Gabriella,
That seems to be his way of bearing witness to God - which he stated ages ago was what he was on here to do, although he acknowledged he might be doing it badly. That's his brand of evangelism. The "know" was his way of distinguishing his current level of belief from his previous level of belief in God. "Know" refers I think to his belief that he had personally experienced God after prayer and scripture on some seminar he attended.
No, he clearly thinks that the rest of us should treat his “know” about his god in the same way that we should treat his “know” about, say, the speed of light in a vacuum. This is called the fallacy of reification, and he does it a lot. They are however different categories of knowledge (personal, subjective, non-investigable etc vs objective, investigable etc).
I don't see him dismissing in its entirety the scientific evidence available - he dismisses some of the scientific evidence and says there is much that science doesn't explain, which he then attributes to some kind of supernatural conscious awareness based on his concept of free will. His perception of free will is his evidence for free will.
Then you’re not looking. There’s a huge amount of evidence from multiple academic fields that points to consciousness as a material phenomenon (essentially as an emergent property of brains). That picture is substantially in place, but it’s not complete. What AB has to do is to dismiss it
entirely in order to leave the field clear for his assertions about “soul” etc. He cannot and does not say something like, “OK, this research and evidence over here is fine, but that research and evidence over there I can refute”. (He’s also incidentally entirely oblivious to the problem that, even if he could falsify every scrap of evidence against him, that would take him not even one tiny step toward providing evidence
for his alternatives.)
We already did this argument before. Personal testimony about perception can be offered as evidence - it's another matter as to whether this evidence is accepted as persuasive or credible by anyone.
Not in science it can’t. So far as possible, science seeks to eliminate precisely the personal in favour of objectively investigable data. If he wants to rebut the science, he has to play on science’s turf. When he doesn’t do that he plants himself squarely in, “that Large Hadron Collider thing doesn’t accord with my personal experience, so it must be pixies” territory.
Demands that claims of fact must be accepted?
Yes. That’s what his evangelism requires. Presumably he wouldn’t for example be shy about trying it with children whose critical faculties haven’t developed.
I'm not sure what you mean by that. I see him bearing witness and trying to persuade through personal testimony and his perceptions. I see him stating repeatedly that he knows God and free will exists in some supernatural, incomprehensible, scientifically unprovable way because of his personal experience and perceptions (usually during prayers I think). I took that to be his brand of evangelism - preaching his beliefs that despite the lack of testable objective evidence to support his claims, he is not just deluded or engaged in wishful thinking that God exists.
That’s precisely what he is in my view, at least he is in respect of the assertion “god is” (as opposed to, “my belief that god is leads me to have certain perceptions"). That’s his problem – constantly trampling over the line between claims of fact about the objects of his beliefs (god, soul etc) and the perceptions those beliefs give him. A someone once said, when your only tool is a hammer every problem looks like a nail. When AB finds his car keys, for him that’s his god at work. And that’s actually what his “testimony” relates to.
That's presumably him spreading the message and advocating for his particular interpretation of Christianity.
He’s entitled of course to any opinions he likes. What he’s not entitled to though are his own facts. And that’s his problem.
I'm pretty sure he said something about a sincerely believing Muslim being deluded and that although he (AB) can't know whether God will save that Muslim or not, he believes that the Muslim should accept the divinity of Jesus to be sure of being saved.
And? That’s the thing with opinions masquerading as facts – any one such is as in/valid as any other, which goes a long way to explaining why people kill each other when their non-facts collide.