Gabriella,
Except that's not what I'm doing.
Try the word “analogy” for starters.
The document used the words "faith, beliefs, doctrines of the Catholic Church" and stated that they wanted their pupils to have knowledge of these beliefs, doctrines, and the Catholic faith. So no, not foxed about the way the words were used in the document on Catholic Schools teaching of R.E.
Not sure why you’ve revisited the catholic document issue, but it’s so long ago that if you think it said only “knowledge of our faith beliefs” or similar you’ll have to cite it.
Incorrect. I know the Eiffel Tower is in Paris because I’ve been there. And I know that the Parthenon is in Athens because there is objective evidence such as photos.Which is different from AB stating that he thinks his beliefs about dualism are true.
Wrong again. You “know” that there’s an Eiffel tower in Paris because you
believe you’ve been there; you “know” about the Parthenon because you
believe that you’ve seen photos of it. These things are beliefs, as indeed ultimately is all knowledge – how for example would you eliminate the possibility that you’re actually just a piece of junk computer code programmed to believe these things? What we can also do with our beliefs though is to sift them
probabilistically by employing the tools we (appear to) have of reason and evidence. By these means we derive working, provisional truths we can use as solutions. When by contrast our beliefs concern matters that fail or are not apt for these tests (leprechauns, “soul” etc) we can say that there are no good reasons available to us to think them probabilistically to be objectively true for anyone else.
This is basic theory of knowledge 101 by the way, and I have explained it to you before.
OK, now to AB. In his head, he
has experienced “soul” every bit as much as you’ve experienced the Eiffel tower and pictures of the Parthenon. It’s as real to him as they are to you. So far as he’s concerned, epistemically there’s no difference at all between these narratives. The fact that any test of reason and evidence falsifies his claim of objective fact for “soul” is another matter, and whenever it's raised he runs away from the problem in any case. On the other hand, so far as I know he would not claim his beliefs and opinions about gender (or language or aesthetics, or….) to be objectively true for other people at all. That’s why,
so far as he’s concerned, there’s no “dualism” at all, and it’s why your attempt at an analogy fails: to AB, “soul” is objective, factual, “out there”; gender, spit infinitives etc though are subjective, opinion, personal to the individual.
And sometimes they don't fail because some trans people also think their belief about dualism are true - that a person has an essence or innate gender.
Wrong again – see above.
And you know perfectly well that I don't know any such thing for the reasons I have explained to you.
Wrong again – see above. Claiming to have addressed something but being unable to tell us where you did it isn’t the same thing as addressing something.
You seem to have trouble comprehending what you read since my point was that I don't object to name-calling because it doesn't have an effect. I was just commenting on your posting style. Or in short: feel free to call me names if that's part of your posting style as it won't change what I write but if it gives you a chuckle then it seems as good a reason as any to keep doing it.
Also I keep addressing why I am not making a false analogy. I can't do much if you won't accept my explanation.
Not yet you haven’t. Just repeating the same analogy isn’t the same as explaining why it isn’t false.
Oh the honesty shtick - I forgot about that one. Good for you. What's coming up next? I should make a bingo card for these.
Fallacy of pejorative language – asking someone to be honest isn’t a “schtick”, it’s just asking someone to be honest. I’ve explained to you (yet) again in this reply why the analogy is false – rather than repeat it, why not try at least to tell me why the argument that shows it to be false is wrong? I know it’s hard to pin you down because you keep shifting ground (“here’s an analogy”; “it’s not an analogy”; “I’m just telling you how I treat his claims”; “OK, it’s an analogy” etc) but if we can pin you down to having tried an analogy (for the reason I explained in reply 34024) why not now either defend it or retract it?