I'm not suggesting that everybody should agree or that you can't say what you want on the forum - I just find it odd that you seem to want to tell us what another poster thinks rather than what you think.
What I think about gods? I'm a theist, a Muslim so I believe in a monotheistic concept of God. But your problem is not with people stating their beliefs but with the idea that Alan says he is sure or knows God exists. Hence I am addressing what I think Alan is saying, which is making a statement of faith.
It's not something I'd feel comfortable doing - even if I thought I knew. I'd be answering the points from my own perspective.
It can only really be my perspective - I'm just giving my perspective of what someone might mean when they say they "know" in relation to something that can't be objectively proved.
It's not that his view has gaps and is incomprehensible, it's that he said it was based on logic and has not only failed to back it up with any, he has failed to respond to the logical argument that his proposal is logically incoherent.
I agree.
It isn't a specifically religious misunderstanding but Alan is making it a central part of his 'argument' for his favourite god.
Yeah - I don't find his concept of free will convincing and I'm not sure if it is an argument for his concept of god. I see him arguing for or trying to explain his concept of free will, and interjecting the explanations or 'don't knows' with his beliefs about this free-will coming from his concept of god.
I gave three reasons why it falls as evidence for an objectively existing god, even as legal evidence. You wouldn't convict based on witnesses' own interpretation of events, that was self-contradictory, and contradicted by other witnesses.
I am just not seeing how you see his statements as capable of making an "objective" claim, when it comes to something that can't be tested or proved. It can only be a belief claim if it can't be tested in any way. Surely, based on how we use the English language, to describe it as a claim for something to exist objectively, the method to test it needs to be demonstrated first. Failing that method test, it can only be a belief.
He said he had "overwhelming evidence" and a "logical analysis". The witness 'evidence' is neither.
I understood that to mean that the testimony and experience is overwhelming evidence for him, rather than it being in the category of objective evidence. Yeah - I'm not seeing his analysis as logical.
You wouldn't expect that if these people are really able to clearly communicate with an objectively real god.
Which people? How often are they claiming to communicate directly with a god? Even with communication (not sure what you mean by clear) ideas can get misunderstood or misapplied - I don't see how you can eradicate the human capacity to err or just perceive things subjectively based on nature/nurture.