Vlad,
First of all the courtier's reply is dependent on the fairy tale of the Kings new clothes.
Close, but wrong. It’s not “dependent on” it, it’s just another way of saying the same thing: ie that embellishing an implausible claim with irrelevant details doesn’t make it less implausible. Thus not knowing the jaunty angle of the Emperor’s (alleged) hat doesn’t make him less naked; not knowing what colour speedos Jesus was wearing doesn’t make it less likely that he didn't walk on water etc.
Secondly. The point of the Courtiers reply is that one needs no expertise in the details of fairy tales to know they have no truth value.
My god, are you saying you’ve finally got it! Well done! And by the same token, no expertise is needed in the details of theology to know that, say, feeding the 5,000 is still likely to be a myth.
Thirdly, therefore we are using the details of a fairy tale to demonstrate why we never need to know the details of a fairy tale.
Aw, and you were doing so well before you collapsed in a heap again. What “we” are actually saying is that no amount of extraneous details will make an implausible story plausible.
These are incontrovertible.
Your failure in reasoning you mean?
If you bid me look at Wikipedia to see where I am mistaken I take it you mean this.
''The courtier's reply is a type of informal fallacy, coined by American biologist PZ Myers, in which a respondent to criticism claims that the critic lacks sufficient knowledge, credentials, or training to pose any sort of criticism whatsoever.''
I didn’t, but OK – yes, that what’s the fallacy entails. So what though?
Who has said that Dawkins cannot make any criticism whatsoever? I haven't.
Nope, no idea what you think that straw man does for you but ok…
So, thanks to you Outrider we can now add ''straw man'' argument to it's failures.
Er, no we can’t. The only straw man here was you dragging RD in for reasons known only to yourself when that has nothing whatsoever to do with the epistemic force of the Courtier’s reply fallacy.
Oh, and you’ve yet to identify one of its supposed “failures” by the way.
Your claim is that there is no expertise or basis in this field anyway. What is your warrant for those beliefs or are they mere opinions?
What field? Theology? No, the claim is that theology has no epistemic value at all when it comes to the Bible’s (or any other “holy” book’s) claims of factual miracles. Go on – pick a miracle, any miracle – now tell me what on earth theology has to tell anyone about why it’s more likely to be true than not. All theology can give us – does give us in fact – is the equivalent of the difference between “a ruffled flounce and a puffy pantaloon” of the Courtier’s reply.
There is certainly a lack of expertise on Myers part because he conflates empirical unfalsifiability with Logical impossibility rendering the 'courtiers reply fallacy' fallacious.
More gibberish. He does no such thing. He merely uses his analogy to explain – correctly as it happens – that embellishing implausible stories with epistemically worthless details doesn’t make them less implausible. It’s not a difficult idea, even for you.
Calling it the Courtier's reply is therefore fallacious. All that is left is ridicule.
And the crash and burn to finish. Ah well.