VG,
If reality is defined as something established through objectively testable evidence, I haven't made a claim of reality.
But Vlad has, which is what this exchange is about. He thinks a real god really paid him a visit and thereby really converted him.
Could you link to a claim of reality - as far as I know neither Vlad nor I claimed to have objectively, testable evidence of a god who converted him?
I assume you’re joking. Just read any of his posts here.
No I wasn't making any claim of an objectively real god, as I don't have any objectively testable evidence for one. The analogy therefore did not fail.
You were responding to the argument about
Vlad’s god also being the one to which he was the most enculturated remember, not your god. I don’t know whether you think your god is real or just a product of your imagination, but that’s not what this exchange is about so it doesn’t matter.
And yes the analogy did fail for the reason I’ve explained to you several times now – you conflated the subjective (preferring coffee etc) with the objective (“god is a fact” etc).
Why would you think the entity would communicate anything new - as far as I know Vlad isn't claiming to be a prophet or messiah with a new message?
You’re being too literal – just turning up would be communicating information, just as someone turning a light on communicates information.
He just made sense of his experience using the information already stored in his brain, as does everyone when they come up with concepts or values or preferences.
Which is the confirmation bias and ensuing relativism I talked about. If all that people who have moving episodes of some sort can do to explain them is to reach for the stories of the supernatural with which they happen to be most familiar then they explain nothing.
Is Vlad claiming to have objectively testable evidence of his experience in order to establish reality or is Vlad claiming a belief and a faith?
That’s called a false dichotomy. He thinks he has “evidence” but that turns out to be just bad arguments, but his “belief and a faith” is also a belief and faith that “god” is an objective fact.
Anyway, the point here remains that the god Vlad think is objectively, factually, “true for everyone”, “out there” real is also by a remarkable co-incidence the exact one he happens to know the most about from his upbringing, and when you conflate the subjective with the objective as if they’re epistemically the same you commit a category error.