Oh, I already did what I needed to do. I read all the available theories about God, and found all of them wanting. If a new line of thought will pop up - extremely unlikely - then I will contemplate it, too.
MPat;14795421:
Very good. So, since you have said that you need a thorough and impartial investigation for important claims, and since you also said that “Jesus is God.” is an important claim, we can conclude that, in your view, you should perform a thorough and impartial investigation of it.
No, that is not my job, since I don’t make that claim. It is the church (or the Christians in general) who make that claim, so the onus is on THEM.
Trying to have it both ways?
Either you did perform what you consider a thorough and impartial investigation - and then you get to tell us how you know that it is indeed thorough and impartial, or you didn’t - and then you get to tell us why that is supposed to be good enough.
Or, of course, you can “ragequit”.
Actually it is more than sufficient.
It isn’t, if you can’t even tell us what makes you think that you looked for evidence well enough.
I am not interested in proving that the sky is blue. Just look up. I gave you epistemological methods pertaining the different types of claims, just as you requested.
So, it sure looks like I guessed correctly - you do not want to assign the “principles” to any group. And you are not able to support them by any argument (not even “ordinary evidence”), having to use “hand waving” and distraction instead. I guess it means that the “principles” are wrong, but you don’t want to admit it.
Oh, and see
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:You_do_need_to_cite_that_the_sky_is_blue - even “Sky is blue.” (which you used to insinuate that your “principles” do not have to be defended) is neither sufficiently obvious nor sufficiently true.
I really thought that I couldn’t have made this any simpler.
Have you considered the possibility that you have been understood, but you are just wrong?
The implications are meaningful as far as I am concerned that I live in Sydney. But not for you. Not in the situation that we find ourselves. I’m some random dude on a forum with whom you are having a discussion. Whether I am in Sydney or Havana or Glasgow has zero implications as far as our interactions are concerned. If you accept my assurance that I live here and it turned out I didn’t, you might think I was a little weird claiming it. Or maybe you’d assume that I used to live there when I first joined the forum and have now moved. Either way, it’s not going to affect you in the slightest.
And, of course, you ignore the counterexample. OK, I can give you a quote:
English is my first language. I am reasonably well read. I am somewhat competent in stringing a few words together to construct a comprehensible sentence. What you said is gibberish.
See? Living in an English-speaking country can make a difference!
And therefore (unless you want to modify your explanation), this claim does require “extraordinary evidence”.
On the other hand, if I mentioned that I had a pet dragon and you were talking to the guys in the bar one night and said: ‘Hey, you’ll never guess - apparently there are dragons in Australia’, then at the very least you are going to appear extremely naive. To accept that there are indeed supernatural fire breathing creatures in existence would have a significant impact on the way you view the world. So you would want a hell of a lot more than just my say-so.
First, it is not an example of a consequence of the claim, but an example of a consequence of accepting the claim. If you want to include them, reword your explanation accordingly, then we’ll look at it again.
Second, the “consequence” of being seen as naive looks rather underwhelming… A mention of Pascal’s Wager is sufficient to demonstrate that you “bravely” ignore possibility of going to Hell for eternity, and we are supposed to care about merely being seen as naive by random strangers?
Third, are we supposed to see a “Freudian slip” in that part about being seen as naive? Are there any other claims you reject for the same (or similar) reason?
Just my assurance that I live in Sydney is sufficient evidence for you to accept it. It is nowhere near sufficient for the existence of supernatural creatures.
As you can see, your current version of “Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence” does not really lead to that conclusion, even if you really want that it would.
On the other hand, the alternative prompts us to ask what evidence could be expected to be found in either case. In case of living in Sydney one might expect not just “confession”, but, let’s say, something in “Australian English” and the like (no, I am not going to look for that). In case of pet dragon we can expect, let’s say, news stories about unhappy neighbours…

Or some bragging about how you got it.

And thus the absence of expected evidence can be taken into account. Not to mention the need to look at alternative explanations.
In fact, whenever you see people interested in finding the truth (as opposed to just avoiding being seen as naive, or something similar), you will usually see them trying to do just that.