Hi Gabriella,
Small piece of housekeeping: if you address your posts to the person you’re talking to it helps avoid the risk of confusion. Usually I can work it out from the context of the post, but sometimes not when several posts have led up to it. Thanks.
You will have to argue AB's statements with him and the statements from the pulpit with the people who make them. Not every theist holds the same view as AB and a theist cannot speak for another theist. I do not try to falsify other beliefs - I just disagree with them because the concepts in those beliefs do not appear as beneficial to me as other alternative beliefs. I arrive at this conclusion through a mixture of sub-conscious and conscious inputs.
But many theists will gather around the same but wrong arguments to justify their beliefs and to expect you to have them too therefore. That’s evangelism, and that’s the point. As for falsification, I expect that you do even at an instinctive level – if for example I told you that you should also hold my belief in Zeus and that the wishes of Zeus should be taught as facts to your children you would quickly dismiss my reasons.
Yes, we have been around your “beneficial” point before. Essentially what that says is that a belief is beneficial – doubtless others in different times and places have found just as much benefit from their beliefs in things you’d find to be ludicrous – but it tells you nothing at all about whether the thing that’s believed in is real or imaginary.
As I have argued before, I do not think God is a fact because a fact (as we seem to use the word) is something that can be tested, measured and proved objectively, therefore God cannot be a fact by that definition because none of those criteria apply to the concept. God is a label people assign to a particular concept that they believe in.
Which is a very well for them, but gives them no warranty at all to expect others to treat seriously the claims of fact they make, let alone to insist they have them too. So far as I can tell epistemically “god” and leprechauns are literally equivalent for this purpose.
I do think God can exist…
I can't get even that far because I have no idea what you mean by “God”. It’s a bit like me saying, “I do think that Zig23 can exist”, but ok…
…but again, not if the word "exist" is defined as something that can be objectively tested, measured etc etc see para above. So I am not sure what the word to use is if something exists as a concept outside of time and space.
Incoherent? ; - )
Also, not sure what to use instead of "exist", if you take the philosophical view that things do not 'exist' independent of the mind.
I’m not sure that that’s “the” philosophical view. You’re thinking of Bishop Berkeley perhaps (
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Berkeley) but I think the more generally accepted paradigm is that there’s an “out there” world, albeit one that we cannot with a high level of confidence be sure we perceive accurately.