AB,
I entirely agree, which is why I used the phrase "secular argument".
But “argument”
is logic. Here for example from the Wiki article on argument:
“
In logic and philosophy, an argument is a series of statements typically used to persuade someone of something or to present reasons for accepting a conclusion.[1][2] The general form of an argument in a natural language is that of premises (typically in the for of propositions, statements or sentences) in support of a claim: the conclusion.[3][4][5] The structure of some arguments can also be set out in a formal language, and formally defined "arguments" can be made independently of natural language arguments, as in math, logic, and computer science.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ArgumentIf an argument isn’t logical, it isn’t an argument – or at least not a cogent one. Whether an argument leads to secularism, theism or any other –ism is entirely a separate matter.
Yes, and without the God given perception of the human soul you could not make this statement.
An un-defined, un-argued (or badly argued) and un-evidenced assertion you make a lot. If you want the claim to be taken more seriously than any other white noise though, then – finally – you’ll need to make a logically sound argument for it.
The difference is that your logical arguments exclude God.
Mine do not.
That’s because your arguments
aren’t logical – they correlate precisely to the structure of
fallacies. Which means they’re
wrong.
That’s not to say that necessarily there is no good argument for “God”, but it is to say that, so far at least, you’ve never managed to produce one.
Only if you deliberately exclude God.
Categorically, cast iron, all out flat
wrong. All the logical fallacies on which you depend aren’t wrong “because they exclude god” at all. They’re just wrong because they’re logically
unsound. Whether you use them to argue for “God”, unicorns, or anything else is entirely irrelevant for that purpose.
Of course I know what they mean.
Finally! Well, if you do know what they mean as you claim perhaps we can move on to why you rely on them so heavily. Do you think that a bad argument becomes a good argument when its outcome is one you happen to have as a personal belief?
If you don’t, why else would you keep attempting arguments that (you now tell us)
you know to be fallacious?
If you knew of God's existence, you would see things more clearly.
An utterly irrelevant piece of reification. Try again: do you think that a bad argument becomes a good one when you happen to like its outcome?
If we did live in a physically deterministic universe, you would not have the freedom to form any argument - be it true or false.
That’s a lot of wrong to pack into one sentence: it’s an
argumentum ad consequentiam (one of the many fallacies on which you depend); it plays fast and loose with the term “freedom” (by which you actually mean your personal but incoherent definition of “free from cause and effect”); and it’s entirely irrelevant to the point being made. The point being made was in fact that, no matter how much the conclusion that the universe is deterministic may not appeal to your tastes, that does
not entitle you to use any fallacies you like to validate your alternative by calling them “logical”.
Desperate, desperate stuff AB. Really.