Just an admission of being wrong would be nice then.
Also why do you think that you making a counter argument which turns out to be wrong makes me wrong?
I think we can agree that a burden of proof lies with those with a positive assertion So that includes God and God Free.
We need to distinguish between what we know, what we can prove and what we believe.
I do not believe God exists because of argument although I find them pretty sound and obviously sound enough for you guys not to be absolutely sure .I believe in God because of .my experience of God which leads me to say about the experience "This God is existence par excellence.
So finally the burden of proof in this case Gordon seems to be decided by your perception. That the universe is God free.
I will repeat that. The burden of proof you think I have above and beyond yours of justifying God Free is based on your perception.
I then personally cannot take that seriously because of what I have already described.
You're still not getting it, Vlad
1. Rejecting certain arguments for 'God' does not imply 'the conclusion 'God free', does not require a counter-argument is offered and involves no burden of proof: it merely indicates the view that there are no good current reasons to conclude 'God' because the arguments offered in support of 'God' can be shown to fail.
2. Who here is arguing specifically that there is no 'God' or that, to use your phrase, the universe is 'God free'? If people aren't specifically arguing that, and they aren't, then they have no burden of proof.
3. You need to ensure that you understand when people are offering an argument themselves or are critiquing arguments offered by others - it is an important difference that seems to escape you.
4. That you find some of these 'God' arguments sound is something you would need to defend, but the burden of proof in the soundness of these arguments remains yours and not your challengers.
5. Your feeling that you had a personal experience of 'God' is, of course, subjective: and in one sense can't be challenged, since it can't be shared. However, if you accept 'God' on basis of your feelings of personal experience alone then you must extend the same weight to the personal experiences of others who also feel they have had similar encounters with divine, including different conceptions of the divine.
6. As regards to personal feelings of encountering 'God' the burden of proof is still yours though, since you'd need to provide some inter-subjective basis to justify your conclusion that the divine is real - after all, if all you have to offer are feelings of having encountered something divine you could simply be wrong, so there needs to be a basis of some sort to exclude the risks of error.