Hope,
but nor does the opposite apply
Yes it does. If a book makes a truth claim about a past event then the book alone tells us nothing about the truthfulness or otherwise of that claim. The most that can be said is, “that’s a truth claim made in a book”. To determine the truthfulness or otherwise of the claim you need some means of
testing the claim.
And there are plenty of those, which because of your understanding of life aren't acceptable to you. It doesn't mean that they are unacceptable.
Yes it does if you want those claims to be accepted as true for other people too. That’s why, for example, biblical miracles stories aren’t taught as facts in science or history lessons.
I agree, but as I'm not making those same logical fallacies, it doesn't apply.
Then your memory fails you. In response to having one of your fallacies pointed out to you (the negative proof fallacy) your reply was that others have done it too. Whether or not they have says nothing though to your (frequent) use of it.
Sorry, but I've heard it used by a number of high-profile people on your side of the debate over the years, so the straw man accusation is on you, not me.
No you haven’t. If you think that you have, then cite an example of it. You can’t just assert your way out of a straw man.
good to see you trying to avoid the natural consequences of your assertion. You made an assertion, so where is the evidence to back it up.
What assertion?
Sorry, Shakes, but just because you believe the argument to be relying on logical fallacies, doesn't mean - as you say earlier in the post - that it does.
That’s true – it’s not just my “belief" though that makes your arguments fallacious. What
does make them fallacious however is that they precisely follow the structures of the various fallacies on which you rely. When you demand that others disprove your claims, that’s the negative proof fallacy; when you attack an argument that no-one makes, that’s the straw man fallacy; when you defend your use of a fallacy by suggesting that others do it too, that’s the
tu quoque fallacy, when you…etc etc
And that’s your problem: you don’t seem even to be aware of what logical fallacies
are, so you use them repeatedly. And the problem with
that is that fallacious arguments are always wrong. If you seriously care about making a cogent argument then you need grasp this simple point and (finally) attempt an argument that does
not rely on logical fallacies.
Go on, you know you want to don’t you.
Don’t you?