AB,
You seem to apply the term "logical fallacy" to any point I make which can't be backed up with watertight evidence.
Completely wrong. A logical fallacy is a logical fallacy is a logical fallacy - it has nothing to do with not being "backed up wth watertight evidence" at all. You remember the example of the cracks in the pavement and Granny's cough I gave you and you ignored? Good, well that's a logical fallacy - it's a basic mistake in
reasoning,
not in the quality of the evidence you think you bring to the table.
When discussing spriitual matters concerning God and human souls I concede that there are inevitable limitations in the way of physical evidence.
That's the least of your problems. First you have to make some arguments that
aren't logically hopeless for the existence of this "God" and of these "human souls" to begin with.
And there's your real problem. However strongly you feel something to be true, that says nothing to anyone else about whether it is in fact true. Just asserting it to be so does not make it so.
But my concept is that there is much more to reality than our physical senses can perceive.
That's not "your" concept at all - there are many phenomena that we need special instruments to perceive for example. If though you want to offer conjectures about the supernatural, then you have all your work ahead of you finally to propose a method of any kind to verify these claims. And no, "It makes sense in my head" does
not do that.
Contrary to what many suggest, I am not making up comfortable explanations to fill the gaps of human knowledge.
That's exactly what you are doing.
I draw on the combined logic derived from my own intelligence,...
But your "own intelligence" lets you down badly when it leads you to stumble into fallacy after fallacy. The logic is the logic - your intelligence has nothing to do with that, except for its limitations when it impairs your understanding of the logic.
...my prayer life,...
Which is epistemically worthless until and unless you can build a logical bridge from your personal prayer experiences to objective facts.
... my experiences with other human beings,...
Which we know leads you to a problem of mistaken causal attribution because you don't understand how probability and randomness work.
... the readings of divinely inspired scripture...
Except that you've yet to demonstrate that it's divinely inspired at all.
...and my own personal experiences - particularly with regard to answers to prayer.
Which brings us back to your misattribution problem.
No doubt you will dismiss most of these with your own alternative explanations, but I am unable to dismiss them.
The logic that undoes you isn't mine at all - it's just the logic that undoes you. Clearly and sadly you are unable to dismiss them, presumably because you find them to be comforting. I merely suggest though that, if you want the rest of us to do other than point and laugh, it would serve you well finally to understand what logical fallacies are, to avoid them in future and to try at least to construct an argument for your position that doesn't rely on them.
Good luck!