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Isambard
Guest
This should be interesting.No kidding.
The first and most gaping flaw in atheists’ arguments tends to be the foregone conclusion/circular reasoning.
Swing and a miss. The conclusion is that there is no objective evidence.The foregone conclusion with which they operate is that the supernatural doesn’t exist.
A strange arguement to make given that you believe only one religion to be true out of the thousands throughout history. That aside, do you believe in dragons, fairies, talking animal spirits, or reverants? People believed in these as well over the millennia.They prefer to believe that millions of people in hundreds of countries for millennia have worked without pay, died brutal deaths, and somehow sneaked out of prisons and dungeons to perpetrate magic tricks that depend on supplies they could not have had access to, all to fool the rest of us with no possible motive except perhaps attention, which can be had much more easily and safely.
Ad populum fallacies are fun
I see you’ve never a met crazy person. Or do you believe Muhammed was a legitamite prophet of Allah because his early years as a prophet were mostly a negative experience? How about Socrates? Was he really talking to a divine daimos from which he got all his wisdom cause he eventually died for his beliefs?Yet people do things only with means, motive and opportunity.
Not at all. Check out poor countires with eccentric revolutionaries turned dictators to see how easily ignorant people can be misled, and how common it really is.When these are not in place, the odds that a person would perform a trick dwindle away.
I disagree with them personally, but I too tend to avoid arguements from people who enjoy employing fallacy-fiestasYet the new atheists become irate when anyone suggests that they reexamine their foregone conclusion. But they will never admit that they are the ones arguing from emotion.