Vlunderer,
What you are doing is claiming validity for arguments against God and meaninglessness for arguments which support it.
Wrong again. All that's happening is that some of us identify that the arguments some attempt for "god" are hopeless. You no more need an argument "against God" than you need an argument against unicorns - it's enough just to demolish the arguments
for.
Note meaningless, the word you use not invalidity because you know that would be challenged.
Happy to use either. If you seriously think you can make a coherent challenge, go for it.
It seems you are trying to gussy up the fingers in the Ear and la la la argument.
Only in your head Vlad, only in your head.
Please demonstrate Your idea that God is imaginary.
Have you genuinely not grasped a single thing I've said when I've explained it to you over the last few posts? Seriously?
Wow!
Once again then: the term "god" is just so much white noise until anyone manages to define it. That is, terms like "exist", "imaginary" or anything else cannot apply as there's nothing to apply them
to.
Nonetheless, if you insist on skipping that stage entirely and claiming the associated stories
about this "god" to be true then we have no choice but to treat them as we would the stories about any other un-evidenced supernatural "something" - ie, imaginary pending any reasoning or evidence to the contrary.
If you seriously think otherwise, on what basis would you dismiss the claims of someone who believes just as strongly as you do that he has "experienced" or "intuited" Thor or Jack Frost?
I think Zeus and King Arthur may themselves be myths and therefore that would impute mythical status on their acts.
I think that your god may well be a myth too, probably for exactly the same reasons that you have reached the same conclusion about Zeus and King Arthur.
I should qualify that by saying that Zeus may be a model albeit rudimentary for God.
Or your "god" may be a model albeit rudimentary for the real god. Who's to say that someone 1,000 years hence won't think of your model of a god just as you look at Zeus?
Or all these narratives may be rudimentary explanations for the otherwise inexplicable but there's no real god at the end of the search after all...
Also I have no experience of Zeus or Arthur.
But other people think they have - just as seriously and deeply and truthfully as you think you have experienced "god". What makes them wrong and you right exactly?
I think that your claim therefore that I think about Zeus and Arthur in the same way that you think about all religions is merely another of your fancies.
Your "therefore" fails for the reasons I've set out (and that you will now ignore or misrepresent). You think about Zeus and King Arthur in exactly the same way that I think about them
and about your god, and I do so because the arguments made for all of them - "experience", "intuition" etc - are identical.