Author Topic: Trouble at mill  (Read 28021 times)

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #300 on: May 26, 2018, 04:42:05 PM »
Vladdo,

Quote
I don't believe you can use these and avoid a charge of argumentum ad ridiculing.

You've been corrected on this misrepresentation, what - ten times perhaps? 20 maybe? Why then do you repeat it as if it hadn't been corrected?
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #301 on: May 26, 2018, 04:43:14 PM »
NS,

Quote
Arguments are not evidence.

They're one type of evidence - which is what I said.
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Nearly Sane

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #302 on: May 26, 2018, 04:49:27 PM »
NS,

Sorry I ducked out last night – last minute call offering Mrs B and me corporate tickets for the Rolling Stones at the Olympic Park. Bloody magnificent – my god for a bunch of pensioners they can really rip it up still. Anyways…

I make no comment at all on how you came to your (non-)beliefs. I merely say that, if you found an argument for “god” that you couldn’t unravel then logically at least you’d have no choice but to abandon your atheism. 

Because I suggested no such thing. You’ve fallen into a pit of Vladian absolutism there, and here’s why: Consider Fred. Fred is an atheist. Maybe he’s an atheist because he’s never felt he experienced a god, maybe he read up on theism and found the arguments for it unpersuasive. Whatever.

Then one day Fred comes across an argument for theism that he can’t unravel. Try as he might, he can see no way to falsify it. Now you might find a way to falsify it. I might find a way to falsify it. It might be an utterly shit argument in fact. Doesn’t matter. All that matters is that Fred can’t unpick it so from his perspective he has a problem – should he retain his atheism and try to forget the argument he’s found to detonate it, or should he abandon his atheism in light of the argument he’s found undoes him?

Do you see it now? It’s a reference point issue – no-one (least of all me) suggests an argument that’s cast iron etc in some sort of absolute way (surely you know me well enough by now to know that I see no way to be certain about anything – unknown unknowns and all that). All I need for the point to stand is an argument that just seems certain enough to Fred. 

That was the "because" I referred to earlier: logically at least you can be an atheist by any means you like; find an argument for theism you can't undo though and retaining the atheism is akin to a professor of geology holding on to the notion that the earth is made of cream cheese.
Why invent someone to illustrate your argument by incredulity when you are talking to someone explaining their position and experience as being contrary to your invented person. And I wasn't been absolutist in any sense. You were the one that said an unfalsifiable argument, which has a technical  meaning, is a cast iron insurmountable and sound, another term which has a technical meaning as an absolute on a non personal sense. I think this use of terms which have technical meanings in attempting an idealised personal argument is sloppy.

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #303 on: May 26, 2018, 04:51:12 PM »
NS,

They're one type of evidence - which is what I said.
Yes, I know you said it but you were wrong and repeating it isn't useful. Arguments use evidence they are not any type of evidence. Alien used to make this same basic philosophical mistake.
« Last Edit: May 26, 2018, 04:53:41 PM by Nearly Sane »

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #304 on: May 26, 2018, 04:54:04 PM »
NS,

Quote
Yes, I know you said it but you were wrong and repeating it it isn't useful. Arguments use evidence they are not any type of evidence. Alien used to make this same basic philosophical mistake.

Just telling me I’m wrong doesn’t make it so. Try here to get you started:

http://www.iep.utm.edu/evidence/#SH1a
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SusanDoris

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #305 on: May 26, 2018, 05:00:08 PM »
So why quote a post and then write something irrelevant to it?
Well, when you get to be as old as I am, you can take a liberty or two, you know! :D
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #306 on: May 26, 2018, 05:10:11 PM »
NS,

Quote
Why invent someone…

I invented someone to illustrate the fundamental reference point error you’d made. All that would be necessary for Fred’s atheism to become untenable would be for Fred to fail to falsify an argument for theism. QED

Quote
… to illustrate your argument by incredulity…

There wasn’t one. Try reading what I actually said.

Quote
…when you are talking to someone explaining their position and experience as being contrary to your invented person.

Because you’re still not getting it. I don’t doubt your position – and nor have I said otherwise. I merely say that you can only hold it logically or tenably because (presumably) you haven’t found an argument for theism that falsifies it. Nothing more, nothing less.

Quote
And I wasn't been absolutist in any sense.

Of course you were. You tried to critique me with a straw man – ie, that I’d said or implied that “cast iron” etc should mean absolutely so. I said no such thing though – rather my point was that an unbeatable argument for theism from the perspective of the atheist would make his atheism untenable. 

Quote
You were the one that said an unfalsifiable argument, which has a technical  meaning, is a cast iron insurmountable and sound, another term which has a technical meaning as an absolute on a non personal sense.

The technical meaning is “cannot be falsified” – that does not though imply I meant “cannot be falsified by anyone”, which is just an assumption you made. I don’t see how any argument can be known to be absolutely right or wrong so I certainly wouldn’t introduce such a notion into a discussion, and nor in any case did I need to for the point to stand. 

Quote
I think this use of terms which have technical meanings in attempting an idealised personal argument is sloppy.

No, the sloppiness is in assuming something that was neither said nor implied – ie, that an argument for theism could only make someone’s atheism untenable if that argument was also universally unfalsifiable. My atheism would be undone if ever I found an argument for theism that I couldn’t falsify. Wouldn’t yours?

Wouldn't anyone's?
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Nearly Sane

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #307 on: May 26, 2018, 05:11:07 PM »
NS,

Just telling me I’m wrong doesn’t make it so. Try here to get you started:

http://www.iep.utm.edu/evidence/#SH1a
I didn't say me saying you are wrong makes it so. As to re article given that it covers a wide range of ideas, how about you select s one that you think supports your idea that arguments are evidence rather than using evidence and we might be able to have a discussion?

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #308 on: May 26, 2018, 05:16:02 PM »
NS,

I invented someone to illustrate the fundamental reference point error you’d made. All that would be necessary for Fred’s atheism to become untenable would be for Fred to fail to falsify an argument for theism. QED

There wasn’t one. Try reading what I actually said.

Because you’re still not getting it. I don’t doubt your position – and nor have I said otherwise. I merely say that you can only hold it logically or tenably because (presumably) you haven’t found an argument for theism that falsifies it. Nothing more, nothing less.

Of course you were. You tried to critique me with a straw man – ie, that I’d said or implied that “cast iron” etc should mean absolutely so. I said no such thing though – rather my point was that an unbeatable argument for theism from the perspective of the atheist would make his atheism untenable. 

The technical meaning is “cannot be falsified” – that does not though imply I meant “cannot be falsified by anyone”, which is just an assumption you made. I don’t see how any argument can be known to be absolutely right or wrong so I certainly wouldn’t introduce such a notion into a discussion, and nor in any case did I need to for the point to stand. 

No, the sloppiness is in assuming something that was neither said nor implied – ie, that an argument for theism could only make someone’s atheism untenable if that argument was also universally unfalsifiable. My atheism would be undone if ever I found an argument for theism that I couldn’t falsify. Wouldn’t yours?

Wouldn't anyone's?
I haven't said anything about absolutes except that as an individual I am aware that I am unable to declare an absolute. Knowing that affects how I feel about arguments. At no stage have I said that the arguments itself has to be cast iron, insurmountable, and sound in an objective sense, though as already noted your use of a term sound which in a technical sense is a claim to truth, causes issues in discussion because your use of terminology is sloppy.


Nearly Sane

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #309 on: May 26, 2018, 05:19:36 PM »
The really annoying thing about that is that belief in ‘the little people’ existed for centuries - belief in local spirits and animism is more ancient still - and in some places and for some people these beliefs and experiences continue to be real. A theist shouldn’t see comparison to the very real beliefs of others as ‘ridiculing’ their own. I don’t get it.
I once pointed out to Vlad that my late great Irish granny believed in the 'little folk'  and he said she must have been a stupid old woman.

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #310 on: May 26, 2018, 05:31:56 PM »
He isn't challenged today, rather a Dawkinsian caricature of his work is challenged.
Knowledge of the facts you are eluding to is inconsequential to his metaphysics. Indeed such is the misunderstanding of his work is the uneducated are convinced that his work depends on the universe having a beginning.

Perhaps you might want to start a thread on Aquinas to shown in your hugely self  proclaimed eruditeness, what has not been challenged?

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #311 on: May 26, 2018, 05:37:30 PM »
Vladdo,

You've been corrected on this misrepresentation, what - ten times perhaps? 20 maybe? Why then do you repeat it as if it hadn't been corrected?
No. That was you trying to deny argumentum ad ridiculing via the miracle of hypnosis.

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #312 on: May 26, 2018, 05:41:03 PM »
No. That was you trying to deny argumentum ad ridiculing via the miracle of hypnosis.
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Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #313 on: May 26, 2018, 05:43:31 PM »
Perhaps you might want to start a thread on Aquinas to shown in your hugely self  proclaimed eruditeness, what has not been challenged?
Certainly one to ponder.
I also don't understand why some atheist classify a challenge as an automatic win.

Nearly Sane

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #314 on: May 26, 2018, 05:49:29 PM »
Certainly one to ponder.
I also don't understand why some atheist classify a challenge as an automatic win.
The same reason as some theists do? Who cares?

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #315 on: May 27, 2018, 12:49:35 PM »
NS,

Quote
I didn't say me saying you are wrong makes it so.

No, but you didn’t tell me why you thought I was wrong – just that I was.   

Quote
As to re article given that it covers a wide range of ideas, how about you select s one that you think supports your idea that arguments are evidence rather than using evidence and we might be able to have a discussion?

Gladly. Have a look at this:

“a. Propositional Evidence in Explanatory, Probabilistic and Deductive Reasoning

One way to approach the matter is to consider the role of evidence in certain kinds of reasoning in which we engage. Recently, such a strategy has led Timothy Williamson to the conclusion that evidence must be propositional—that is, that it must consist in a proposition or set of propositions (Williamson 2000, pp. 194-200).

Although Williamson declines to give any theoretical account of propositions, minimally we may take propositions to be the bearers of truth and falsity (what is true or false), the contents of assertions (what is said or asserted) and the objects of propositional attitudes (e.g. what is believed or known). More generally, propositions may be taken to be the referents of that-clauses: for instance, I believe or know that the house is on fire; it is true or false that the Orioles won last night; I said or asserted that Jones is a thief; and so on.

To begin with, Williamson points out that evidence is often featured in explanatory reasoning, in the sense that we tend to infer to the hypothesis that provides the best explanation of the evidence. Whatever else evidence may be, then, at the very least it is the kind of thing that hypotheses explain. But what hypotheses explain, Williamson contends, are propositions; we use hypotheses to explain why such-and-such is the case, and so what is explained—the evidence—is that such-and-such is the case. By contrast, it makes no sense whatsoever to explain an object; we cannot explain this knife, for example. What we might explain, however, is something true about this knife, such as that it is bloody. Here, the evidence would be that the knife is bloody—again, a proposition, not an object. Nor, on Williamson's view, would it make sense to explain a sensory experience. The hypothesis that I have a cold does not explain the tickle in my throat, but would explain why I have a tickle in my throat. Again, what is explained—the evidence—is that I have a tickle in my throat, not the experience itself. Accordingly, if we consider the role of evidence in explanatory reasoning, it seems that evidence is propositional."

You seem to be opening up a distinction between reasoning (or argument) and evidence (“rather than using evidence”) that I think is false. A bloody knife next to a corpse for example isn’t on a stand alone basis “evidence” of a murder weapon – rather reason or argument has to be brought to bear to create an evidential narrative. At a fundamental level therefore all evidence is argument – without it all we have is data (“the bloody knife exists” etc). 

As for pure reason (eg, when there is no knife) then I see no barrier to that being evidence either. If we take “argument” to mean something like “truth bearing statements that lead to a conclusion”, then if I say, “All men are mortal” that statement is either true or false. The same goes with the statement “Fred is a man”.

From these two statements (which are themselves reason-based, and so on back up the chain of propositions) I can argue:

1. All men are mortal
2. Fred is a man
3. Therefore Fred is mortal

Logical inference (ie, argument) provides thereby evidence to believe the conclusion that Fred is mortal.

Quote
I haven't said anything about absolutes except that as an individual I am aware that I am unable to declare an absolute. Knowing that affects how I feel about arguments. At no stage have I said that the arguments itself has to be cast iron, insurmountable, and sound in an objective sense, though as already noted your use of a term sound which in a technical sense is a claim to truth, causes issues in discussion because your use of terminology is sloppy.

Yes you did. I said (Reply 260):

But the point was that you cannot be an atheist if you're aware of an argument for theism that's sound. "No sound arguments for theism" is a necessary condition for atheism - or at least it is for honest atheism. Although Vlad's "goddodging" car crash that he just ran away from a while back was hopeless thinking (because it just assumes its premise), ironically someone who found a cast iron argument for theism that he couldn't falsify but who nonetheless insisted he was still an atheist would I suppose be one such.”
Note that I referred there specifically to “someone who found a cast iron argument for theism that he couldn't falsify
”.

You then commented (I think to Maeght) in Reply 266:
 
Is there such a thing as a cast iron argument in this area, or indeed in most areas we deal with in a daily basis? How could I know what a 'cast iron' argument was? It can't simply that I can't see how to refute it, To quote Russell on the ontological argument "it is easier to feel convinced that it must be fallacious than it is to find out precisely where the fallacy lies". That 'feels' seems much closer to my experience than bhs's view of how we reach belief.”

Again, I’m not doubting anyone’s “experience” here – I merely say that, if you found an argument for theism that you couldn’t unravel, then your atheism would be untenable (at least if you were to remain honest about it). And so would the atheism of anyone else.
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Nearly Sane

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #316 on: May 27, 2018, 01:09:02 PM »
A note of thanks to bhs for his post which I will reply to when I have the time to do it justice.

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #317 on: May 27, 2018, 01:44:16 PM »

Again, I’m not doubting anyone’s “experience” here – I merely say that, if you found an argument for theism that you couldn’t unravel, then your atheism would be untenable (at least if you were to remain honest about it). And so would the atheism of anyone else.
Theist: Let's see a bit of unravelling then....
Antitheist: You couldn't possibly understand it and it was done in the past....
Theist: Repeat it.....
Antitheist: There is no point.
Theist: Reference it.
Antitheist: Oh it was before the board was springcleaned.

You see a lot of your 'argument' involves words like unravelling and undoing which lack philosophical precision.
« Last Edit: May 27, 2018, 01:48:32 PM by The poster formerly known as.... »

Nearly Sane

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #318 on: May 27, 2018, 01:47:04 PM »
Theist: Let's see a bit of unravelling then....
Antitheist: You couldn't possibly understand it and it was done in the past....
Theist: Repeat it.....
Antitheist: There is no point.
Theist: Reference it.
Antitheist: Oh it was before the board was springcleaned.
  Reference it.

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #319 on: May 27, 2018, 02:02:37 PM »
  Reference it.
It is a parable Sane.

We know that the ignorant theist is a favourite trope in antitheist circles.
We know this forum has undergone spring cleaning and other changes
We know that posters respond to demands for repeat undoings with stating the pointlessness of the activity....

In terms of referencing......

A note of thanks to you for your point which I will reply to when I have the time to do it justice.

Nearly Sane

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #320 on: May 27, 2018, 02:21:36 PM »
It is a parable Sane.

We know that the ignorant theist is a favourite trope in antitheist circles.
We know this forum has undergone spring cleaning and other changes
We know that posters respond to demands for repeat undoings with stating the pointlessness of the activity....

In terms of referencing......

A note of thanks to you for your point which I will reply to when I have the time to do it justice.
. An evasion and a non sequitur. What on earth does the quote from me have to do with any point you think you are making here?

ekim

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #321 on: May 27, 2018, 02:58:12 PM »
A note of thanks to bhs for his post which I will reply to when I have the time to do it justice.
... and don't forget
1. All gods are immortal
2. Jehovah is a god
3. Therefore Jehovah is immortal
and
1. All women are mortal
2. Fred is a woman
3. Therefore Fred is mortal  ;)

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #322 on: May 28, 2018, 09:18:57 AM »
NS,

No, but you didn’t tell me why you thought I was wrong – just that I was.   

Gladly. Have a look at this:

“a. Propositional Evidence in Explanatory, Probabilistic and Deductive Reasoning

One way to approach the matter is to consider the role of evidence in certain kinds of reasoning in which we engage. Recently, such a strategy has led Timothy Williamson to the conclusion that evidence must be propositional—that is, that it must consist in a proposition or set of propositions (Williamson 2000, pp. 194-200).

Although Williamson declines to give any theoretical account of propositions, minimally we may take propositions to be the bearers of truth and falsity (what is true or false), the contents of assertions (what is said or asserted) and the objects of propositional attitudes (e.g. what is believed or known). More generally, propositions may be taken to be the referents of that-clauses: for instance, I believe or know that the house is on fire; it is true or false that the Orioles won last night; I said or asserted that Jones is a thief; and so on.

To begin with, Williamson points out that evidence is often featured in explanatory reasoning, in the sense that we tend to infer to the hypothesis that provides the best explanation of the evidence. Whatever else evidence may be, then, at the very least it is the kind of thing that hypotheses explain. But what hypotheses explain, Williamson contends, are propositions; we use hypotheses to explain why such-and-such is the case, and so what is explained—the evidence—is that such-and-such is the case. By contrast, it makes no sense whatsoever to explain an object; we cannot explain this knife, for example. What we might explain, however, is something true about this knife, such as that it is bloody. Here, the evidence would be that the knife is bloody—again, a proposition, not an object. Nor, on Williamson's view, would it make sense to explain a sensory experience. The hypothesis that I have a cold does not explain the tickle in my throat, but would explain why I have a tickle in my throat. Again, what is explained—the evidence—is that I have a tickle in my throat, not the experience itself. Accordingly, if we consider the role of evidence in explanatory reasoning, it seems that evidence is propositional."

You seem to be opening up a distinction between reasoning (or argument) and evidence (“rather than using evidence”) that I think is false. A bloody knife next to a corpse for example isn’t on a stand alone basis “evidence” of a murder weapon – rather reason or argument has to be brought to bear to create an evidential narrative. At a fundamental level therefore all evidence is argument – without it all we have is data (“the bloody knife exists” etc). 

As for pure reason (eg, when there is no knife) then I see no barrier to that being evidence either. If we take “argument” to mean something like “truth bearing statements that lead to a conclusion”, then if I say, “All men are mortal” that statement is either true or false. The same goes with the statement “Fred is a man”.

From these two statements (which are themselves reason-based, and so on back up the chain of propositions) I can argue:

1. All men are mortal
2. Fred is a man
3. Therefore Fred is mortal

Logical inference (ie, argument) provides thereby evidence to believe the conclusion that Fred is mortal.

Yes you did. I said (Reply 260):

But the point was that you cannot be an atheist if you're aware of an argument for theism that's sound. "No sound arguments for theism" is a necessary condition for atheism - or at least it is for honest atheism. Although Vlad's "goddodging" car crash that he just ran away from a while back was hopeless thinking (because it just assumes its premise), ironically someone who found a cast iron argument for theism that he couldn't falsify but who nonetheless insisted he was still an atheist would I suppose be one such.”
Note that I referred there specifically to “someone who found a cast iron argument for theism that he couldn't falsify
”.

You then commented (I think to Maeght) in Reply 266:
 
Is there such a thing as a cast iron argument in this area, or indeed in most areas we deal with in a daily basis? How could I know what a 'cast iron' argument was? It can't simply that I can't see how to refute it, To quote Russell on the ontological argument "it is easier to feel convinced that it must be fallacious than it is to find out precisely where the fallacy lies". That 'feels' seems much closer to my experience than bhs's view of how we reach belief.”

Again, I’m not doubting anyone’s “experience” here – I merely say that, if you found an argument for theism that you couldn’t unravel, then your atheism would be untenable (at least if you were to remain honest about it). And so would the atheism of anyone else.
I think we are owed
1: A definition of hypothesis as used in this context
2: A worked example to show how it aids you in the war against theism.

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #323 on: May 28, 2018, 11:10:50 AM »
Vladdo,

Quote
Theist: Let's see a bit of unravelling then....
Antitheist: You couldn't possibly understand it and it was done in the past....
Theist: Repeat it.....
Antitheist: There is no point.
Theist: Reference it.
Antitheist: Oh it was before the board was springcleaned.

You see a lot of your 'argument' involves words like unravelling and undoing which lack philosophical precision.

Only what actually happens is:

Theist: Here’s my argument for god…(insert ad pop, argument from incredulity, post hoc ergo propter hoc etc here).

Atheist: But that argument fails because it’s logically false, and here’s why….(insert explanation here). 

Theist: Here’s my argument for god…(insert ad pop, argument from incredulity, post hoc ergo propter hoc etc here).

Atheist: What’s the point?

You have for example been corrected countless times on your “argmentum ad ridiculum” misrepresentation yet you repeat it over and over again. Why then demand yet further corrections of your various mistakes when you won't respond to any of them?
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Trouble at mill
« Reply #324 on: May 28, 2018, 11:13:04 AM »
Vladdo,

Quote
I think we are owed...

You'e not "owed" anything.

Quote
1: A definition of hypothesis as used in this context

It's a standard term - look it up.

Quote
2: A worked example to show how it aids you in the war against theism.

There is no "war against theism" - that's just another of your fanatasies.
"Don't make me come down there."

God