Beau and Others -
There may be no point to continuing the discussion, because I don't think that you will support using logic and evidence to either consider or refute an argument. It seems like the only consideration you give as to whether something is true or not is defendant on your personal experience, or the personal experience of those you agree with or think support your worldview.
Quote: Anything besides subjective (known only to the experiencer) is speculation.
I guess as an educator this type of thinking scares me for the future of America, because I run into a lot of people it seems who either do not or cannot value reason, evidence and logic. At the end of the day, it simply doesn't matter if one has evidence, reason, and logic supporting what they are saying, because it becomes impossible to reason with people would rather disengage, stick their fingers in their ears, and say 'lalala it doesn't matter because I'm not willing to consider anything that could be true that is different than my paradigm, and forget all of that logic and evidence stuff anyways, I just want to create my own reality as I see it'.
To specifically address that quote, I would say that the sentiment is flat out wrong. For instance the scientific method as well as deductive and inductive reasoning have given us all of our technological advances that we enjoy, and we would never know much about the universe if we limited ourselves to only validating things that could be experienced directly. Even things that are not controversial would be rejected by this statement. In other words, if you had never been to China then it would be speculation to say that a place called China exists. Or more abstractly, the United States would simply not exist either (as a concept) because we would not experience an abstract concept directly with our senses. How about if we were on drugs, or hallucinating - do those things experienced automatically exist? Or could you experience something that you thought was there based on some bad dinner the night before? Some neuroscientists will note that the only thing we truly directly experience anyways is our brain. So clearly limiting ourselves to what is true about the universe to the things that one can experience is not an effective way to learn about the universe or judge what is true.
Some concepts we directly know because we can deductively prove, such as arithmetic or geometry. Other things we inductively know to be likely true, as I mentioned earlier. It seems that you are looking at my inductive proof and assuming or misconstruing me to have a deductive type of proof conclusion:
Quote: My reason for arguing this point with you is that you present your case as though it is some kind of fact by using the word "Evidence" in a fashion that suggests you KNOW something to be true.
I think what you are doing is confusing deductive proof with inductive proof. I am not arguing that I have proved God exists or so on as a deductive proof. I am saying that the massive body of evidence out there suggests that the existence of God is very likely. Put another way: I cannot 'prove' to you deductively that the sun will rise up tomorrow morning. What I can do is show that based on evidence, it is very very very very likely that the sun will rise up tomorrow as an inductive proof. That is my case here; taken together all of these lines of evidence that have not been refuted make it very likely that God exists.
Quote: That's all I'm saying and people on this board offer their opinions with varying degrees of civility and conscience, but I would much rather read someone's opinion than have the truth thrust upon me.
No, what you mean is that you would rather not have your worldview challenged with lines of evidence that threaten that worldview, and be forced to consider that a/ you might be wrong and b/ you basically have no lines of evidence to back up your ideas other than personal belief or experience, and should we not forget, lets toss in a healthy dose of hatred for anything that might relate to organized religion. You want to be the captain of your own ship, to design the universe and afterlife as you see fit, as it is most palatable to you. I'm saying that that view should be different; the universe is as it is and God is as it is independent of what you think of it; you are not the creator. Truth is truth, independent of how that tastes to you. We are discoverers of truth, not creators of it.
Quote: The universe (physical) was most certainly created, but by what means does not point directly to a god.
Not true; my inductive argument taken as a whole most certainly points to a God. My argument has shown (and it hasn't been refuted or even really diluted by anyone here) that this being or beings is 1/ eternal from our perspective, outside of space and time /2 the beginner or cause of space and time 3/ incredibly intelligent assuming it was desired to create a universe that permitted life. In conjunction with my other arguments due to the existence of absolute good and evil, and the life of Jesus, we can conclude that this being is most likely a God that is portrayed as the Father by Jesus, simply from the physical, scientific, and historical evidence that all my arguments inductively depend on and tie together. What have you used to justify any alternatives? I see nothing here.
I've run out of time. I think we probably are done though; I don't see how anything constructive can happen moving forward.