AB,
It all boiled down to a difference of opinion, but I have no wish to trawl through all the arguments again.
No it didn’t. A difference of opinion would concern, say, whether coffee is nicer than tea. What you attempt is assertions of
fact that rely on false arguments, which is a different matter entirely.
My posts are indicators to discovering the truth of God's existence.
And that’s one of those false arguments – called the reification fallacy. You can’t just refer to “the truth of God’s existence” as if it were an axiom. Your problem here is to demonstrate that that
is a truth without relying on false arguments to do the job.
They do not comprise watertight logic, so it is very easy to nit pick on certain points, but in doing so the whole concept of the argument gets lost.
This is wrong on so many levels.
First, you give yourself too much credit. It’s not that they “do not comprise watertight logic”; it’s that they comprise attempts at logic
that are completely broken. This is a bit like saying, “2+2=5 does not comprise watertight logic”. Your “logic” is
wrong. Flat wrong. Not a bit “not watertight”, but flat wrong.
Second, this isn’t about nitpicking on certain points at all. The arguments you attempt for “God”
are the point. If those arguments fail (and they do) then your claim “God” is just your personal assertion on the matter, no more and no less epistemically useful than my claim “pixies”.
Third, “the whole concept of the argument” doesn’t “get lost” at all. Rather it’s
falsified. If you have a different “concept” that has cogent logic to support it, or a different argument entirely then by all means bring them to the table. For now though all you have is some personal assertions and some very bad arguments you wrongly think to validate them.
So let’s try again. Here’s the question once more:
DO YOU KNOW WHAT THE TERM “LOGICAL FALLACY” MEANS AND, IF YOU DO, DOES YOUR RELIANCE ON THEM IMPLY THAT YOU THINK THAT A FALSE ARGUMENT SOMEHOW BECOMES A GOOD ONE WHEN YOU HAPPEN TO LIKE ITS OUTCOME?
It’s simple enough. The first part requires only a “yes” or a “no”. If it's a "no", the term can be explained to you so you can avoid false arguments in future. If it’s a “yes”, then the second part comes into play and again all you'd need for a reply is a “yes” or a “no”.
Subject to your answers, you can be helped on your way.