Vlad,
Again you have f*cked up category wise.
There's no "again" because you've never understood that category error does not occur when the two examples are not identical in every respect. Thus when I point out that the negative proof fallacy works equally for "god" and for leprechauns, that's not a category error regardless of how many times you fall off a cliff with your "but one is God and the others are little green men" error. The common category is, "conjectures for which the identical argument has been atempted"
Argumentum ad ridiculum again.
Something else you've never understood. However ridiculous you find, say, leprechauns (or for that matter an orbiting teapot) to be, the force of the argument is not thereby lost when they're used to illustrate that an argument for God works equally well for anything else, however daft.
Bang on about the triumphs of science and close examination will reveal any developments, discoveries and inventions were all mays at one time.
Yup - and then logical paths were found to take the from "may bes' to "probably is", which is when the conjecture becomes a fact. The problem with God, leprechauns etc is that there is not such logical path to reclassify them from conjectures.
God is unfalsifiable but Leprechauns aren't, neither is the Loch Ness Monster. If your mind was mousse-like prior to your holidays it has definitely turned into loose alvine efflux with the result that you have diarrheoed all over your own Bonfire.
Flat wrong as ever. How would you propose to falsify leprechauns or the Loch Ness monster exactly?
The ''space most occupy'' is also suggestive of an argumentum ad populum
No it isn't because I didn't use it to argue for the truth of something. Rather you tried to argue that someone should consider that a "relationship with god" or some such is possible. I merely pointed out that most do that anyway, albeit for the trivial reason that in principle at least anything is possible. Where you went wrong again was to imply that thinking that something is possible has anything whatever to say to whether it's
probable.