SOTS,
1) But you don't understand that what you are saying is wrong in both cases. Ad hominem was given on your part by making unfounded comments on what I had said accusing me of entertaining incredulity. I know what it means I just think you are seeing things in what I say, so claiming I'm postulating arguments for invalid reasons, which aren't there. Who are you to say I'm thinking this or that way?
OK, so it seems I do need to explain “
ad hominem” here then. An
ad hom is a logical fallacy in which the protagonist attempts to rebut an argument by attacking the character, motive etc of the person making it rather than by addressing the argument itself. In this case I pointed out (rightly by the way) an attempt to argue from personal incredulity (yet another logical fallacy). That’s not an
ad hom at all - it's just identifying bad reasoning, a standard rhetorical approach. If on the other hand I’d said something like, “SOTS smells of weasels”, or “SOTS has an unnatural interest in baked beans” that would been an
ad hom.
Hope that clears it up for you.
See my #303 to see where I have cited three examples of him doing something similar about the poster Hope.
See the posts that follow it that rebut it.
This is what happens when posters like bluehillside fail to realise that the burden of proof lies with the one making the claim....
You of all people are talking about the burden of proof? Good grief!
He cannot defend his position because his defence is not based on properties of truth. He can't defend it (because it is not falsifiable), has to keep hiding behind the misuse of the NPF, therefore misrepresenting the views/intentions of those he is arguing against. As I said, there are three examples in my #303 and there are many more that could be cited!
At what point I wonder should we conclude not only that you’re wrong but, having ignored the corrections, you’re also flat out lying?
Yet again:
1. Many here have attempted and continue to attempt the NPF, Hope being just one of them. Just two posts after yours for example, Sriram did it too. Anyone who’s spent any time here will have seen it many times. It’s a commonplace.
2. Whether some, none, or lots of people attempt it here is however entirely irrelevant to the
argument. You can keep using its un/popularity as a diversionary tactic if you wish but it’s not reflecting well on you when you do. The fact remains that it’s a false argument
regardless of how often it’s tried.3. Your point of attack (on which you have now gone silent in favour of a diversion) was that the rebuttal of the NPF failed when leprechauns, celestial teapots etc are used as alternative outcomes to “God” because the former are obviously made up. For reasons that have been explained to you several times now, this line only betrays your failure to grasp the force of the rebuttal. It doesn’t mater a jot what the unfalsifiable conjecture happens to be – the point in logic remains that non-falsification is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for a truth proposition. That the NPF produces leprechauns and celestial teapots with the same facility that it produces “God” just serves to highlight the ludicrousness of attempting it.
This is what it has come down to with bluehillside: My conjecture is that there is a giant onion orbiting the sun between the sun and Mars, with the inscription, the fallacy of the negative proof fallacy. Now, according to bluehillside, any arguments used for God can also be used for my conjecture!
Stop lying – it’s just boorish. “According to bluehillside”,
only the argument “you can’t disprove my giant onion conjecture, therefore it’s true” (ie the NPF) is under discussion here. You may or may not have different arguments you think demonstrate “God”, but the only one we’re discussing here is a crock regardless of how much you fail to grasp its rebuttal and regardless oh how much you attempt to divert our eyes from it with irrelevancies.