Vlad,
What they have in common is that they are believed to be mythological to some people Hillside.
That's one thing they have in common, yes. But it's not
the thing they have in common for the purpose of the argument that
actually being made here.
What
that thing in common is is that certain bad arguments can produce "God" and "leprechauns" alike. The negative proof fallacy for example will do that. I merely point out that if you want to use that argument for just one of them nonetheless, you should probably have a re-think.
But it would only be intellectual slovenliness of Hillsidian proportions to leave things at that.
Then - as ever - you would say wrongly. The only "intellectual slovenliness" here is your insistence on looking down the wrong end of the telescope. Turn the thing around and finally engage with what's
actually being said and you might stand a chance of not falling flat on your face again. And again and again.
It really isn't a good idea to cling on to a mistake just because you've invested heavily in making it. Really, it isn't.
Outside that...
Sadly, your "that" in this case has collapsed completely again but ok...
...all you are doing is saying look A is ridiculous therefore B is ridiculous on the grounds that I am insinuating that there is an equivalence between A and B.
You're leaving me no choice but to conclude that your lying here is deliberate. What else can I think when I've told you over and again why this is precisely
not what I'm doing?
I make no insinuation, arguments, statement,
anything to say that there's an equivalence between A and B. A and B can be as
un-equivalent as you can possibly make them for this purpose. Really, fill your boots - make them as different as you like.
Done that? OK. Good.
Now then, back to the actual issue: when the
argument that gets you to A
and to (the completely different remember) B is exactly the same argument for each, and you agree that either A or B is ridiculous, then you have no choice but either to accept both A and B as true nonetheless, or to abandon the
argument completely.
Look, I'll even put it in bold and in big letters so you don't have to lie about it again:
When the argument that gets you to A and to (the completely different remember)B is exactly the same argument, and you agree that either A or B is ridiculous, then you have no choice either but to accept both A and B as true nonetheless, or to abandon the argument completely.You're welcome.