Vlad,
Sorry that's just words thrown about shamanically.
You are saying that experience of God is a guess.
To be clear, I’m saying that the fact of an “experience” isn’t a guess, but the attaching to it of “God” as its explanatory cause is.
On what grounds? You seem to be assuming that it is. Please demonstrate.
On the ground that it’s character is precisely that of a guess – it’s a statement of (supposed) fact with no underlying logic or evidence to support it. That’s what “guess”
means.
God is never put forward as a physical thing so I don't know what you mean by concretisation.
Clearly. “Concretisation” in this case just means, “making real”. If the conversation is about why you think there’s a “god” at all, you cannot just include, “but the discovery of God….” as if any such thing had already been established.
I think you've probably successfully mired the conversation...though why you would possibly want to do that I can't possibly imagine ha ha.
“Mired” in what? You don’t understand the word.
You need to therefore justify why you think experiencing God is guessing.
I already have.
Are you saying that I could have experienced something other than God?
Of course you could. There are lots of other possible explanations, albeit presumably ones you’d find less solipsistically thrilling.
I apply language frameworks and the only satisfactory one is that which I would say I was gifted understanding of.
Nope, no idea. What do you think you’re even trying to say here?
I think you are guessing at truth being only mundane experiences and quotidien explanations being available.........Am I right?
Never so far, no. What I’m
actually doing is
reasoning that the assertion “god” as a causal explanation is no less a guess that “leprechauns” would be.
Why is this difficult for you to grasp?