You produced one earlier - "It is all the same at the end of the day ..." (post #6) on the 'Atheism and Meaning' thread
Addressed in some detail and at some length - despite which you must have missed it.
The assertion is that because theists - who not believe that science is the be-all and end-all of life - can't produce a methodology that is limited to scientific parameters, they are limping 'along behind science looking for gaps and, to paraphrase Dara O'Briain, filling in the blanks with whatever fairy tale most appeals'.
Yes, that's right. How many times have the likes of you and Alien been asked to provide a methodology for determining the truth of your beliefs about reality, and what has been the result?
As I have said numerous times, your posts reflect your world-view; a world-view that, in my understanding, is limited to and by science. It will not allow for anything that science can't explain. Yet, you have not provided any hard evidence that it is a world-view that is line with reality, relying instead on the circular argument that because X doesn't fit into the scientific parameters you have hedged yourself around with, X can't exist.
No, that would be yet another example of the negative proof fallacy, and we all know that you've practically got exclusive rights to that one. It's more to do with the fact that the worldview to which I adhere has a methodology which allows claims to be evaluated with the absolute minimum of personal preference and subjective bias, allows for claims to be tested, shared with others for them to test, and so on and so forth. Your methodology is ... well, what
is it, exactly? You lot seem incredibly unwilling to say. Remember that you and your ilk can't go bandying around words such as "limited" and "reality" when you can't provide any method by which reality can even be known and your so-called "limits" to be demonstrated to
be limits. Without such a methodology (demonstrated to exist; shown to work) this is just sloganeering.