The etymology of the word is irrelevant to its usage in modern English.
The belief in and worship of a superhuman controlling power, especially a personal God or gods
Is it? English remains one of the few languages that officially has no male-gender marked pronouns. The fact that most people aren't aware of that, and use
him/his/he as male-marked terms, it doesn't mean that the official position doesn't still stand. The same holds for other etymological issues.
Where?
A number of threads over the last 5 or so years. The fact that you have missed them is regretable, but then the same could be said of many arguments on the other side of the debate that have been lost as a result of the necessary culling of the board's threads.
How many times are you going to repeat this, despite having been told that people will accept any objective evidence or methodology regardless of whether it's "naturalistic"?
As many times as necessary until such people begin to accept objective evidence 'regardless of whether it's "naturalistic"'.
This continued assertion of yours is blatant dishonesty.
You mean, like the dishonesty shown by those who claim that they will 'accept
any objective evidence or methodology regardless of whether it's "naturalistic";, but then ignore it whenit's produced?
So why is there no hint of a shred of objective evidence and no suggestion of any reasoned arguments to support the notion of this god?
Simply because, as all on your side of the debate have said over the years, none of it fits their naturalistically restricted thinking.
I find it very telling that, rather than present any evidence or arguments for your position, you try to drag science down to the level of religion.
Well, having provided plenty of evidence and arguments which are almost always dismissed by those whose opinions and ideas differ from mine, I decided that it would be just as worthwhile to point out the flaws that science exhibits - flaws that even scientists admit to.
Science is clear. It has conjecture, hypotheses and theories - the big bang theory is clear and accepted by the vast majority of scientists. It covers the origin of the observable universe in a hot, dense state approximately 13.5 billion years ago.
Is that why there are a number of different interpretations of details and timings, etc.
Now, back to that evidence you claim you've presented - where is it?
Probably on threads that you prefer not to read or remember reading.