No, you say it's an hallucination. That is a positive claim. I look forward to your proof.
No, you say it happened - that's a positive claim. I say it sounds like an hallucination, that's a characterisation of your claim.
In terms of my points that the supernatural is unfalsifiable scientifically, that unique historical events like miracles are not susceptible to scientific investigation, that numerous people were convinced that jesus had been resurrected, that reductionist materialists tend to cordon off the resurrection on philosophical grounds and not make a very close examination of the NT accounts I have done by philosophical argument and citation.
I accept that 'miracles' are not susceptible to scientific enquiry - in the methodology I cited for science I stated that the presumption was that cause and effect were consistent, and 'miracle' implicitly requires a breach of that.
However, you have to give a more demonstrable justification for ignoring that methodology than 'I think this is a miracle'. The most we can justify from 'we can't explain this using known methods' is 'we don't know'. You can't go beyond that to 'therefore miracle'.
A large number of people may have believed at the time - more people believe now. People can be wrong. A large number of people don't believe, so one group or the other has to be wrong.
I can see how you'd think 'reductionist materialists' would ideologically refute your claim, but I think you have it the wrong way round. I'm a reductionist materialist because no-one's shown sufficient reason to think there's anything else. You can make the claim, but your 'evidence' is purely internal (and therefore unverifiable as extistent, let alone correctly interpreted) and you accept it as much on faith as by demonstrating any reasonable confidence that your interpretation is correct.
There is bags more argument to be had but that is enough to be getting on with considering the failed analysis by your team and it's refusal to provide an alternative history.
We don't need to provide an alternative history. You are making the claim, we are saying 'we don't know'. And in the absence of knowledge we're not going to accept an extreme claim with no other corroboration.
So all you have to do is to demonstrate your positive assertion that religion is hallucination.
How come an alternate explanation for the resurrection account - of which there are many - is enough, but an alternate explanation for your 'experience' isn't?
I've provided an alternate explanation for your claim of an 'experience of a god'. You've got to demonstrate how you determine it's your previously unevidenced explanation that's right, rather than the well-established, well-documented, repeatedly-studied, entirely natural phenomenon.
You are making the claim of an 'experience of god'. I'm suggesting you need to justify that claim because there are other, more likely, possibilities.
O.