Hi Gonners,
What is the basic logical mistake, I promise I won't misrepresent, I have a definition of a unicorn and a leprechaun in my mind but most definitely not God, well except persistence, so where is the logical mistake.
Well, as long as you promise to keep it between just us...
...OK then. Ol' Vlunderingabouttheplace said the following:
"For example Unicorns have a meaningful definition and are still mythical. Given that ,God cannot be mythical because of a lack of a meaningful definition."
Even if for the sake of the conversation we agree that unicorns do in fact have "a meaningful definition" (a highly dubious proposition as by common repute they are possessed of magical powers rather than being just horses with wings), no-one argues that it's the absence of a meaningful definition for "god" that
determines his mythic status.
There are all manner of gods, spooks and ghoulies that variously have lots of definition, some definition or barely any definition at all that we would all - Vlad included - accept as mythic: Thor, Robin Hood, Jack Frost, whatever. He is in other words knocking down a straw man version (yet again) of what's actually being said. Some of us find
stories about "God" to be mythic for the same reason that we find
stories about the man in the moon to be mythic - they fail to cohere with anything we observe about the way the universe appears to be, and their proponents give no reason whatever for us to think them not to be mythic.
The definitional problem is a major one for Vlad if he wants to establish this god in the first place (and that's
before he finally even gets to a method to distinguish his claims about this will o' the wisp from anyone else's claim about any other supernatural entity - the problem he always runs away from) but it's not the major reason for finding his stories
about this god to be mythic.