Jesus either was resurrected or did not .......X ... or Not(X).
There is no third possibility.
Correct.
If you do not think Jesus resurrected then by process of LOGIC you are maintaining Jesus did not resurrect.
That is it... there is no third possibility either X... or Not(X).
Incorrect.
Whether I believe Jesus was resurrected or not is an
entirely independent proposition. It has no bearing on whether Jesus was actually resurrected or not. All four possible combinations can exist without contradiction for any purported historical event X:
I believe X ∧ X
I believe ¬X ∧ X
I believe X ∧ ¬X
I believe ¬X ∧ ¬X
See how that works? That's four possibilities right there.
ETA: And then there's is no contradiction in the following:
I don't believe X ∧ I don't believe ¬X
There's the third possibility you're looking for.
According to your illogical assertions you are saying if someone comes along and says Jesus was resurrected and I say to him no he did not because he failed to prove his assertions then I have to prove my assertion.
You both claim certainty about the truth about an event in history. If they fail to support their claim, you have no reason to change your mind. If you fail to support yours, there is no reason for them to change theirs.
This is really not that complicated.
But by your continued illogical statements you saying implicitly (due to logic rules) that he did not resurrect by not believing he did is not something that needs proving.
I hope you can see how illogical that is!
I can, actually. But on the other hand I neither said nor implied that. In fact, it is exactly opposite to what I would say about that.
See above for what I would say about that.
Finally, here's the short and sweet of my point in this thread:
A lack of belief about the truth of a proposition is not the same thing as a belief about the truth of a proposition.
A lack of belief is not the same thing as a belief.
A lack of belief requires no justification. A belief does.
Yes?