Nonpareil
The Terrible Trivium
The appeal to popularity fallacy relates to imagining that the truth value of a proposition is somehow affected by how many people believe in it.
That isn't what I was saying. I wasn't saying that ~6B people believing in something means that what they're believing is true, or even that that increases the likelihood of its being true. What I was saying is that the 6B numbers of belivers makes it more likely that we'll engage with them as far as this issue. That's all.
Then I admit the fault. I misinterpreted what you were saying. But I am now at a loss as to what it is that you are actually arguing.
The discussion, until this point, has been about whether or not we can rationally dismiss the existence of gods, and the argument in favor of doing so has been that we can due to them being either garage dragons (which fail to exist by definition) or not (in which case their existence is bare assertion at best).
What issue do you take with this argument?