Gabriella,
Bingo! Here's AB (Reply 27831):
"But I can find no arguments to support the existence of leprechauns, but overwhelming evidence for the existence of God."
Apparently he thinks he has not just evidence but overwhelming evidence for the existence of God! Apparently too based on his proselytising he expects me to think that this "fact" is a fact for me too - ie, it's a statement of objective fact about the world. He hasn't actually produced any of this evidence of course, but that's not the issue.
You're welcome.
Thanks for providing what should be from here on in a citation to be referred back to, demonstrating your utter ignorance of what religious belief entails.
Before people discovered gravity, was it a subjective or objective fact that gravity exists?
Did the sum of the square on the hypotenuse of a right-angled triangle being the sum of the squares of other two sides of the triangle only become objective fact when Pythagoras discovered it?
There is *nothing* stopping you testing Alan Burns' claims for yourself. In fact, that's the advice of Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount: Seek and you will find. However, that's where you guys have a problem. Your philosophy calls that a 'confirmation bias', so once again, you find yourself in the impossible position of asking for evidence of something, whilst using a methodology that makes a predictive claim about the origin of that evidence.
You are without excuse because all of the arguments you use here against religious belief fall down flat when used on your arguments against religious belief.
- Your worldview assumes the truth of it's position.
- Your worldview is not falsifiable
- Your worldview requires faith (something that is wrong when people with a religious belief do it) as it is unprovable.
It's why you guys have a whole philosophy set up (Negative Proof Fallacy, etc) which means that you never have to account for your own position. If you could defend it, you would and if shown to be true would disprove all religious belief claims.
I would go as far as to say that your position is a whole lot worse than those of religious belief. Taking the main monotheistic religions: For Christianity, the falsification test is whether or not Jesus Christ rise from the dead. For Islam, there is only one God (Allah) and that Muhammad is the messenger of God (I'll stand to be corrected by Gabriella on that one). For Judaism, the Messiah is still to come.
You justify the double standards by trying to claim that belief v non-belief is not a 50-50 scenario (same as Dawkins tried in 'The God Delusion'). Again, all that illustrates is the double-standards, hence why positive claims from religious believers always have to be backed up, but positive claims by those arguing against religious belief (e.g. God does not exist, Jesus didn't rise from the dead, etc), do not appear to require justification.