Sword,
No, the avoidance is on your part.
Well that's weird. I asked you something about circular reasoning, you ignored the question entirely and replied with a different and unrelated question of your own. I pointed out that you'd avoided the question you were asked, and you replied, "No, the avoidance is on your part."
Odd behaviour.
If you want to hold to the claim
the natural is all we know of that's reliably accessible and investigable.
fine if it is applied to things it is appropriate for. However, if it is going to be applied to everything (including any non-natural claims), then by your own scientific standards, it should be falsifiable.
First, you fail to grasp the problems with the term "non-natural" here: it's just white noise unless there's some way of investigating the claim. Just now though, all "we" know of that can be reliably accessed and investigated is the natural. The "falsification" of that statement would be finding something other than the natural that
could be reliably accessed and investigated.
QED
What you do however is get round stating how your position is falsifiable by shifting the responsibility on to others to come up with it, which then allows you to just sit back and state why you think they are wrong without ever having to justify your own position.
Not sure if you're just wrong or flat out lying here as it's been explained to you several times now. Assuming for now you ever could come up with a meaningful definition of "non-natural" (it's your claim remember), then the falsification of my position would be finding an example of it that you could reliably access and investigate. That's the falsification test.
Why is this difficult for you?