All you did was copy and substitute. You didn't articulate in what way you think it fails.
If you have a methodology that people from rivaling religions use to come to rivaling conclusions, the methodology fails.
Because you have made statements about my faith that are incorrect.
Nothing stops you from correcting my assumptions. I'm always happy to learn new things.
Then why are you here discussing it? Why aren't you out seeking the evidence you want?
I'm asking theists on this forum. Don't assume that this is the only place I frequent. Nore that it is the first.
I even created a special thread to ask people "why the bible?" while mentioning that I require an objective and / or rationally reasoned answer that doesn't assume the answers before asking the question.
I can't help it if every single one of you fail provide what I'm asking for.
And no, after 10 years of asking these questions and receiving no answer, I no longer expect anyone to be able to give me an answer. But, I love being surprised. So... surprise me.
Is this the reason you're here?
Perhaps partially. There are many reasons why I'm here.
I could write an entire essay about why I'm here. But I don't see why my reasons to frequent forums like this are relevant. If you really wish to know, we could go in on it. I just don't see what the merrit of that exercise would be.
So, the Internet won't work to convince you God exists, but it will work to convince me an experience I had for which you were not present and have no details wasn't real?
I have stated on multiple occasions that I have no reason to doubt your sincerity. You should pay attention when you talk to people. Don't just listen to yourself.
This is an example of a flawed statement about my faith.
I didn't make a statement about your faith in that quote. I made a statement about the parallels of your faith with the faith of people of rivaling religions.
Which is something you have not addressed once, while I asked you about it many times now. Your dodging speaks volumes.
I am well aware of the devotion other people have to their beliefs. I am convinced there are devoted Muslims just as much as I am convinced you are a devoted atheist. But the experiences, the arguments, and the claims are not the same.
Having spend more then 10 years talking to people of all kinds of faiths (on forums, in chats, through emails, in person, in discussion panels,...) I can guarantee you that you haven't told me ANYTHING that I haven't already heared from muslims (to name just one).
Seriously, I'm not joking.
Even one of the most popular christian apologists, William Lane Craig, stole all his arguments from Al-Ghezali, which was a muslim philosopher.
Compare what WLC says with the presentations and debates from this guy called Hamza Tzortsis, which is a muslim.
Take a random argument from WLC, replace the words "jesus" with "mohammed" and "bible" with "quran" and you pretty much have exactly the same argument as those that Hamza presents.
I don't know what you think of WLC, but it's just an example. You folks DO use the exact same arguments and the exact same claims.
Again, for clarity: there is nothing in this entire exchange that you told me that I didn't already hear from muslims.
You all have your fantastical tails of limbs growing back, tumors dissappearing, praying for X and "then it happened", etc etc etc etc.
OK. This could be fun, so I'll play along. Is "gravity" more than a reiteration of an observation? In other words, is it more than an ex post facto statement.
Yes. Gravity is a force emitted by matter with mass.
This is not something you can observe. The only thing you can observe is the effect it has.
I'm afraid it is, whether you want to admit it or not. Are you saying you are special, and that the statistically significant views of your geographic area have no affect on you?
Yes. Because I'm not religious.
If I would be religious,
statistically chances are quite enormous that I would be a catholic. But I'm not religious.
1) If people follow a religion because of cultural tradition, then they are following a religion because of cultural tradition. Depending on what that religion specifically says, it would often mean they don't really believe that religion.
You're skipping a few steps. Most people grow up being indoctrinated in a religion. Which religion that is is mostly a matter of cultural tradition and background. In the US, this would be christianity. In Pakistan, this would be Islam. In Tibet, this would be Buddhism. In India, this would be Hinduism.
2) Would I be Christian had I been born in Pakistan? I don't know
Common sense and statistics say: probably not. Most likely, you would have been a muslim.
. Would I be a frog if I had been born in Pakistan? Those two questions have about the same value.
Are you going to claim there are no Christians in Pakistan? It is possible for people in Pakistan to be Christian. If you are implying that the statistical average of a population applies to the whole population or that it can predict the outcome for a specific individual, then you need to better understand statistics.
If 90% of a country is muslim and you point at a random person of said country, then 9 times out of 10, that person will be a muslim.
So,
most likely had you grown up in such a country, you'ld be a muslim
(90% figure is made up, I didn't look it up)
Is there a larger pressure in Pakistan to become Muslim than Christian? Sure. Is that pressure coercive? Much evidence suggests it is. Does my church support such coercion?
Your church would be unkown to you had you grown up in Pakistan. You wouldn't be a part of that church because you wouldn't be anywhere near it.
No. So if this is not a case where you misunderstand my church (my faith), then this example simply doesn't apply.
Are you playing stupid on purpose?
How many times? Did you just watch or did you participate? Did you talk to the people there? I would suggest you need to try again. My youngest son has a tendency to do this. He plays baseball once or a musical instrument once, and then says, "See, I can't do that."
I've done it enough times to know it's nonsense.
What you are asking of me starts to sound very much like I have to brainwash myself into believing it in order to believe it.
Yes. So don't ask me for a measure or a logical construct.
Deducing how they feel about me by
the actions they engage in and how they treat me IS a logical construct.
That's the data that leads me to my conclusion.
Context, friend. If there is a Christian who speaks about God and you believe what he says is true, then that's great.
Wauw.
What a warped definition of "trust" you have, it's not even funny.
I trust my wife blindfolded. When she is wrong about something (and thus I don't believe what she believes to be true), then that doesn't mean that I don't trust her. It only means that I disagree.