Yes, that's all it deserved. Sorry. That you can't see that is your problem to deal with. Not mine.
Your ridiculous definition of "faith" requires some imaginary "justification" authority to declare what beliefs are justified and what beliefs are not. Clearly, that imaginary authority is YOU. Or more precisely, it's your bias against any justification that does not comport with your materialist view of reality. So your definition of "faith" then becomes "whatever I say it is". And what you say it is, is anything you consider unjustified nonsense, to be dismissed. It's so perversely circular and self-enforcing that it rivals even the 'inerrant bible theory'.
Yes, I read that the first time you wrote it. And it's not logically valid; as existence is not contained by nor defined by what we can or cannot detect, in theory or in practice.
Because it remains a real existential question, and possibility. And the awareness of that questions and possibility will have 'detectable' effects on us. Just because we don't have the answer doesn't mean the question become existentially moot.
Because it can exist, may exist, and may be effecting this universe significantly. And by extension, us. Just because we can't detect this other universe as a fact does not negate it as a possibility, nor the effects of that possibility on us.
You keep confusing yourself with this obsessive insistence on dragging 'belief' into it. There is no reason to 'believe' or 'disbelieve' ANYTHING. So forget about belief. The issue is the existential possibility, and the real effect of that existential possibility on us.
Again, you are doing well at explaining theism, here. Keep up the good work! Yes, we detect the 'movement' but not the source, or the destination. Very good. Now, consider that 'movement' to be existence, itself: ... we detect the 'flow of existence', but we cannot detect the source, or the purpose. The awareness of this conundrum (mystery), and the quest to understand it better, and deal with it 'appropriately', is basically, theism.
I am positing an existential mystery, and labeling the resolution; "God". You're just driving yourself nuts by over-complicating it and tangling it all up in religious mythology.
Forget 'belief', and forget religion. You will understand theism a whole lot better and easier.
They are reasonable and supported by evidence according to the theist's experience and understanding, same as you or anyone else. He's just trying to share those with you. Unfortunately, you have placed yourself in position as the grand, high, exalted, universal decider of what is a reasonably 'justified' conceptualization of human experience and understanding, and you are using your own as your criteria. So, of course, you are dismissing any and all others that don't comport with your own as "unjustified belief", to be dismissed as meaningless nonsense. But again, this is your poison pill to deal with. All I can say is that if you don't deal with it, you're never going to understand theism, or any of the many other related human 'spiritual' endeavors.
Why should he? It's only 'incoherent' to you. I have explained why omniscience and free will are not mutually incompatible using a very simple and obvious example. Understanding 'how it all plays out' does not necessarily negate the value or purpose of playing it out. And playing it out is not being rendered impossible to do simply by knowing how it'll be done, in advance. So the idea of an omniscient God is not logically "incoherent", as you claim.
Now let's see you explain why you think otherwise.
This is a misstatement on both counts. But nevertheless, theists make up the significant majority of the world's population. You're surrounded by them. So of course ...