Sword,
From what I can see and have seen, no Christian here is disagreeing with the need for a methodology. The issue is with how any methodologies that are provided are challenged.
No, the issue is that none have been provided at all.
I could use this thread as an example. I would have thought that it was obvious that if someone asks a question and specifically refers to “The Christian God”, a source that has a copious amount of detail on the subject should be available for use.
Then again you think wrongly. If you were to ask me why I believe in leprechauns and in reply I quoted bits from the Big Book of Leprechaunology at what point would you say, “but I didn’t ask you
what you believe – I asked you
why you believe it”?
Apparently not!
Certainly not. You can’t just assume that because a book says things about “God” that’s case closed then. That’s the reification fallacy of which you’re so fond.
So what was the point in bluehillside asking a question about the Christian God, but DavidM not being allowed to respond by using what the Bible says about the Christian God?
See above. It’s pretty obvious I’d have thought. The question wasn’t “what does a book say about this?”; it was, “how do you reconcile what a book has to say about this?”.
Can you really not see the difference?
Do you want to go back and read Gordon’s #259 to my #256? He starts off in a similar vein to you and ends up talking about ... erm ... philosophy!!
How about the end of Bluehillside’s #261?
Quote
Celestial teapots and the like are arguments in logic (itself a naturalistic phenomenon by the way) used to rebut bad attempts at logic made by theists (“you can’t disprove it, therefore it’s true” etc). For that purpose, they’re fine.
No matter how many times in the past I’ve pointed out that theists here aren’t doing this, bluehillside keeps on bringing it up.
That you “point out something” doesn’t make it true. You, AB, Vlad, Hope when he was here and others all consistently attempt(ed) logical fallacies in support of your arguments. Your attempt at the reification fallacy just now is an example of it. Just pointing out the fallacies is a short hand way of undoing the attempt. It’s simple enough – if you stop doing it, there’d be nothing to identify as fallacious.
But then bluehillside makes the same mistake: to link something that is clearly made up to religious belief, thereby assuming the conclusion about the nature of that which is being investigated. Whether or not that is the intention, that is what happens.
No Bluehillside doesn’t. What Bluehillside actually does is to explain that, when an argument for “God” works equally for leprechauns, it’s probably a bad argument.
Why is this so difficult for you?
Seriously, try it. The next time you want to attempt an argument just substitute “leprechauns” for “God” and see whether it works equally well.
When it does, you have a bad argument.
Shall I refer to the appeal to vanity that is the substance of Susan Doris’ responses to my posts?
You can if you want, but all she’s saying is that being so triumphantly wrong is doing you no favours.
If she had any kind of truth on her side, she would not need to go down this route. I’m also confused as to why she on the one hand wants ‘certainty’ (as opposed to just guessing), yet objects to it being allegedly demonstrated in someone’s posting style?
That’s not what she says. She’s just saying that your arrogance and dismissiveness while hopelessly losing the arguments isn’t an edifying sight.
Clearly there is a fundamental problem with the worldview being employed by some here.
Clearly it isn’t for reasons that have been explained to you many times now but that you just ignore.
Wearily…first, a “world view” tells you nothing about the truth or otherwise of a proposition. One man’s world view that the Christian god is real is no more valid than another man’s world view that Ra or Poseidon are real.
Second, the only time you’ve attempted to demonstrate your position you dicked around with the starting conditions of a sum but relied on exactly the same world view all along – ie, logic.
My advice to you (again) is this: do not cling on to a failed argument just because you invested heavily in making it.
You’re welcome.