Gabriella,
Actually no it doesn’t, for the reasons I explained but OK…
Yes it does, if not ruling out the supernatural means that I have adopted the position that anything supernatural is a possibility.
“Weighing up the pros and cons” as you put it is epistemically worthless though. However warm and cuddly believing in a claim of fact makes you feel, that on its own tells you nothing about whether that claim is correct.
Ok. And what's your point? I weighed up the pros and cons. That doing so doesn't tell me if something is a fact or not is irrelevant to me because there is no methodology to establish fact when it comes to supernatural claims so I do not waste my time trying to establish something that can't be done. A fact is something that can be demonstrated in some way using evidence.
My point was that I didn’t understand how you thought statement A led to statement B. In reply you’ve given me several fairly lengthy dispositions about statement A. Fair enough – that’s your choice, albeit that I remain none the wiser about the question I actually asked you.
If you can't understand and I can't explain my thinking in a way that you can understand, then it will have to remain a mystery to you.
See above. As I’ve said several times, when the reasoning for a “true for you claim” is broken then it’s also broken for a “true for me only claim” when both claims are about supposed facts, but the latter is no-one’s business but your own. If it works for you nonetheless though, knock yourself out.
What supposed fact? A fact is something that can be demonstrated to be true. A god or the supernatural cannot be demonstrated to be true. Therefore statements about gods or the supernatural cannot come within the category of facts, any more than feelings of love can come within the category of a 100% deductible enhanced capital allowance. If it is a true for me belief - it is subjective, based on experiences - that I can't demonstrate as true to anyone else.
Again, he was just referencing a well-trodden thought experiment and your patronising of him in response does you no favours.
You're wrong - it does me lots of favours. I don't need to waste my time writing out a response to his post if he can't be bothered to write out an argument as to why NPF applies to my post. Which means I have time to read other posts and threads. What favour is it that you think I require apart from the time to read and respond to what I wish?
No – the question was about how statement A lead to statement B. What you actually answered (at length) concerned only statement A.
Ok - so you don't accept my answer. Not much point continuing on this particular point then, unless you want to go back to yes/no.
That wasn’t your statement. Your new version is that not being able to rule out the supernatural (albeit wrongly) then opened the door to the possibility of a “leap of faith”. Your pervious version though (ie, the one I asked you about) concerned not ruling out the supernatural making your belief in a god “not difficult” to do.
Ok so you understand the leap of faith answer? You asked what I meant by my statement, and I have clarified what I meant.
I was – the one when you said that you couldn’t rule out the possibility of the supernatural. How so?
I have no idea what you mean by "how so". If you mean you want me to explain that statement, it means I am adopting the position that it is possible that there is something outside of natural laws. Of course I am not aware of any method to investigate or demonstrate something outside the natural world as anything related to the word "method" that I am aware of relates to the natural world.
You’re still not getting it. To get to the point even of considering whether or not you could have a method(ology), the proposition itself has to be coherent. You can’t for example complain that our butterfly nets and magnifying glasses just aren’t up to the job of demonstrating four-sided triangles because it's the proposition itself that's incoherent a priori.
I’m sorry, but I’m not sure I can put this any more plainly.
And you finish by going off the rails again with your “meaning” irrelevance. Whether or not I happen to find something “meaningful”, “beneficial” or anything else is epistemically worthless when the object involves a claim of fact. Philosophy? That’s fine. Claims of objective fact (whether just for you or in general)? Nope with sprinkles on.
Sorry, but there it is.
What fact?