Perce,
While the courtiers reply in the story is er, a courtiers reply it is obvious that the story is not transferable to the question of whether God exists and if there should be a theology.
“It’s obvious” is not an argument, and it’s perfectly transferable as an illustration of the fallacy of irrelevance. I explained why in Reply 8, but you continue to ignore the explanation.
Well whether God exists is a debate and that debate is theological.
Four letters too many there: “logical“ is sufficient – the “theo-” adds nothing. Theologians don’t have access to special logic that ordinary logicians (or reasoning people generally for that matter) don’t have.
Dismissal is not debate and surely it is obvious that only a complete moron would say that God probably doesn't exist because I cannot see him(Surely the point of the story of the Emperors new clothes).
Straw man, and that’s not the CR argument at all. Perhaps if you bothered to read my explanation of were you went wrong in your OP you’d understand what it actually entails.
Luckily, such morons do exist and so the argument I cannot see God therefore he doesn't exist has been given a whole new lease of life. The story of the Emperor's new clothes does not apply to theology. It also turns out that it is based on opinion.
It also has fuck all to do with what the CR argument actually concerns.
It was a cheeky wee ploy to cover a cheeky wee ploy a bit of Tottenham Chutspah which led atheist autoeroticism to spike.
Have you dropped a can of alphabet soup and photoshopped it into a post again?
So being a crock I don't think scientists who propose Multiverse or String theory but especially multiverses are guilty of a courtiers reply or maybe ever could be.
That’s right, they’re not. You though are.
No, The real Courtiers replies are in the field of politics.
Did that mean something in your head when typed it?
So all scientists and theologians are guilty of is philosophy…
You can’t be “guilty” of philosophy. What you can be guilty of is philosophically wrong arguments (theology) and philosophically right arguments (science).
… with some scientists perhaps rightly miffed at colleague's palming it off as science.
So now you’ve finished throwing yourself from the tenth storey rather than from just the third, perhaps you like to start again but this time try at least to grasp what the CR actually entails. I set it out for you perfectly clearly in Reply 8. I suggest you start there.