I don't consider my own act of listening to another person and considering whatever truths may reside within their own statements and in their shared perceptions, and evaluating those statements in their usefulness to me as any kind of a "semantic game." It isn't a game, and it isn't a retort, but it does seem that I'm being interpreted in this way, as if I'm trying to secretly humiliate the skeptics who pop of here.
You skeptics here on CF need to stop working overtime in trying to anticipate (or guess) what you think I'm go to try to say or to get at. I'm not being devious here with you guys. I'm not trying to implement subversion of a skeptic's integrity. No, I'm answering honestly, even here with you, and even if where religion and metaphysics are concerned, I'm doing so existentially.
It's called online tone, we all can be mistaken in interpretations and especially when we post things that would seem innocent from our perspective, but are not necessarily seen as such by others because the nuance in the voice we intend isn't there.
And perhaps that's part of the issue is dealing with it existentially, as if we just need to go so individualistic it borders on solipsism.
Which book on epistemology says what you're attempting to say here, because I don't think mine say any of this?
Pretty sure I wasn't referencing your books, I was speaking in generalities, I didn't claim expertise, if you looked at the whole post. By what standard are you defining coherency and cogency beyond what appears to be what seems credible to an individual, like phenomenological and existential qualities?
I'm sorry, but I don't find this assertion of yours about good and bad to be coherent. In fact, sometimes you don't seem to be saying anything you've actually learned through your education but rather just firing from the hip ...
Not all of us rely purely on texts to substantiate our claims but utilize what we retain in regards to reading them to enrich our own pool of knowledge and points of argumentation. By all means, argue why your deity is coherent in any way that could be remotely universal. If not, then you may have to admit the whole endeavor in theology is like searching for a black cat in a dark room and claiming to find it. And if you can't even get to a coherent "God" definition, not sure you can claim, as I'm almost certain you have, that it's the best source of morality (correct me otherwise)
... again, I think you guys really need to start buttressing your arguments with some academically substantial references and documentation. If you don't, I won't be able to take you seriously and I'll just assume you're here to "mess with Christian minds."
Excuse us for not all being constantly engaged with academic texts and seeking to be intellectual in a pretentious fashion, there's a moderate way to present a rational argument that doesn't require treating every engagement like a college debate
As for you, muichimotsu, you also need to stop treating interaction with various Christians as a chess game and please stop trying to outwit everyone by using loaded language that's structured to anticipate what you think your supposed "opponents" will soon say ... because in doing so, you end up saying things that, to me, aren't very substantive and not really hitting the target of what actually will be said by your Christian interlocutor, such as myself.
You'll forgive me for being a bit cynical in terms of there being much in the way of remotely original presentations of arguments when I've engaged with this kind of apologetics tripe for nigh on a decade and seen plenty (though certainly not all) of the arguments thought to be "effective"
As I've implied above, I'm not saying this to mess with your mind. I'm not, but I am saying this just in case you're simply here to be a gadfly and to bite folks. If that is all you're wanting to do, then the jig is up, so stop doing it because it makes you look sociopathic rather than just a person who struggles with autism, and I'd rather extend empathy to you since I know you have some hefty challenges and struggles in your life; most importantly, I'd rather by sympathetic with you than have to gear myself up (and probably waste our time) in order to tear apart what you are trying to say to me.
If I was being a gadfly, I likely would've gotten banned far more times, but I've eased up in some aspects of posts you can find from 7+ years ago.
If you're going to be empathetic, then there are articles I can find (still trying to find a good system for organizing my bookmarks relative to my quirky categories) that point out autistic people can have tendencies that make being religious not as easy as with neurotypicals. Particularly one that notes we're not as likely to see things in a teleological sense, at least in regards to larger scale, rather than seeing the basic causal chain and nature of events, like the universe, nature, etc.
And from what I observe, I'm a major exception from most ASD individuals in terms of religiosity, because many seem to be able to find a way to reconcile them, but I cannot say I have remotely, and that's after engaging with theological texts and such as a religious studies major (was called religion department until several years ago) at a Christian university (Episcopalian) that had many people that I could have discussions with in regards to faith and we'd still end respecting each other (though much of that was due to it being face to face, I'd argue)
Have you ever seen the movie, Dunkirk? If so, being the existentialist that I am, I'm going to be "that" pilot ... if I have to.
I recall my parents watched it, though I believe I watched The Emoji Movie (not a great decision in hindsight, but you have to see terrible fiction to appreciate the good stuff)
On the one hand, I can admit that like a lot guys here, I'm always up for a good skirmish in play, just like I am when I'm playing Marvel Strike Force [like a kid] on my phone. But wouldn't it be even cooler if you and I could just talk to each other as peers, be friendly with each other, and maybe even research and discuss some things together rather than trying to beat each other over the head in defiance of what resides cognitively in the other person's brain?
I do discuss DC Legends (a competitor to Marvel Strike Force in the design, which I don't think I played: I think I played a more action RPG Marvel game for a bit, twas interesting, though Marvel has lost my interest with its stories in contrast to DC, a whole other topic I could start potentially) with fans and it doesn't devolve into competition, but an enjoyment of the strategy aspects and how we can enjoy it without playing the same things for teams?
I enjoy other games and certainly wouldn't call someone childish or such merely because they enjoy things that could be interpreted as such
I'll fully admit I can have that problem and it's as much tone on my side as others and how I interpret that.
I certainly make an attempt to add qualifiers in that it "seems" you advocate something or other, though I can forget that at times.