No you do not. There is no way possible for you to conclude God does not do miracles (magic). You simply decided that was the case and have no way what so ever to prove it.
You haven't learned a thing about what it means to 'prove' a thing, have you. All my hard efforts have bounced off of a hardened heart without leaving the slightest impression. You still think that a thing can be proven, yes?
Listen: No true God would do magic tricks. No true God would send actual human words down to mankind. No true God would torture his creations for disbelieving in Him. No true God would plant fake fossils in the geologic column in order to test our creationism faith.
I know plenty of the features of a false God. They are ridiculously easy to know and prove. Since I am a prophet of God and since I declare it to be so, therefore it is proven. Ipso facto. Wrap the thing up and mail it.
You did not exist 1000 years ago or on a planet 1 billion light years away. You can't test what you claim.
Can you prove that I did not exist 1000 years ago or on a planet one billion light years away? Or is that just something you decided to be the case, with no way whatsoever to prove it?
All evidence in the Bible refutes you claim.
Then it's fortunate that the Bible is a false book. Otherwise, I might be wrong about my God knowledge!
For goodness sake that is why I put if in front of every claim I made. You didn't.
Ah. I should have known. You believe that if you call your claims 'conclusions', then they are legitimate and true, but if my claims are 'premises', that means they 'are not proven'.
Yikes and doubleyikes. You know, if you would like a little guidance on the rudimentary workings of human logic, I'll be glad to do that with you. It is never too late, but you'll have to ask convincingly.
No it is a logically consistent deduction if the premise is assumed. It is a logical conclusion from a hypothetical premise and stated as such. See the difference?
Sure. If all animals can fly, and elephants are animals, then elephants can fly.
So it's a logically-consistent deduction that elephants can fly. But have you tested it in real life? I'm thinking that in real life, elephants can't actually fly and you may be disappointed if you try to mount one in NYC, expecting a quick trip to LA.
Same with God doing supernatural stuff. God can't really do magic, no matter how you work your logic. I'm sorry.
You can act like an occasional grammatical error is causing you all this trouble if you wish but as can be seen by others comments it isn't that hard to know what I mean.
If it were an occasional grammatical error, I would have nothing to say about it. Everyone makes simple grammatical errors now and again without substantial interference with the meaning.
As for the other commentators, I am virtually certain that they're mistaken in their claims to understand you. People tend to assume that they understand the meaning of anything they hear. It's just human nature to do that. They also assume that they have heard every syllable in a statement, even though they could not recite those syllables back to you. They haven't really heard every syllable. The human mind just fills in blanks and makes us believe that we've heard the whole thing. I can explain more about these phenomena if you'd like.
But this is all testable. The next time you send me one of your convoluted, ungrammatical, perplexing paragraphs, I'll ask Otokage to translate it and discuss it with me. You'll see. He'll not recite the meaning as you sent it. That's unlikely.
As every other grammar critic that I see. You might want to move out of the glass house.
OK. If you won't listen, you won't listen. I was only trying to help. From now on I'll simply ignore the word salad stuff as best I can.
You said you wanted to know how many acres you have in a watershed. I do not know why that would be important to build a pond.
Umm... so you can get an idea of how to plumb your pond. If you have 200 acres flowing into your pond, you'll plumb it much differently than if you only have 10 acres flowing into it. That's really not obvious to you? How can you size your overflow pipes and spillway(s) if you have no idea how much drainage may come into your pond?
It's the same with culverts. They have to be sized based on the watershed and expected drainage... yes?
Then why did you ask. I couldn't and can't think of a reason why you would want to know what you seem to be asking and so I was examining other more meaningful issues.
Ah. So you won't answer a simple engineering question without first determining the reason you are being asked?
OK.
I asked you about pond engineering because I know a pretty good bit about it and I wanted to hear how you spoke about it. Frankly, I find your thought/language to be disjointed and confused and I wondered if you would express the same disjointedness about physical engineering matters as you do about theological and rational matters.
I was just curious, mostly. You don't get graded on it. Not out loud.
Whatever you need to do to maintain the illusion.
Actually it's a great disappointment to me that some folks flee my questions. If it were an illusion, I'd be the first to toss it aside.
No they were not. I continuously complained that the question was incomplete specifically because you did not include those terms which was what I knew you were driving at but wanted to see if you would ever get there.
Whenever the physical world appears to contradict my beliefs, I adjust my beliefs. If I saw an elephant fly tomorrow, I would change my mind about elephants. I would sure stop insisting that elephants cannot fly.
How about you? Do you adjust your beliefs to physical evidence?
If so, see Msg #1004 in our first thread -- in which you backquoted the included terms and discussed them.
It's very hard for me to dialogue with someone who insists upon his own truth even in the face of hard physical evidence which proves him mistaken. I hope you'll study the evidence and change your stance. Maybe even apologize?
Why is it so important to be right? What if the important thing was to learn -- to continually adjust one's view of life, rather than to stand around loudly insisting upon the truth of one's current view?
Imagine.