Hope,
Well, iirc, the latter (albeit slightly modified) turned out to be true on 9/11. I do find the use of these extreme, and highly unrealistic examples quite amusing - notice that you only introduce 'the 22nd storey' partway through the second part of the equation. Equally, one might argue that the lift will get you to the ground floor more safely (or quicker) than by jogging down the stairs: I suppose it depends on what floor one is on, when you start the timing, whether the lift is a modern hi-speed one or a more ancient, slow one; are the lifts busy and therefore require you to stand in front of them for a long time; is there a power cut partway through your journey; ..., etc.?
Oh dear. The comparison was between a
naturalistic answer (the lift) and a
non-naturalistic one (the window). Just substituting the latter for a naturalistic alternative misses the point entirely.
See above
I did. You went straight off the rails
Its been explained as 'solidly' as your opening gambit above, blue. I believe that I knocked that down fairly straightforwardly. If that degree of 'solidity' is all you can muster, ...
But as so often your belief here is flat wrong. The explanation of the NPF is perfectly straightforward - and "solid". Why you can't grasp it is a matter for you, not for others.
Yes, I can see the faulty reasoning here: its in your first two sentences.
Halle-flippin'-llujah!
Leprechauns (or trolls, as in Iceland) have always been and remain fictional concepts. It is why they only ever appear in such things a fairy tales and legends. Even those who 'believe' in them acknowledge that.
NOOOOOOOOOO! You haven't understood it at all. Dear god but you're obtuse. It's a point in
logic regardless of the examples that populate it.
Not being able to falsify something says nothing whatsoever to whether that thing is true.
Now write that down a hundred times.
Orbiting teapots are a daft idea too - does that invalidate the force of Russell's analogy do you think?
Why not?
Conversely, religious issues such as the Virgin Birth or the resurrection of Jesus are reported as fact by people who were either present at the time or who knew of such eye-witnesses. This tends not to be the case with Hindu or Buddhist holy documents as they were not written down for many centuries
Give-me-freakin'-strength.
Whether true or epistemically useful or not, THAT HAS NOTHING WHATEVER TO DO WITH THE NPF.
Really, nothing whatever.
Zip.
Zilch.
Nada.
In ancient times, the scriptures were transmitted orally, from one generation to next, in verse form to aid memorization, for many centuries before they were written down
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Hindu_scriptures
'Corruption' over this length of time is very different to that over a matter of 2 or 3 decades.
Lovely. Now then - back to the NPF we were actually discussing. There may or may not be good reasons to believe something to be true. As a SEPARATE matter though, arguing that something is true BECAUSE IT CAN'T BE FALSIFIED is broken thinking.
Stop doing it, and then perhaps we can consider the DIFFERENT arguments you think you have for your beliefs.