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Sorry, mate. I have tried to communicate as best I can. I keep saying that all definitions are flawed, none are logically consistent in all contexts.
There is absolutely no point whatsoever in attacking a usage.
I don't know how else to explain this to you - but you ignore it, so there is not really anything I can say.
Attacking a definition acheives nothing, it does not address the argument, it does not refute the position being described - all it does is prevent the other person from finishing their sentence. I'm sorry that I could not explain this to you better.
Some are consistent. Also you must show how all are not logical. Go for it, I will wait. Until you do so I dismiss this assertion as being an assertion.
Yes there is since the usage is the only factor in the argument
The definition is not the argument. I can't be bothered repeating that again.
The argument is not based on a definition, defeating the definition of atheism whoever you are talking to applied stops you from ever even getting to the argument, let alone defeats it.
There is no point attacking a usage, I am clearly unable to communicate that simple point to you. Let's just stop going around in this silly circle where you just ignore everything I say anyway.
Why do you keep posting to me, only to ignore every word I say anyway? What is the point?
The definition is not even an argument.The definition is the only inference the argument has, defeat the definition and the inference disappears.
No, the definition os not the argument.Yet you have used context, which is used in definition, to argue just such a case. The argument is therefore based on a defination as inference between an opening premise and conclusion. Defeat the premise which uses the definition the argument becomes invalid and unsound
It forms no part of my argument whatsoever, and never did. You are barking up m the wrong tree.No you want me to stop attacking a usage since it is the core of your argument. Special pleading, nothing more.
Not at all, if you understand/realise/experience the difference between "I am this" and "I am".
The definition is not even an argument. No, the definition os not the argument.
It forms no part of my argument whatsoever, and never did. You are barking up m the wrong tree.
Shad
That is all nonsense Shad, Definitions are not arguments. I don't care to continue this exchange.
Yes and the fact that I did not use it as a premis keeps escaping you apparently, as does the fact that disproving a definition is pointless.I told you a number of times that the definition you use are used as premises which are used as inference between a position and state of a subject has. It is not my problem that you have issues in reading and argument comprehension. Nor is it my issue you contradict yourself when it suits your argument.
Yes and the fact that I did not use them as premises keeps escaping you apparently,
Actually, that would be a flaw. Fortunately, being posed in a different context doesn't make any words meaningless. It will almost certainly lose sense, but without meaning it can't lose sense.You can't 'defeat' a usage. All definitions are only useful in the right context. The usages are not flawed just because they are meaningless in a different context. The same goes for all definitions of atheism.
By all means ... explain the difference. Please.
hang on. Are you saying that the toss (verb) itself landed on its own edge? Or are you saying the coin landed on its edge after the toss? Which side of the edge? Huh? You know, I think I'm going to declare myself as an atossist. I don't believe in coins being tossed.That coin toss landed on it's edge !
~
'mud
A more impressive stunt would be to land the coin on the inside.hey Ouro,
I meant that it handed on 'it's edges' one of the three and a half,
but I was inclining towards the narrowest one,
minus the obviously disguised double crown.
Everyone knows that, don't they ?
"On it's true honest written words from the mighty creator on parchment in the library of such entities."
"it's edge"
So be it forever.
NuffStuff
'mud
Again I ask:I predict this thread will run over the 3,000 marker.
all the while.....atheism is NOT the default position.
Do you think that it can be done by intellectual means?
As much as one tries to define and know "I am", the "I am" gets encapsulated in some body form or some thought form. This is called conditioned "I".
"I am", contrary to "I am this", is devoid of any bodily or mental boundary.