patiodadio
Hero Member
- Feb 28, 2014
- 578
- 592
- Detector(s) used
- Whites 4000D
Garrett ATPro
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
All I know is that I love reading about all the old treasure legends and I hope they keep right on going
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... The point ends as soon as .... impossible feats are added in ....
I'll take for granted things that are physically possible to a point.
The point ends as soon as Ghosts, hocus pocus & impossible feats are added in
Yeah, kind of like that guy from a long time ago that SUPPOSEDLY walked on water, got killed, then rose from the dead. Nothing documentary to back up that story!
Mike
29 Then Jesus told him, “Because you have seen me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.” - John 20:29
Crosse brought up "the other JJ". Well I for one had never considered Jesse Jackson
burying stolen money but anything's possible I guess.
And we know where Jesus hid his treasure: "You will have treasure in Heaven" (Matthew 6:30 & 19:21, Mark 10:21, & Luke 12:33 - about the only thing the three Gospel writers agree on) ;-)
Now there's a place that bad spirits could be lurking ..cheers MickMaybe JIM JONES buried some loot in Guyana before they all drank the KoolAid!
Mike
Charlie,
Funny you mention that. Whenever a heart is used on a Spanish Map or in the field, it always refers to gold.
Matthew 6:21 "For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also."
Mike
except, of course, those things that credible eyewitness accounts record, by your own admission. We can agree that if a lone person "sees a UFO" or "sees an aparition", then yes, he's probably been smoking too many funny cigarettes, or has mental issues, etc... But at what point does it cross to "credible" for you ? And when answering this: remember you've agreed that eye-witness accounts (credible ones) *do* count as satisfactory evidence for something historical.
Jeff, thanx for taking the time to pen that out. All I can say is, that what you're saying/doing, is very understandable human nature. No matter how many eye-witnesses and evidence occurs about a supernatural event, the "next generation" tends to dismiss it. Ie.: if it didn't happen to THEM (you),then ... there will be doubt. You will tend to explain it away by other means.
So even though you *say* that eye-witness evidence is a credible source (like as-is-how they accept that in a court-of-law, for instance), yet .... when it comes to something we don't want to believe, it's easier to dismiss it. Heck, even videos, photo's, etc... are all subject photo-shop trickery, right?
There was a humorous quote from a skeptic scientist during a debate once (but he was actually serious): He said that if the statue of liberty blinked and waved at him, he would still not call it a miracle. He would give more weight/belief to the fact that it must be all the molecules of the statue coincidentally moving in the same direction at the same time. Or the wind, or an optical illusion by the sunlight, or whatever. So you can see that, to some people, NO AMOUNT of evidence (even that brought to their own eyes) satisfies. Much easier just to "move the goal posts" of the criteria levels you say you'd accept.
I think its outrageous that George Washington could throw a silver dollar across the
Potomac. But if he did try wouldn't the recovery of that coin be the find of the century?
Wow, a 1794 double die could be waiting for some diver in the Potomac. All coins that
first year were struck twice.