I've never heard those terms used by any scientist. Also, the page you linked to is just some guy's website. There's nothing to suggest that his opinion is of any merit.
That’s true, it is just one man’s opinion. It does not matter anyway, I was just trying to explain that there are different kinds of evidence and not all evidence is hard facts.
How very convenient. When science shows that there's no support for a religious belief, you can say, "Oh, but science just isn't the right tool," and you can leave it at that.
It is not convenient, it is just reality. Science cannot support a religious belief, not anymore than religion can support science. Science and religion are two very different domains of knowledge so we cannot prove that religion is true using the same methods that we use to prove a scientific theory or a scientific fact.
And if someone is a true prophet or if someone is a false prophet, is that not part of their nature?
No, they both have a human nature so it only tells us whether they are telling the truth or not.
Again, no. It makes no difference if the one who has locked us in is God, Satan, the planet Jupiter or a peace of cow dung. The end result is the same.
If it was fated and the fate was irrevocable (locked in).
And again, if there is one thing that is locked in, then Everything must be locked in. If there is something that is not locked in, then there is some action that a person could take at that point which would completely nullify any locked-in event.
No, that is not how it works. Some fated are locked in and some fates are not locked in and God decides what will be locked in and what will not be locked in because God determines our fate. If a fate is locked in there is nothing we can do to change it but if it is not locked in there is an action we could take that
might change it, but only if God decides to change it.
So it seems you can understand that the causal mechanism is irrelevant. I hope to never see you say otherwise again.
The causal mechanism is not irrelevant because everything has a cause. God does not cause anything to happen just because God knows it will happen, not anymore than the astronomer causes an eclipse to happen just because he knows it will happen.
You sound like Yogi Berra. "It's absolutely certain that it will happen, but only if it happens." A whole lot of words to say something that has no useful information at all.
I guess you did not understand what I said and admittedly it was poorly worded. Put another way, if a fate is irrevocable that means it cannot be changed so what was fated by God will happen to us no matter what. But if we do not act out our fate, what was fated will not take place. But if it is an irrevocable fate it has to take place so that means we will do what we were fated to do.
Also, claiming that it is fated and then claiming it is a choice is contradictory. If something is fated to happen, then it will happen no matter what, even if we actively try to stop it. That's about as far from a choice as it's possible to get.
That’s what I just said, if it is fated and the fate is irrevocable then we have no choice but to act it out and we cannot stop it from happening. But if the fate is impending then the choices we make
might alter what the fate would have otherwise been.
Then how about God puts a thought in my head that causes me to become a Christian? By your own logic, that's not forcing me.
No, it wouldn’t be but God would only put such thoughts in your head of you were considering becoming a Christian, in order to help you along. But I don’t think God would do that because God is not looking to make more Christians since Christianity is not the religion God is working through in this new age. But if you were considering becoming a Baha’i, God might help you along, particularly if you were wrapped in veils, meaning that you were trying to see but your judgment was clouded so you were confused.
“God desireth not to straiten the heart of anyone, be it even an ant, how much less the heart of a superior creature, except when he suffereth himself to be wrapt in veils, for God is the Creator of all things.” Selections From the Writings of the Báb, p. 133
If it can be averted, then it's not fated, is it?
Think of it as a would-be fate that was averted. That is why people pray to God, hoping God might reverse what He has in store for them, what was fated. An omnipotent can do anything that is within His nature to do including reversing what He had fated.
The thing is that we can never know what God has fated, so all we can do is live our lives as best we can and try not to think about our fate.