AB,
It is you who have declared my arguments to be logically false.
Of course it isn’t. I don’t “declare” any such thing. Logical fallacies (formal and informal) are
documented. You can look them up on various sites, Wikipedia for example.
When you try an argument that’s precisely aligned with one or several of them (which you do routinely despite being endlessly corrected), then
by definition your argument is
wrong.
At some level I think you perceive this, at least dimly. If I attempted any of the fallacious arguments you attempt for “god”, “soul” etc to validate my belief in, say, leprechauns, you would at least sometimes have the wit to say something like, “no, that’s a false argument because….”. Yet when you attempt
exactly the same arguments for your faith beliefs for some reason you seem to think they should get a free pass.
I do not see this.
I don’t believe you – if you can see a false argument attempted to validate a belief other than your own, why can you not recognise that it’s also a false argument when you attempt it to validate your faith beliefs?
For you actually not to see it you'd have to be entirely unaware of what logical fallacies actually entail regardless of what they're supposed to validate.
What I see is that I have the freedom to consciously choose, and no amount of so called logical argument can take away this freedom. I do see that my freedom to choose can't be explained in any physical sense, because any physical explanation would take away this freedom. So it is logical to presume that my freedom to choose emanates from a source which is not physically predetermined. My logical conclusion is simply that my ability to make consciously driven choices emanates from the entity which is me. This entity has freedom to make conscious choices which are not entirely predetermined by the past, but determined by my conscious self which exists in the present. This is not a logical impossibility, just a feasible explanation of reality.
But you know already that that’s stupid – for reasons that you have been given may times already but that you just ignore. Essentially you’re privileging your superficial experience
of things over the coherent, logical, demonstrable explanations
for those things.
I don’t know why you do this, but my guess is that you’re so terrified of being wrong that you cannot allow anything to jeopardise your certainties no matter how irrational they are.