NS,
which then begs the question throughout your posting that you assume your perception is right.
No. All it assumes is that, if AB wants to try the common language of logic, he fails on two grounds: first because he relies on fallacies; and second because he apples broken logic
inconsistently – he leans on bad arguments when they produce “God”, but rejects the same bad arguments when they produce something else.
The whole point is if the perception, and I take it that you now accept that choice of perception is ludicrous (given your continued lack of description of what that would mean)…
Surely the problem here is that you have failed to tell us what you mean by it, and of course it’s not ludicrous for the reasons I’ve explained – people have perceptions about all sorts of things that they sometimes change as new information arrives.
…is something that is then where you and AB may well not be talking about anything similar
Of course we may not, but (again) that’s not the point. Whatever that “something” may be is the outcome of his thinking. I don’t even get to that – the “thing” we’re talking about that he and I think is similar at least is the logic of the arguments that lead to his outcomes. Whatever he may perceive either that logic meets the codified descriptions of fallacies or it doesn’t, and whatever he may perceive he doesn’t get to apply identical arguments inconsistently when it suits.