VG,
I couldn't understand your question. How would we establish if a supernatural entity is real?
I have no idea. As I’m not proposing a supernatural entity though that’s not my problem (though it is for a proponent of such a thing who wants her claim to be taken seriously).
I wasn't claiming objective fact as I have no method to establish any objective claims about the supernatural.
But Vlad is, which is what this about. He thinks an objectively real god “converted” him.
I'm getting it. Maybe you're not getting it. You made a point to Vlad in reply #882 that "the very god you think you "encountered" or some such as an adult just happened to be exactly the same god that these various organisations peddled to the young and impressionable you"
The point I made in response was that any discussion or sense of gods, whether they are objectively real or not, would have to be in terms based on prior information in the brain. Whatever the objectively real god brought to the party, the concept of the god forming in someone's brain - the person's thoughts - would be subjectively conceived based on past information stored in the brain. So whatever a person senses, I would expect that when they perceive that they sensed God, the thoughts in their brain would be based on their association with past information they have been exposed to. What's the alternative?
Why are you ignoring the rebuttal you’ve been given? Your response tried to draw an analogy between claims of an objectively “real for everyone”, factual, non-imaginary, "out there" god and your personal, subjective preferences about curries, 80s music etc. That’s called a category error, which is why the analogy failed.
As for your “prior information” sidebar, as a separate matter if the (supposed) entity that shows up doesn’t communicate anything about itself that the visitee doesn’t believe already all that implies is confirmation bias – and total relativism (because any description of god’s characteristics would be as (in)valid as any other).
It's the same for how we conceive morals, values and our other subjective preferences such as tea and coffee - we link them to prior experience in our brains that was peddled to us when we were young and impressionable.
It absolutely isn’t. Morals, aesthetics, hot beverage preferences etc are all about the
subjective. Claims of gods, dragons and leprechauns are all about the
objective. These are fundamentally different categories of knowledge.