularly concerning evolution and the origins as well as development of life as we now know it, a rigid view of Scripture collapses….For some the whole ship sinks.” Two) The empirical realities of science also demolish our faith, he notes. Ed Babinski was “completely devoted to a six-day creation theory” but eventually “became disillusioned with Christianity and the Bible because of the lack of evidence for what was considered so central to the faith – the scientific accuracy of a simplistic theory of creation.” McKnight opines that “a simplistic theory of origins, along with special pleading theories that are designed to explain away that evidence, when combined then with knowledge of the ancient Near East parallels to both the creation accounts and the story of Noah’s flood not infrequently are the collision point for many who leave the orthodox Christian faith.” Three) The behavior of Christians is another factor in our apostacy. McKnight: “For many, the failure of Christians to be transformed by the claimed grace of God and the indwelling power of the Spirit obliterates the truthfulness of the Christian claim.” Robert Price gained an insight while attending a lecture by Harvey Cox, McKnight pens. Price is quoted as saying: “As I looked at the secular students gathered there, I suddenly thought, ‘Listen, is there really that much difference between ‘them’ and ‘us’?’ I had always accepted the qualitative difference between the ‘saved’ and the ‘unsaved.’ Until that moment … Then, in a flash, we were all just people.” Four) The traditional Christian doctrine of hell is another factor. McKnight points out that “belief in hell has led some to contend the Christian faith is inherently unjust and morally repugnant,” such that his judgment leads him to think the Christian doctrine of hell is “far more fundamental to those who leave the faith than is normally recognized.” Then he quotes me as saying: “The whole notion of a punishment after we die is sick and barbaric. The whole concept of hell developed among superstitious and barbaric peoples, and tells us nothing about life after death.” Five) Apostates also reject the God we actually find in the Bible, who is vindictive, hateful, racist, and barbaric--my words. There are other reasons, McKnight admits. There is the problem of religious diversity in which it’s hard to dispute that “one’s faith is more shaped by one’s social location than by one’s personal choice.” Then there is the problem of evil which causes many to leave the faith. Of course, I’m surprised that these last two reasons are not highlighted as reasons in their own right, especially since I highlight them in my book. But at least he mentioned them. Another suggested reason for our defection from the Christian faith comes out of nowhere, with no evidence for it at all, and guided more by McKnight’s theological persuasions than anything else. His next suggestion is not helpful to a scientific investigation of conversion theory, which I take it, is one of his aims—to merely describe the conversion process. His next suggestion is based, not on anything he’s read, but on his “own intuition,” and even admits he “did not find anyone speak in this way.” He furthermore does not find this a factor in any other conversion stories in his other three chapters, which shows his theological biases. He suggests that “the demand put on one’s life by Jesus, by the orthodox faith and by a local church’s expectations can provoke a crisis on the part of the person who wants to go her or his own way. I am suggesting that behind some of the stories is a desire to live as one wants, to break certain moral codes that are experienced as confining, and that were either forgotten when telling the story or were an unacknowledged dimension of the experience.” Indeed, “one might summarize the entire process of leaving the faith as the quest for personal autonomy, freedom and intellectual stability. These factors seem present at some level in nearly all the stories I have studied.” Christian professor Ruth A. Tucker who wrote the book Walking Away From Faith: Unraveling the Mystery of Belief disagrees with this. In a talk to a Grand Rapids, MI, Freethought group (which I have also spoken for) Professor Tucker listed five myths about people who have abandoned their faith (note # 4):
1) "They are angry and rebellious." She found virtually no evidence for this. Rather, people felt sorrow, initially. They experienced pain, not anger. 2) "They can be argued back into faith." Because the person leaving his/her faith has carefully and painstakingly dissected the reasons behind this major worldview change, the Christian who proffers apologetics is more likely to convert into non-belief in such an exchange. 3) "Doubters can find help at Christian colleges and seminaries." This is not seen to be the case. 4) "They abandon their faith so that they can go out and sin freely." Tucker pointed out that too many people who profess faith sin more often than non-believers and that this argument was not a motivational issue in de-converting from faith. 5) "They were never sincere Christians to begin with." She has come across example after example of the most earnest and devout of evangelical, fundamentalist believers who became non-theists. Dan Barker was mentioned as just one of these erstwhile believers.
McKnight goes on to discuss the “advocates,” meaning those who go on to debunk the faith they left. He finds in us an “animus” in the “constant diatribes” of ours, from Charles Templeton’s “white-hot prose” to my whole book, to Harry McCall resorting “to caricature,” or even to Dan Barker, whom he claims has much “less rancor but still finding a need to tell that story in Losing Faith in Faith.” “The ‘anti-rhetoric,’ or the rhetoric that is so negatively against what they formerly believed, is both a characteristic of all kinds of conversion but especially those whose ‘conversion’ is leaving orthodox Christianity. Not all, however, are as white-hot in their antipathy to orthodoxy.” Of course, if he actually read my book, or my posts on DC, he should know I have no rancor towards Christians and that I treat my opponents respectfully. I suspect he feels the sting of our arguments rather than those other conversions he details in the other three chapters because he is simply a Christian believer, and we argue against his faith. McKnight does acknowledge people should not minimize the anguish we apostates have when going through our crisis of faith. It is not an easy process. It is agonizing. Quoting Dan Barker he writes: “It was like tearing my whole frame of reality to pieces, ripping to shreds the fabric of meaning and hope, betraying the values of existence. And it hurt bad. It was like spitting on my mother, or like throwing one of my children out a window. It was sacrilege. All of my bases for thinking and values had to be restructured. Add to that inner conflict the outer conflict of reputation and you have a destabilizing war.” McKnight also sees an interrelationship between us. Ed Babinski’s “fine collection of stories of those who have left the faith demonstrates an interlocking relationship at times – Babinski himself was influenced by William Bagley and by Robert Price while others were influenced by Dan Barker. There is presently, then, a connection for those who are reconsidering their faith, a connection that is filled with folks who have already traveled that path, know its rocks and its cliffs and who can guide the pilgrim away from faith.” The internet is also an important facilitator in our apostasy, McKnight understands. While doubts are not to be expressed publicly in the churches, the internet is another matter entirely…”many find their way to the multitude of sites, like Positive Atheism or Debunking Christianity, where one can hear arguments against the orthodox faith and apologies for alternative systems of thought and meaning." In the end, those of us who walk away from our faith find a sense of relief and independence when we finally decide to leave it all behind us. McKnight tells us that at some point we just had to decide, and sometimes it meant giving up our positions in life to gain the needed relief. He writes: “Harry McCall, a biblical scholar who voluntarily chose to leave Bob Jones University…chose to abandon his faith because ‘Jesus is so obviously a product of human imagination coupled with arbitrary faith that I chose to simply acknowledge the obvious rather than remain religious.”’ Robert M Price is an example of someone who found his relief akin to being “born again”: “I had to swallow hard after twelve years as an evangelical, but almost immediately life began to open up in an exciting way. I felt like a college freshman, thinking through important questions for the first time. The anxiety of doubt had passed into the adventure of discovery. It was like being born again.” McKnight finally recommends Lewis Rambo’s book Understanding Religious Conversion as “required reading for every minister and theologian.” This is a good, well researched book. I liked it very much. In one way it shows that those of us who have converted away from Christianity are not alone when we factor in the many other people who are also being converted to different theological positions. People change their minds, that’s all, and many of us do it.

Calvinist Information Theory, redux

3 comments
This is a follow up to my previous post looking at some of the the "information theory expertise" over at Triablogue. Peter Pike is willing to do what other T-Bloggers like Hays are not, and wandered into an area where real demonstrable knowledge can be applied to his claims and idea. And as this post may show, there's a good reason Hays and others remain safely out of the reach of knowledge accountability -- Peter went off on a subject he has shown he's not got even a basic grasp on, and has now gone on to demonstrate clearly that he's not just confused, but obstinate and incorrigible in clinging to and amplifying his confusion. Think of this post as "What if someone took the time to really examine Triablogue 'knowledge' when they ventured into a subject where they were liable to real knowledge?".

Readers looking for discussion about the typical (a)theological subjects can go ahead and skip this post. I think this post is worthwhile as a matter of diligence, as a "for the record", a review that will document in some detail the kind of hostility to real knowledge Triabloggers, or at least Peter Pike are given to display. It's also useful to note Peter's aversion to correction and getting things right. He's got more than he needs to understand he's dug himself into a hole here, from several people, not just me. Often enough, Pike and the Triabloggers just get conspicuously quiet when good criticisms are leveled, else they obfuscate and prevaricate. Typically, this kind of feedback would go right into the combox for the post over at Triablogue, but the Triabloggers do not suffer criticism like this on their blog, so I'll burn a slot in the post queue here at DC in order to provide some documentation of the errors and problems with Information Theory According to Peter Pike™.

Peter Pike, 8/14/2008 8:41 PM
I will add one thing for people who are interested. T-Stone's example of a 1,000 x 1,000 random pixel grid is only "maximally complex" if there are no repetitions at all. That is, there must be 1,000,000 pixels each with their own unique color. If there are any repetitions, compression can occur.
This is incorrect, as just a little experience with compression will demonstrate. When converted to bits (binary), any string beyond just a handful of bits will have repetitions. Repetitions are not automatic candidates for compression, as many repetitions are more expensive to record and store as instances of a pattern than just leaving the repetition in the datastream untouched. This means that Pike's statement: "If there any repetitions, compression can occur." is a false statement.

Here's a quick example. If we examine the string:

[A] = "11001100"

We can see that it contains a number of repetitions. For example [11] [00] [11] [00] is one grouping of repetitions. 1 [100] 1 [100] would be another, and [1100]*2 would be another.
Pike supposes these repetitions are all opportunities for compression, but none of them actually produce a smaller program when compressed than the uncompressed program. The reason is that the "bookkeeping" for small repetitive patterns is more costly than the uncompressed pattern itself. It's only when the length of the repeating patterns becomes significant in length and the number of those repetitions is large that we can effect some amount of compression. A short string of English text takes more space to "compress" the few words that repeat than it saves. A long string of English text is likely to have a number of words that are long (>4 characters) and occur many times (the work 'molecule' might appear 300 times in a long article about biology, for example).
For example, suppose that the random pixels are simply 1 or 0, that is the pixel is either on or off (i.e. "white" or "black"). Now suppose that one section of the string shows:

0100010011101011

We can easily compress this by saying "00" = A and "01" = B and "10" = C and "11" = D. Thus, the above string of numbers can be compressed to:

BABADCCD

This is a simplistic examination. In fact, given that we have 26 letters to choose from, there is no reason that we have to stick with only two-digit numbers. We can use four-digit numbers sections easily enough represented with just 16 letters.
"Simplistic" is a charitable description of this examination. Here, Peter shows he is unfamiliar with how binary representation of data works. He begins with a binary string "0100010011101011", which he supposes might be compressed to "BABADCCD". But "0100010011101011" is just 16 bits long, and "BABADCCD", at least on byte-strings is 64 bits, as every character maps to a byte, which consumes 8 bits (8 char * 8 bits/char == 64 bits). So, on a conventional platform, Pike's "compressed" string has gotten FOUR TIMES LARGER, just in terms of representation. He hasn't even addressed the logic needed to provided the mapping between patterns ("00") and symbols ("A"). Even in a conceptual machine where a "pikebyte" is only 2 bits long (enough to allow for the symbols "A", "B", "C", and "D"), he still has produced a "compressed" version of the source string that is 16 bits, exactly the size of his "uncompressed" string (8 char * 2 bits/char == 16 bits).

All of this inflation he has introduced without providing the logic used to effect the compression/decompression, which is not free, and makes his "compressed" program just that much bigger than the uncompressed program that just echoes the string out as it is.
Of course, this level of compression immediately begs the question: is it really less complex to have various symbols represent sequences of other symbols? That is, while the string "BABADCCD" is shorter than the string "0100010011101011", the program needed to convert "BABADCCD" is more complex than simply reading "0100010011101011".
As above, the string "BABADCCD" is NOT shorter than "0100010011101011" (binary, pixels that are 1 or 0). Pike doesn't understand bits and bytes. The binary string "01000001" and the ASCII character 'A' both take up the same amount of storage -- 8 bits in both cases. To Pike's credit here, he is at least grabbing the idea that the compression logic matters in terms of complexity from whatever web page he's trying to catch up on this topic from, now that his goofs have been pointed out.
This also brings to mind the question: if complexity in information is reduced due to compression where certain symbols stand for a certain combination of other symbols, then we can theoretically define a symbol as a long combination of other symbols. In other words, we can say:

"*" = "0100010011101011"

Now we can transmit all of the above with a simple character: "*"
Here Peter Pike is invoking magic for us, or something supernatural at least. There is no free lunch with information. One can assign a symbol to point to a referent string (like "0100010011101011"), but there's a cost incurred in associating the symbol and its referent, and the symbol is never more than a symbol. If we construct a couple lines of code like this:

char* a = "0100010011101011";
std::cout << a;

We haven't shrunk the string "0100010011101011" at all. All we have done is assign an alias for it, a symbol that makes it easier for humans to conceptualize what is going on. But in terms of compression, nothing is achieved at all. Transmitting "*", in quotes as Pike has it, just produces an asterisk character on the output. In the fragment above, sending the variable a to std::cout just dumps our original string as output. Perfectly nothing is achieved by Peter's stratagem. His magic is a bit of self-hoaxing.
As we continue in this vein, obviously constructing a symbol code for all the iterations of a 1,000 x 1,000 grid will be immense; but the output will be greatly condensed. No matter which iteration comes about, it is represented by one symbol.
Creating symbols for a given output does not achieve compression itself. It is only when the repetitions in the data are so large and frequent that the symbol table plus the mapping logic is smaller than that data that compression is achieved. Additionally, Pike gives us the clue that he believes he can cheat with external symbol tables, pre-calculating all the possible permutations for the matrix, and simply resorting to transmitting a "permutation ID" as an elegant way to realize dramatic (like 10,000x) compression! The creation and storage of the symbol table counts against the size (and those algorithmic complexity) of the program. Pike here fails to understand the constraints the compression must operate within, and the costs it must incur in implementing compression heuristics.
But this brings to bear more issues beyond simply the complexity of the information itself. The program of compression (which, in order to be useful, must be able to decompress data as well) can be infinitely more complex than the output; and vice versa. But if we're merely looking at the information present and not considering the compression algorithms at all, then "*" is obviously less complex than "BABADCCD" which is itself less complex than "0100010011101011".
Confused gobbledygook. Perhaps Peter can tell us how he can start with "*" and produce "0100010011101011" without incurring the overhead of "0100010011101011"?
Some people want to stop thinking at that level and not consider any further. Others don't. You can decide whether it's important or not.
Ahh, the irony!

Peter Pike 8/14/2008 9:12 PM
Idahoev said:
---
There will always be repetitions in any string of sufficient length
---

Exactly my point.
That was not the same point. Idahoev was correctly pointing that repetitions occur in strings that cannot be compressed any further. Pike supposes that repetitions -- like the same bit value occurring twice in a row (or any two-bit combination, as it happens) implies compressibility. Idahoev points out the the inevitable repetitions in any string beyond a few bits is all the indicator Peter needs to see that he's mistaken. Peter considers this counterfactual a vindication of what he's been saying all along.
You further said:
---
...nonetheless you cannot create a compressor that will successfully compress random numbers. This is because you compress by replacing repeated sequences with shorter sequences, and then adding those shorter sequences to a symbol table.
(The symbol table's size must be considered part of the compressed string's size, otherwise, all you've done is destroy the original string because you can't uncompress.)
---

And that's where you're wrong.

Consider the example once again. If you only have two digits (a 1 and a 0) for a 1,000,000 long string, you'll find a lot of repetitions. Even if the 1's and 0's are generated randomly. And those repetitions are sufficient enough that you can include a symbol table with your data.

In a "pure" random sample, you'd have approximately the same number of "00", "01", "10", and "11" sequences. Thus, you could replace them all with the four symbols "A", "B", "C", and "D". Your string (which was 1,000,000 bits long) is now 500,000 bits long. Are you seriously claiming that the symbol table will be 500,000 bits in size?
Peter has obviously never tried this before or worked with data compression algorithms in any meaningful way, as casual interaction with the problem would arrest thoughts like this immediately. Pike is incredulous that Idahoev might suppose the the symbol table might take up a full half megabyte. Why would that be? Because Pike supposes that this random string can trivially be compressed in half... for free! How does Peter get to an estimate of 50% compression? Well, apparently he thinks he can trade "00" for "A" and realize a 2:1 compression. Two characters for one, right?

Wrong.

"00" is binary, {0 | 1} remember, so "00" takes up just two bits of space. For conventional computing platforms, "A" consumes EIGHT BITS, and even if he restricts his alphabet to just {A | B | C | D}, all he's done is reached parity for the original string (1 char "A" * 2 bits/char == 2 bits), and he's still got to add on the symbol table mapping logic in his program, which will unavoidably make his "compressed" version of the program bigger than the uncompressed version. The best he can hope to do with his plan here is to produce a program just a little bigger than the uncompressed program.
You said:
---
But you can't do that. The amount of information
(=complexity) in a string is defined as the smallest algorithm which
can produce that string.
---

Which is exactly my point. Dawkins (and by extention, T-Stone) only have the universe, which would be the "output" of the whole algorithm. They have no idea how complex or how simple something need be to produce that output. They don't even
think about that. Information theory can say nothing about God because we don't have all the sufficient knowledge available to us. What it can say is whether natural processes can account for the information we see present.

Thanks for venting your views. Now perhaps you could actually read what I wrote before responding.
That was exactly Pike's point, that complexity is defined as the smallest algorithm which can produce that string? Hah. As for the universe, information theory cannot tell us whether natural processes can account for the information we see around us. Information theory is a mathematical model, and doesn't reflect anything about the physical world necessarily. We can use it profitably to measure complexity all around us, and there is an unimaginable amount of complexity to comprehend in the universe. But none of that tells us whether natural processes can give rise to the information and complexity we observe and measure around us. This whole discussion started because Vox Day thought he had real knowledge about complexity by doing a drive-by read on fractals at Wikipedia. Pike knows even less about the subject than Vox Day, as he is ably demonstrating here, but none of this is attached to real process, but rather is anchored in the curious idea that Sierpinski triangles are "infinitely complex".

Peter Pike 8/14/2008 9:52 PM

Next, Pike move on to respond to comments from "nihilist"...
Nihilist,

First, I assumed what T-Stone meant by "maximal randomness" was the impossibility of the string to be compressed. Given that assumption, then my statements about randomness come into play.
Above, Pike said this:
FWIW, I disagree with T-Stone’s version of information and complexity. And despite what his post would lead you to believe, the idea that “maximal randomness = maximal complexity” is not true for all information theories."
It's not just my post(s) that will lead you to believe that the maximally complex string is the random string, it's the theories and proofs themselves, from Shannon, Kolomogorov, and others. Moreover, algorithmic complexity defines "random" as any string that is shorter than any program that can produce that string, given a reference platform like a Turing machine. That means that "random" is defined as "incompressible" in the theory.

Even if Peter cannot understand the conceptual basis for this, there's a simple exercise that will tease out the absurdity of Pike's claim. If a random string is compressible by 50%, as he suggested above, then the output of a compression pass on random string A will produce a shorter (by half) output string A'. But if any string with repetitions can be compressed, we can just repeat the processes until we have compressed any arbitrarily long string down to nothing at all. Magic! Take A' and compress it down to half it's size, producing A'', and take A'' and compress that down by half to yield A'''. Pretty soon, you've got all the worlds data neatly compressed into Pike's Magic Asterisk ("*"). Clearly, there must be a floor for the compressibility of any given input, and this is what information theory and algorithmic complexity focus on.
Again, consider the example of the 1,000,000 bits. Random data will tend to have an equal number of "00", "01", "10", and "11" number sequences. When you have 1,000,000 bits, that means you'll have roughly 250,000 of each. (As anyone who's rolled dice know, these percentages rarely happen in the real world.)

You can compress those to halve the length of the string. Even including the symbol table will not increase the string length back to its original size.
Here, Pike reiterates his error in clear terms, just to make sure he has no wiggle room in denying it later. "You can compress those to halve the length of the string", he says, referring to a million random bits. His understanding of the concepts here is such that he suppose two bits (which we represent as "00") is compressible by 50% to "A". But A isn't representable in less than two bits in an alphabet that has four symbols. These are rudimentary errors for this subject.
Therefore, it follows that a "maximally random" string can only be a set length, and if it cannot be compressed it must have specific rules in place as to what is in the string. Therefore, the "random" strings are not so random after all in order to be "maximally complex."
Information theory has shown that the opposite of what Pike claims here is true. There is no "set length" for a "maximally random" string, and it is the complete absence of rules governing the contents of the string. Rules are what enables compression! That's why, for example, we can render the "infinitely complex" output of a Sierpinski triangle or a Mandelbrot set with just a handful of lines of code -- the code implements the simple rules that govern the output for each. Randomness is "without rule", which is what makes it information-rich. Rules represent certainty, and information is measured as the reduction of uncertainty.
Now there are random aspects to it. I'm not denying that. Rather, as the string gets longer, in order to maintain its maximal complexity it must lose its randomness.
This is precisely the opposite of what information theory and Kolmogorov complexity demonstrate. Here's a short quote from Nick Szabo's tutorial on Algorithmic Information Theory that captures the idea (Peter, I invite you to have a read of the whole thing):
A truly random string is not significantly compressible; its description length is within a constant offset of its length. Formally we say K(x) = Theta(|x|), which means "K(x) grows as fast as the length of x".
(emphasis mine)
Let's use lower case letters for an example. Suppose our string starts with:

"jq"

The next letter can be completely random.
What does it mean for a letter to be "completely random"? This makes no sense at all. If the next letter is random, it can be any one of the possible letters. Another "j then q" is no more or less random than any other letter pair, prima facie. Randomness obtains from the unpredictability of the arriving input, and has nothing to do with whether it repeats or not. A fair coin flipped 20 times is exactly as likely to produce "00000000000000000000" as it is "10010110010101110010", even though the first string is trivially describable programmatically as a 20-iteration for loop echoing a 0 to the output, and the latter is not. Some random strings coincide with strings that have simple rules, statistically. But a maximally complex string has the fewest rules and the least structure. In any case, the idea that the next letter is "completely random" or not based on the letters that came before it is nonsense.
It can even be another "j." But if it is another "j" then a "q" CANNOT follow, else it can be compressed (say with a "J").

Now short strings can indeed run into problems with the symbol table, but even if we say the individual portions of the symbol table are twice the size of each bit of the string, then because there are only 26 lower case letters in the alphabet, random letters will result in letter "pairs" every (1/26) x (1/26), or 1/676 times. Thus, even having a text with only, say, 2,000 randomly generated characters will provide sufficent number of repeats for you to be able to compress the string. And that's even if you're using an arbitrary table and you're not tailor-making a compression program (like you would for language). You know that the pairing of "jq" will occur roughly ever 676 times, so that substitution will reduce the original length of the (sufficiently long) string even if that's the only substitution you make.
ASCII text is compressible due to its lavish use of bits in representation. If our random string only draws from the lower-case, 26-letter alphabet, you only need five bits per letter, where ASCII characters are 8 bits, meaning you can realize more than 35% compression right off the bat, if you are beginning with ASCII representations. To avoid "illusionary" compression (take a text file with randomly generated letters in it and you will see this file can always be shrunk with gzip, due to the wasted extra bits for each ASCII character), use random bits. ASCII strings are not random, no matter what letters the string contains, due to the wasted bits in the format.

In any case, the mistake operating in this paragraph from Pike is the belief that he can replace "jq", or any other two-letter combination, with symbolic metadata that takes up less space in capturing it. For example, if we have the following string:

[D] = "kujqopjqbnlsjqjqlmze"

We can identify four instances of the pattern "jq" which are candidates for Pikian compression (bolded). But the compression requires encodimg and this is what thwarts the compression of two-letter patterns. For example, we might use digits as our indirections into our symbol referent patterns. Here, we might use "1" to indicate the subsitution for "jq", meaning anytime we encounter a "1" we should replace it with "jq":

[E] = "ku1op1bnls11lmze"

[E] is 4 bytes shorter than [D], but you cannot represent a symbol table or the substitution coding in the space of those 4 bytes. If we suppose that we can overcome this with larger strings, we realize bigger savings, but only by preserving the non-random statistical distribution of the letters. If, instead of a 20 character string, we multiplied [D] by a factor of 10, we would have a 200 character string with 40 instances of 'jq' that we might replace. That's a lot better savings, 40 bytes you might do a little something with. But this only happens because the source string is NOT STATISTICALLY RANDOM, having 40% of the letter pairs matching "jq", several deviations over what we would expect statistically. This is precisely the insight Kolmogorov, Solomonoff and Chaitin all arrived at concerning the information in a string; the more statistically random a string is, the less compressible it becomes.

You can increase the complexity of the symbol table to be any finite value greater than the length of the string, and it will still be possible to compress that string if the string is longer. Only if you claim that the complexity of the symbol table is infinitely large will you be unable to compress the string in this manner.
This is one of the few paragraphs Peter offers in the whole thread that is not demonstrably incorrect. But in this case, that is only because it's incomprehensible. Peter, what is the "complexity of the symbol table", since you are clearly not using the accepted Kolmogorov-Chaitin definition of the term? This paragraph isn't coherent enough to qualify as possibly "wrong".

Therefore, a "maximally random" that is "maximally complex" can only have a finite number of repetitions (depending on the number of symbols the string itself has and the symbol table that would accompany it). Even adding in the symbol table's information, there is still a finite length that a "maximally random" string can be before it must obey rules (i.e., no longer be random) and still maintain it's "maximal complexity."
Peter doesn't identify a "maximally random" what here, but assuming he means "maximally random string", it is safe to say that a finite string does, indeed, contain a finite number of repetitions for any given pattern. So we can give Peter a second nod for the thread here. But while correct, it's irrelevant, and tells us nothing about the complexity, or lack thereof, for any given string. Peter offers a novel theorem here, names that a string with high statistical randomness must at some point begin to "obey rules". Peter doesn't tell us what these rules are, or when they kick in, or where we might anticipate this "kick in" of the "rules". Curiously, strings beyond this length are both "no longer random", and "maximally complex". If Peter is onto anything but spewing BS here, he's got ideas that will make him world famous in mathematical circles.
Finally, consider the odds that a string of random characters would reach it's maximal complexity by purely random means. The vast majority of random strings (unless you keep them really short) will have those repetitions enabling compression. It is far more likely that a random process will generate those strings than that one will generate a "maximally complex" string.
Finally! The maths that obtain here show just the opposite. Highly random strings do not contain the kinds of patterns and frequencies that lend themselves to effective compression -- this is the very definition of random! Peter hasn't grasped this yet, but he's demonstrably wrong based on the very terms he's using: if a given string can be compressed to any significant degree, it's definitionally not a highly random string.
It is far easier for an intelligent being to create a maximally complex string than for a maximally complex string to occur randomly.
It's quite difficult for a human to create a statistically random string. Go ahead and try it sometime, Peter. Sources of randomness abound all around us in nature, and tapping into one of these sources provides an easy, reliable, instantaneous supply of random input (for example, circuit shot noise or radioisotope decay). Computers can easily create pseudo-random strings that pass all the statistical tests for random distribution, way faster than any human can make up string they suppose are random, but which very often pass statistical evaluations for randomness.
But again, I predicated this on the belief that T-Stone accepted "maximal complexity" as the inability to compress the string.

And FWIW, I didn't invent this theory, but I don't remember where I read it either. If you must have a name for it, you can try to Google it. I've written it out for you so I don't feel the need to spend any more time on it.
There's no theory to claim invention for. And nothing coherent to even try to blame on someone else, some other source. Peter says he's written it out for us, yet the reader has perfectly nothing that will help determine the complexity or information content of a given string, according to Calvinist Information Theory, for lack of a better, or Peter-supplied name for it.

Peter Pike 8/14/2008 10:07 PM
BTW, just to clear up one other thing that may cause confusion, since Idahoev said:
---
You can only successfully compress when some sequences occur more frequently than others, so that you encode the frequent ones with short strings and the infrequent ones with long strings, and your net size of message + symbol table decreases. It doesn't work on random strings.
---

This is not accurate at all. And because I like T-Stone so much, I'll use the Wiki article to demonstrate it.

Wiki says:
---
...[T]he following string:

25.888888888

...can be compressed as:

25.[9]8

Interpreted as, "twenty five point 9 eights", the original string is perfectly recreated, just written in a smaller form.
---
Idahoev makes a noble attempt to get through, but fails. He explains that compression is available "when some sequences occur more frequently than others", and points out that this "doesn't work on random strings". So, in response to this, Peter pulls out an example string ("25.888888888") that is precisely the kind of string Idahoev told him is compressible, and which is ridiculously far from statistical random distribution of its symbols. It's as if Peter thinks "25.888888888" has a highly random distribution of its symbols chosen from the phase space of digits (and apparently the '.' character). The string in question has the digit "8" occuring in 9 of the 12 positions in the string, making it close to the theoretically least statistically random string available for that length ("888888888888", or any 12 digit string consisting of the same symbol).

Peter tells Idahoev that his claims are "not accurate at all", then goes on to provide examples that affirm precisely what Idahoev said. How would Peter write this string "in a smaller form": "439806931752"? That would be a better test of what Idahoev was telling him.
In the same way, random data (especially binary data that only has 2 digits to use) will form "runs" that can be compressed in this manner. Suppose you get the sequence: 1000000000.

That can be compressed (as per T-Stone's beloved Wiki!) as: 1[9]0.

So even ignoring everything else with the symbol table, Wiki agrees with me that random data can be compressed so long as there are "runs" in it. And with "pure" random data...there will be runs.
"1000000000" is not a string that registers high for statistical randomness. By definition, if a string can be compressed into a program that is smaller than the echo of the string itself, it's not maximally random. So, algorithmic information theory provides a mathematical basis for identifying and measuring the randomness(complexity) of a string. There will be repetitions for any string of more than a few symbols, but it is the nature of randomness, proven my the maths of the theory, that the repetitions and patterns contained are not compressible, even in principle. No way, no how. Maximally random strings defy compression, tautologically, as that is what we mean when we assign the label "maximally complex" or "maximally random". If the reader consults the Wikipedia article Peter linked to, it will be seen that the strings in question are NOT presented as random strings. These are "best case" non-random strings, the opposite configuration of strings we are focusing on in terms of complexity and incompressibility.

Peter Pike 8/15/2008 8:09 AM
As I was dropping off to sleep last night, I think I discovered where the problem in understanding my position is coming in for folks like Idahoev. Idahoev would be correct if we were forced to use the same symbol "alphabet" to compress data as we used to create it. While this restriction is necessary to get computers to communicate with each other, it's an artificial restriction when it comes to information as a whole.
Information Theory and Algorithmic Complexity assume symmetric representations on both sides. It doesn't matter what alphabet gets used, as all data gets rendered as binary -- a stream of bits -- ultimately anyway. Alphabets and other symbols are just useful mnemonics for human conceptualization. Peter's computer doesn't store the letters "Peter" as letters on his hard disk when he saves his name in a document. What gets stored is "0101000001100101011101000110010101110010", and even that is a human-friendly set of symbols representing alternate magnetic states. Everything gets crushed down to bits, ultimately.
As a quick example, suppose that Adam writes a program and compiles it so it's in binary form. He wants to send it to Bill, but Bill lacks a compiler, an internet connection, and a portable storage device. He does, however, have the ability to type 1s and 0s into a program on his computer and have it save it as a binary file.

Adam wants to send the program to Bill so he can have it too, but when he prints out the binary file (as 1s and 0s) it is much too long to mail inexpensively. Therefore, he compresses it using the compression technique I already showed (i.e. "00" = "A", etc.), and drops that compressed form in the mail. Bill gets it, converts it back to binary, inputs it into his computer and has the program.

Now this technique is impossible for computers (although it may be possible for a quantum computer) since they can only function in binary. However, binary is very inefficient for humans, which is why we don't speak binary. The English alphabet serves as a meta-alphabet for the binary alphabet, and you can compress the binary alphabet in the English meta-alphabet (and then transmit it in the meta-alphabet before converting back to the binary alphabet).
This has been dealt with adequately above. Peter is confused about the binary representation of data, and supposes that "00" (binary) is bigger in terms of storage than "A" (ASCII), or "A"(2 bit symbols {A|B|C|D}). The missing idea for Peter is that when you have more than two symbols ({0|1}) in your symbol set you need more than one bit to represent a symbol. The lower-case 26-letter alphabet requires 5 bits to represent a letter, in other words. With 6 bits you can represent the 26 letters in both cases and the digits 0-9, etc. As your symbol space gets larger, the space you need to allocate for each symbol grows. This is what Peter does not understand and what defeats his compression strategies (if what he is saying is true, he's worth billions for his earthshaking innovations!).
If you keep that in mind (the difference between the alphabet and the meta-alphabet) it should help you understand my original point. Even if random strings cannot be compressed using the alphabet, some of them can still be compressed using a meta-alphabet. However, my argument is that there are still some strings that remain that are incompressible in both the alphabet and the meta-alphabet, and those would be the correct definition of "maximally complex." And because those strings must obey certain rules, the "maximally random" string is not the "maximally complex" string.
This is completely confused. Peter ends things up no more clued-in than he began. What are the "certain rules" that a maximally complex string must obey, Peter. If they are certain, please enumerate them. Here is a way for Peter to refute the whole of what I've been saying, along with the rest of the world that relies on Shannon, Kolmogorov, Solomonoff and Chaitin. If Peter can enumerate and demonstrate the "rules" that make a string maximally complex and yet NOT maximally random, he will have shown me up, and launched a revolution in information theory -- Famous by Friday, as they say. As it is, I predict that these rules will remain unenumerated and undemonstrated, and we will not see a revolution in information theory, because Peter is just making all this up as he goes, and covering as best he is able when his blunders are pointed out. Strings that have the attributes that defy further compression (small patterns, fairly and unpredictably distributed) are the conceptual basis for the term "random" in information theory and algorithmic complexity. What makes a string maximally complex/random is its *lack* of rules, or the single rule that there are no rules that apply, rules which can be used as the basis for further compression.

-Touchstone

Stan's Argument: Not Creating Is The Greater Good.

12 comments
Stan the Half-Truth Teller is one of our commenters and he makes a recurring comment every now and then that I'd like to feature to facilitate some discussion about it because I think it is a good example of an efficient, sound and succinct argument against the existence of the Christian God.

Stan says the following.

If we accept the Theist's position, then god chose to create. Choosing instead to not-create would have been a greater good, as it would have necessarily avoided any suffering or evil whatsoever.


What Would Jesus Do...in Hell???

58 comments
In 2000, a Texas police officer was shot and killed in the line of duty. He was a rookie. His name was Aubrey Hawkins (29) of the Irving Police Department. Hawkins was killed by the “Texas Seven,” the infamous group of men who had escaped from John Connally Prison the same year. Prison escapee George Rivas, the Texas Seven ringleader, had orchestrated robbing an Oshman’s Sporting Goods store in Irving. It was here that this convict and his cohorts, looking over their shoulders, running from the law in utter desperation, faced a fateful decision when encountering Officer Hawkins—kill him and escape or be captured and let him live? The decision was quickly and brutally made. Hawkins was shot and then run over. They knew how badly they wanted to escape their pursuers. Even when maintaining freedom meant killing a police officer, Rivas decided to go through with it. It was at this point that an ordinarily infamous gang became the officially deadliest mob in America.

How could these thugs have been called the deadliest men in America? Because under Texas law, anyone who takes the life of a peace officer gets either a mandatory life sentence without the possibility of parole, or the death sentence—no exceptions. Knowing this, Rivas and his pernicious posse could now kill anyone else they wanted and it would be a freebie. If you're already going down for life in prison or death, how can you be further penalized for any additional murders you commit?

When Rivas was finally caught, he asked for the death sentence and rightly received it. Hey, smart move on his part! Even a cretin of a human being shouldn't be kept around without a purpose. Lifetime incarcerations, much like the religious idea of eternal torture, sound justifiable to some, but they accomplish nothing. Why should a person lay around and be kept in a cage for 50 to 70 years? The purposelessness, the hopelessness, the pointlessness of it is cruel in its own rite. The waste, the consumption of resources in keeping useless human beings alive can’t be justified.

Having thought about this topic as it has to do with earthly matters, I soon began to wonder about it as it pertained to heavenly matters; namely, what would God have the unsaved do as we live out our eternity in Hell? Since Jesus doesn't want to rehabilitate us, what would he have us do in the devil's abode?

My mother used to say, "Go to your room and think about what you've done." Do you think maybe this is what Jesus is really saying to us by confining us to Hell? If this is true, it reflects wholly vapid reasoning because it implies rehabilitation, but the Bible says there isn't going to be any rehabilitation for the damned. (Luke 16:19-31)

Does God want us to suffer? If so, then he is a sadist, a monster who takes pleasure in the suffering of others, but the Bible says he doesn't take pleasure in such suffering. (Ezekiel 18:24) And if it is the case that God hates it when the wicked suffer, then why has he constructed it so that the wicked suffer eternally? It makes not a lick of sense.

So, I want to know: what does God want us to do in Hell, amidst those agonizing moments of regret and reflective thought? Amongst those endless feelings of everlasting contempt, what does God have to say to us then? When we can force back the pain of damnation long enough to think coherently, what does Jesus want us to think about? What should we do when there is no redemption, no hope, and not a drop of mercy to be found? What do we do when we’ve blown our last chance? Could a perfectly just God “run out” of mercy and have a “last chance”? If Jesus was in our lost condition, suffering eternal retribution, what would he do?

If there is some sort of hierarchy in Hell, some sort of satanic "pecking order," should we follow it to serve our master, Lucifer? What about the demons that are right under him? Can they command us too? Will demons sodomize us there as it happens in prisons here on earth? Are we supposed to obey if higher-ranking hell-spawns command us to sodomize Hell's new arrivals as sort of an initiation? Or, should we lead a salvation-less ministry in hell, in the bleak hope that perhaps the Catholics were right, and we are merely in a purgatory, and may get out if we are spiritually redeemable? Should we bathe in the hotter parts of hell to please God, hoping maybe he will see us suffering enough and change his mind? But how can we do these things, knowing full well that there is no relief, that there is no reward for us ever, and that God never changes his mind (Numbers 23:19)? When the misery is too much, does Jesus still sympathize? Does he hear us at all down there? Does he even care? Should we bother to pray, to count beads, to chant, to beg, to call upon the name of Christ?

In life, God doesn't like idleness. He likes for us to work and stay busy. But in death, he doesn't care about us anymore. He doesn't love us anymore, and apparently, doesn't even want to think about us anymore. We know this because the bible has no commandments or advice for the hellbound. By God not caring, he inadvertently encourages more evil in Hell. Because of God's neglect of us at that point, we might as well resolve to be more wicked than ever, just like the Texas Seven. We might as well wish and think bad thoughts, pleasing ourselves by looking lustfully at the "hot" curves of another cute little dancing demon on the equivalent of a table-top at a topless bar in Hell. We ought to steal from Hitler’s magma hole, and as much as is possible, add to the suffering our fellow sufferers are already being subjected to. If it’s possible, maybe I can assist Genghis Kahn in another torso-chopping raid? Maybe I'll get to bunk with Ivan the Terrible and play Chess?

God is a hypocrite. He tells us to always love those who hate us because if we love only those who love us, we are no better than sinners who do the same (Luke 6:38), but God doesn't practice what he preaches; his enduring love abides only to those who love him and will receive his invitation to come to the wedding feast of heaven. But once the rest of us (the unsaved) die, his love for us is extinguished, as is his mercy. He lets us exist only for the purpose of suffering, but with no hope of redemption, with nothing to look forward to ever again. He is a quitter who has given up on his wayward children. He has left them out on the street to be forgotten about. He is worse than a mother who leaves her children to starve, scampering for old food between the cushions of a couch. When they die, they are forgotten about, but when we die, we continue to live...to live and to suffer. No wonder the annihilationists find such Christ-like character and great comfort in their doctrine that a merciful God could never create any other hell except eternal sleep!

Christians spend a tremendous amount of time and energy getting us prepared to meet Jesus in the afterlife. For the saved, it's going to be one great big party/worship service in the New Jerusalem. But what about when the afterlife commences for the unsaved? What then? And why do we hear so little about it nowadays? Why do Christians avoid talking about it? Could it be that they are ashamed to talk about a God who plans to torture his own children?

Christians say so much about a God who has a plan and purpose for everything and everyone. But he clearly doesn’t, not for the godless. No, God keeps junk. Like an old, eccentric packrat with psychiatric issues, lounging in her bathrobe, staring out a window, sipping tea, before going into a wide-eyed tirade about the neighborhood kids, God shows purposelessness and extremely poor planning. God keeps junk. What a disappointing revelation!

(JH)