NS,
And again this seems to bear no connection with what I was attempting to consider. The idea that someone has 'the perceptions he likes' is as misconceived as AB thinking people choose beliefs. Surely you just have the perceptions you have? You cannot be suggesting one chooses them?
You're missing it still. Perhaps he cannot choose his perceptions, but he
can choose the arguments he makes to proselytise for them. And when even he himself knows those argument to be bad (because he too would reject them in different contexts) then by attempting them at best he's guilty of irrelevance, and at worst of lying.
Note, as already coveted, this isn't a question of being right and wrong , rather Alan's (and many others) posts seem to describe a reality that I just don't recognise. He seems to perceive consistency, where there is only as maelstrom. Also if my perceptions are that different maybe the communication is fundamentally flawed and the idea that we are talking about the same thing is wrong.
Yes I know what he's trying, but it
is a question of being right or wrong when we limit the conversation to the arguments he's attempting rather than encompass the conjectures at the end of them. As I said earlier, frankly I have no idea whether he's right or wrong about "God", "soul", "Satan" etc because I have no idea what he means by these terms (not least because nor it seems does he) so all I have is white noise. When he tries to tell me
why he thinks he's right though using the language we do have in common - ie, the language of logic - then it's trivially easy to unravel his arguments like a cheap suit.
What may or may lie beyond the hinterland of his broken arguments though is not something with which I need be concerned, any more than I (or he for that matter) need be concerned with the different speculations of anyone else that also depend on bad thinking. Here at least I agree with you that it's not about right and wrong - it's just irrelevant.