Re: The Most Famous Trilemma
I saw a documentary recently on the miracles Jesus performed. Apparently they were all similar to well-known tricks which con artists performed at the time. People will believe almost anything if its accompanied by the proper misdirection and flair. I once saw David Copperfield make the Statue of Liberty disappear and also saw David Blaine levitate. They mentioned it was curious that Jesus divided the crowds into groups of 50 when he performed the "loaves and the fishes" miracle because magicians of that time period divided crowds in a similar fashion.
They did say however that the best magicians have no explanation for the miracle itself as it was written. They can replicate items on a smaller scale but nothing to the level of what the story claims Jesus did on that famous day. Stories do have a tendency to be embellished over the years but who knows.
I seriously doubt Jesus was delusional in his belief that he was the son of God. Certain psychics are delusional in that they actually believe in their powers after ample evidence to the contrary, but that's mainly because they fall victim to confirmation bias. Jesus, OTOH, performed such complicated feats that he would have to have been aware of what he was doing. So either he was a complete fake and knew it or he was the real thing.
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