From
#13779I would say that an atheist would find the arguments for god(s) personally unconvincing...
I'd question the "personally" here. The point of logic is that it's impersonal: 2 + 2 ? 5 regardless of who your are, your personal opinions, your "faith" etc. That's the difference from religious faith in particular, which gives you a "true for me only" god but that's all it gives you.
(emphasis mine)
But that doesn’t make it wrong (the underlined bit). The question is, how do you establish something as being true, or not?
If I said 2+2=10, this would be deemed illogical under base 10, and as you say,
regardless of who you are, your personal opinions, your “faith”, etc. However, in base 3 (I wrongly said base 5 last time I used this), the statement is true. Therefore what appeared to be false is no longer false if certain parameters are changed.
Let me illustrate in another way: How can someone who can see
prove to a blind person (who has always been blind) what a lemon is? Does the fact that there is no way to do so mean the blind person should conclude that there is no such thing as a lemon? Does the blind person not have to accept by faith what they are being told, whilst having to take as
evidence that which supports it, e.g. texture, taste, etc. How do they know that they aren’t being the victim of a hoax? Those who can see know because for them, the existence of a lemon is
fact. To the blind person however, they are not in a position to verify that fact so have to accept it by faith. According to you, they shouldn’t take this approach, yet because we know that lemons exist, it would be seen as nonsensical for a blind person to conclude that lemons don’t exist because they cannot prove that lemons do exist.