I'm just wondering if you're going anywhere with your point that there is no objective evidence for free-will or supernatural agents.
On the question of free will - the sort of 'free will' that Alan is talking about is logically impossible. Despite Alan's repeated insistence about his 'perception' and his ability to post what he wants, there is no relevant evidence.
I have seen no objective evidence, or sound arguments for the existence of any gods or the supernatural (both of which are rather vague terms anyway).
My understanding is that there is an established legal principle that testimony under oath can be accepted as evidence (with a penalty for perjury if it is later proved that a person lied under oath). This type of evidence still requires people's brains to decide what they find credible from the testimony and their own experiences, and yes we can call this process guessing, but it is an accepted method of arriving at decisions.
The legal evidence approach falls down on three counts.
Firstly, it's quite possible to believe most of the 'testimony' without believing the conclusions people have draw from it. For example, I don't doubt that many religious people have had what they refer to as 'spiritual' experiences but that does not necessarily mean they have encountered an objectively real, external entity.
Secondly, inconsistency between 'witnesses'. There is simply no agreement amongst those who claim to have knowledge of god(s). Instead we have endless religions, sects, cults, and denominations that all disagree. They can't all be true. That's without considering that we have similar 'evidence' for ghosts, horoscopes, alien abductions, homeopathy, and so on, and so on.
Thirdly, many of the claims are self-contradictory. For example, Alan claims his god is has an important message for us and that we need to make an important choice but, at the same time, this god is apparently hidden, so we are supposed to go looking. This is simply incompatible with a just and loving god. If the message and our choice was important, it would need to be made plain to everybody.
Apart from legal situations, we tend to make decisions in every-day life based on information we find credible and AB stating his beliefs about what he finds credible about other people's testimony and his own experiences in relation to the supernatural seems unremarkable on a Christian Board. Especially as he does not seem to mind the challenges to his testimony as that goes with the territory of testimony. Testimony by its nature is there to be challenged even if that might not alter the testimony.
But (again) he claims to have logic and evidence to back up these claims...
Since the supernatural is a category for which science doesn't seem to be appropriate, testimony and subjective experience is currently the only evidence that is available to persuade others.
But (again) he claims to have logic and evidence to back up these claims. Testimony falls down for the reasons given above and subjective experience (by itself) cannot be distinguished from guessing (and doesn't help with the contradictions).
I haven't seen AB claiming he has evidence tested by science proving free-will etc. All I see is him pointing out areas where he has found room for his strongly believed guesses about free-will and/or a supernatural entity because science has limited explanations and my impression is that AB will leave it to those listening to the testimony to decide for themselves what they find credible.
He claimed in
#27413 to have "overwhelming evidence". He also claimed in
#24676 that the evidence for the soul and his view of free will was based on a "logical analysis". Yet he has produced no objective evidence and no logic.
If he doesn't want to use science, that's fine (although he seems to want to sometimes, see for example
#26627) but he does need to provide some way to distinguish his claims from guessing or admit that he doens't actually have any objective evidence or logic.
He will not admit that he's only sharing personal beliefs. For example, I've invited him on several occasions to just admit that he cannot see any flaw in the argument that his kind of "free will" is logically impossible but that he rejects in anyway on the grounds of his personal beliefs - but he won't do so. Instead he's indulged in transparent evasion and avoidance.
Why are you so keen on telling us what Alan thinks anyway? Do you think he cannot put his point of view himself? Do you have anything of your own to add?