Gabriella,
I wasn’t cherry picking anything – I was just explaining why suggesting that people believe in teapots and the like was missing the point ("I, along with many others I suspect, seem to have got by just fine in life without teapots and Hansal and Gretal but if they are useful for you by all means indulge."). Those people weren’t saying that they did believe in an orbiting teapot – rather they were responding to a bad argument you made for believing in “God”. If you have other arguments that’s up to you, but that one in particular is (for the reasons they explained) wrong.
Have a nice lunch (and take an umbrella!)
BHS - you are mistaken. I suggest you re-read my posts.
The conversation about belief started with Rhiannon saying in #21153 that "You can't really assess the pros and cons of atheism or belief. There's only what you can and can't believe. I didn't want to lose my faith but I did, and I have to live by that or live a lie. Religious belief or lack of it isn't a lifestyle choice."
My reply #21157 was to say I think I can assess some pros and cons of atheism vs belief because I don't find it difficult to see a world without a god in it.
Rhiannon replied #21159 that "But you can't enjoy your life with God in it without believing in God. Belief isn't a choice. I like the idea of believing in pagan gods and rituals but I can't force myself to believe and therefore the pros and cons are irrelevant."
I replied "I find the concept of a "God that can't be defined" not that difficult to believe in, once you get to the point where you can't rule out the supernatural entirely." which Ippy correctly interpreted as me saying that it was possible for me to believe in anything once I got to the point where I didn't rule out the supernatural entirely. And then I could assess the pros and cons of a belief in it.
So Ippy asked me in #21192 "How about you can't rule out orbiting teapots, unicorns, fairies, leprechauns, alien abduction either?"
And my reply in #21193 was "Whatever works for you. I don't find any benefit from those concepts. But I don't mind hearing about what you get out of them if you want to elaborate."
So having acknowledged that I can't rule out orbiting teapots, unicorns, fairies, leprechauns, alien abduction if I can't rule out the supernatural, I said I can rule out the items on his list if belief in the things on the list does not work for me as an individual i.e. I do not perceive a benefit from believing in them or a benefit from following the rituals and practices of what a belief in them entails.
Ippy kept insisting that I read up on orbiting teapots and he also suggested Hansel and Gretal and I kept saying I could perceive no benefit for me in them so I wasn't interested in researching them but if it was something that he was interested in, felt was important or worked for him he was free to elaborate on this on the forum, but if it wasn't important to him then he probably wouldn't bother.
So while Ippy thought he was making a clever argument he actually wasn't.
My actual argument was that if you can't rule out the supernatural then anything is possible so logically you have to allow the possibility of orbiting teapots, leprechauns etc etc. but you may be able to rule out a belief in teapots and leprechauns on the basis that you don't perceive a benefit from belief in them. Of course, if other people, including Ippy, perceive a benefit from the practices and rituals associated with belief in orbiting teapots and leprechauns - that's up to them if they want to explain the benefit they perceive they get from those practices and rituals.