VG,
So we're agreed we're ok to use the term 'honour' to represent an idea - we can speak of a person having honour or a person can refer to their own honour - even if we cannot agree on an objective definition of this concept / abstract noun. Why are you having such a problem with a similar use of the term "God" to reference an abstract concept of a higher supernatural power that is deemed morally good?
Because, obviously, “honour” is employed as an abstract noun (“a noun denoting an idea, quality, or state rather than a concrete object, e.g. truth, danger, happiness”) whereas “god” is being employed as a proper noun (“a noun that serves as the name for a specific place, person, or thing”).
You have already accepted that a person's brain will interpret 'honour' based on whatever was peddled to them when they were an impressionable child - whether it was helping old ladies across the road or a patriotic British soldier firing on and killing Muslim civilians in another country to serve the best interests of the British people. Why is it remarkable that the same brain will apply this method of interpretation for the abstract concept of God?
Because Vlad (and, presumably, most other theists) doesn’t claim “god” as an abstract concept – he’s claims it as a tangible entity of some sort that exists as an objective fact for all of us regardless of his conceptualisation of it.
That was your category error.
That seems to be a world of your own creation.
As is your world in which you supposedly “correct” me for something I’ve never said, implied, hinted at or suggested in any way – just the opposite in fact.
That's not my understanding of Vlad's post on this thread about the presence of God in his consciousness. My understanding is that Vlad agreed that facts need to be supported by objective evidence, which he doesn't claim to have. He said he had an inner experience of a non-physical God's presence in his consciousness. So I'm not seeing where he thinks his belief in God's existence means he thinks God's existence is a fact.
Your understanding is neither here nor there. Both in this thread and consistently elsewhere Vlad has always made clear that he doesn’t just think of “god” as a conceptualised idea like honour or justice; rather he thinks of it as an actual entity that moreover he’s “encountered”. If you don’t believe me about that, ask him.
(To be fair by the way Vlad’s ideas about the features and characteristics of his supposed god have been all over the map and sometimes bear little relationship to mainstream Christian theology, but that doesn’t deflect from him thinking there’s an actual god to be encountered rather than just the idea of one to be conceptualised.)