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Post by gadreel on Aug 20, 2017 20:01:11 GMT
I do not think that the existence of God is a certainty either way, if it was then the numbers of people who believed against that certainty would be tiny, like people who believe in a flat earth. To be fair I am playing the game I play with all people who proclaim the certainty that there is no God, allaying the burden of proof on the claimant. This is also why I draw the line at saying God exists, I realise there is no proof and so in all honesty I cannot make the claim. Again, there is no proof to be had of any empirical claim. So how can we talk about burden of proof when it comes to empirical claims? That's a big red herring, because it's asking for something that can't really be had. Would you ask someone for proof of God if they made the claim that he existed?
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