Vlad:
Me:
I'll take that to mean:
1. You'll never answer the question.
2. You'll never tell us why you won't answer the question.
3. You have no understanding of the question, and no of why it causes "assertion as fact" schtick such a problem.
Ah well.
You:
or 4. positive assertions come with burden of proof. There is no hierarchy of response.
5. I don't know that I can give you anything that you will recognise as a method and therefore I am not actually offering one.
6. You claim that philosophical naturalism is the established truth. The burden of proof on that positive assertion is yours
therefore points 4 and 5 considered it is up to you because you seem to be the only person claiming something.
4 is incoherent.
5 is at least a response of some kind, but your problem isn’t finding a method that
I would recognise, it’s finding a method of
any kind. “Intuiting” something isn’t a method – it’s just a feeling, and anyone can have them about anything at all. Not only does your claim give nothing to anyone else to make them think you might not be wholly wrong about that, it gives
you nothing either for you to test your feeling against the possibility of mistake, delusion etc.
6 is a straw man. No-one claims that philosophical naturalism is
the established truth. This is where you keep going off the rails because of your failure to comprehend what it does entail.
Philosophical naturalism is the belief that there is no means to test or examine or verify claims of the supernatural. It does not assert that there is necessarily no such thing as the supernatural (that’s just your straw man version of it) but it does say that those claims are incoherent unless they can be verified and so can safely be ignored. Methodological naturalism is just the application of that, for example in the working methods of science.
The resulting findings are a
provisional truths, but no-one claims the absolute truth. Thus the claim that jumping out of the window will make you hit the deck shortly after can be tested, and when you do indeed hit the deck – and so does everyone else who tries it – then gravity is accepted as a provisional truth.
By contrast, someone else may claim that if he jumps out of a window a god will lower him safely to the ground. The problem though is that, unless he submits to have the claim falsified, then all he has is a claim. Now that claim may be true - as may any other clam anyone else thinks they “intuit” – but that helps you not a jot.
What you’re actually saying here is effectively, “OK, I’m guessing but so are you”. It fails because it’s dishonest, (equivalent to one four-year-old saying to another, “you smell” and the other replying, “well you’re fat” as if that were in some way relevant), and because it fundamentally fails to understand that naturalism provides enough inter-subjective commonality of experience to enable a probabilistic assessment of truth, whereas claims of the supernatural offer nothing at all.
You’ve been corrected on your going nuclear approach several times now, but here once again is the Stephen Law's essay that will explain it to you:
http://stephenlaw.blogspot.co.uk/2011/09/going-nuclear.html