Vlad,
No. Isn't it down to you if you think there are bad arguments for leprechauns to show what those argument are.
Wrong again. It’s simple enough: there are various arguments used to demonstrate “God” whose logical force is unchanged by substituting that outcome for “leprechauns”, or for any other conjecture. Either you accept the force of the argument for any conjecture therefore or you need a reason to make it sound for one conclusion but not for the rest.
If nonetheless you seriously think a bad argument becomes a good argument when you change the outcome to one that suits you better, then by all means tell us why.
You already presented one which I never use anyway…
Actually you have attempted it in the past, and moreover you just asked for
an argument, not for the one you happen try the most. That’s what I provided. (This is a bit much from someone whose entire approach here consists of straw men too by the way.)
[/quote]…but that is also a bad argument for materialism, physicalism and any other unfalsifiable. Why, then are you specially pleading God?[/quote]
Categorically wrong as ever because you’re using your personal definitions of these terms again in order to go nuclear. Gravity is demonstrably more "true" as an explanation for apples falling than is invisible pixies pulling them down with tiny strings. There is though no claim here to absolutism – for all either of us know it is pixies doing it – but probabilistically gravity provides the working model until and unless an explanation that better describes the observable phenomena comes along.
However much you throw irrelevancies at it, the logic here remains: if an argument for “God” works equally well for leprechauns, then it’s probably a bad argument.
If you think you can lay a glove on that then – finally – try to do so.