Sword,
Firstly, it is not a lie.
Yes it is. It’s something he accuses me (and others) of that I’ve expressly told him many times I do not think to be the case. In the unlikely event that he ever could find someone who actually does think as he tries to paint all “antitheists” as thinking, I’d agree that the absolutist “cannot” is logically unsustainable.
Secondly…
You can’t have a “secondly” when your firstly has just collapsed.
…as to why, this is why!
Your response above: Why should one consider reports of a physical resurrection and evidence of a (subsequent at least) community that believed it to be true as any more accurate than There are reports of a physical resurrection and evidence of a community with an experience of this.
It’s more accurate because a community believing something to be true is a commonplace. There’s no particular reason to doubt that they did believe it. Whether their belief was well-founded on the other hand is a different matter entirely – there are various alternative explanations for their beliefs, and no means to eliminate them.
How do you know what their experience of it was?
I don’t, any more than I know what the Greeks’ experience of Poseidon was or the Egyptians’ experience of Horus was. And nor do you. I do know though that epistemically the argument in all three cases for an objective truth is hopeless.
And that’s all that’s being said here.
It's obvious that you are starting from a position that such things cannot happen…
Why are you repeating Vlad’s lie about that? The only thing that’s obvious is that I find that there’s no cogent reason to think that such things
did happen – a very different position.
…whilst giving the impression in your exchanges with Vlad that a lack of testable evidence is the problem.
Not just of testable evidence – of underpinning logic too.
Like Gordon and Floo, you really need to sort out your worldview.
Why are you persisting with making a fool of yourself with this nonsense?