Hope,
Regarding the famous accusations of NFP, I've been discussing this and one or two other threads here with some logicians I know - some religious, some not.
Have you now?
Really?
Really really?
Almost all agree that, yes there is an degree of NFP-ism in several of my posts...
Only "
almost" all?
And no, there's not just "a degree" - you really on it very heavily. Every time you post, "but you can't disprove X" as if not disproving X had anything whatever to say to whether X is true, you fall straight into it. Again and again.
...but then there is a similar degree of it in many of the other posts because there appears - to them - to be an unevidenced assumption that logic can only deal with 'the natural'.
First, even if that was true a
tu quoque does not deflect from your reliance on the NPF. That's more fallacious thinking.
Second, it's not true in any case. If you want to establish that there is such a thing as the non-natural, then you have to make an argument to that effect that's
cogent. Simply using logically bad arguments to do the lifting doesn't help you one jot - you need to find some logically sound arguments to establish your premise or, if not, to find some
other method to distinguish your claims from just guessing about stuff.
Interestingly, most of them (wheter religious or not) point out that this particular thread of debate is nigh on impossible to come to a conclusion on - simply because of the very different starting point that the two sides of the debate are starting from; something that I have been pointing out for several months now. It's an interesting academic exercise, but with minimal practical value.
No, it's quite possible to reach a conclusion. Simple in fact. A logically bad argument is a logically bad argument is a logically bad argument.
And logically bad arguments are
always wrong.
What that means is that, every time you attempt one, your position collapses beneath you. That's why it's much more than an academic exercise with "minimal practical value" - the practical value is that it removes your claims from serious consideration because the arguments you attempt to establish them are demonstrably
false.
QED.
Job done.
Finito.
Junk the broken arguments and try some that aren't broken and then perhaps you'd have something worth considering. For now though, your reliance on broken reasoning continues to lock you out of any serious discussion about your faith claims.
I don't know who these supposed logicians are, but I'd ask for my money back if I were you.
PS Just fyi - an appeal to authority is a logically bad move too by the way.