Your value judgement is questionable since you selectively declare your own claims as "ordinary" although the vast majority of humans disagree to you.
Please accept as well: your personal naturalistic worldview, which you implicitely deploy to declare "supreratural claims" as extraordinary, is neither shared by the majority of mankind nor by those people you want to dispute with here.
You understand your fallacy?
Herzblut
1) Is your avatar from "The Third Man"?
2) It would seem that you are positing a fallacy as well. Ad populum?
The Luminiferous Aether was considered normal by all learned people. Fully accepted as existing, and having real effects on the world. That is, until those pesky kids came by and actually tried to find it. **shakes fist at timely gust of wind** DAMN YOU, MICHELSON AND MORLEY! They had no direct evidence of it existing. The onus was on the claimants to find it, not the few who doubted it. Even though it was popular. Even though "80% of people" believed in it.
A deity, by definition, is EXTRAordinary. It HAS to be SUPERnatural. Unless you live in some Bizzaro world where you have Loki over for tea every day (and if so, remind the bastard that he still owes me five bucks) and are dating Innana, gods are extraordinary. Their abilities are described as fantastic and superhuman. They are sometimes fatal to even look at. I mean, I'm fat, but no one would ever describe me as omnipresent (which leads me to think that Yahweh but be a REAL porker...um, fatso! I mean fatso.)
Like I said to ken, if he were to claim that he's 6'2", that's an ordinary claim, no matter what his real height it. There are plenty of people who ARE 6'2". Not that believe they're 6'2", or believe in 6'2" or other populist argument, but really ARE 6'2". Nothing strange there. Now, if he were to claim that he was 62' tall, then we'd be moving into the "extraordinary" category, and I'd be totally in the right to require from him some really DAMN good evidence. He'd better be willing to come to me and let me measure him. If he were to claim that he was omnipotent, i'd laugh at him and call him my bitch, cause that's just silly.
So, no, you're wrong. It doesn't matter if one person or 1 billion people think that way. If they're believing something that breaks every known law of the universe, then they need to bring the evidence to the table. Until then, I'm totally in the right to say "Sorry, I just think that you're wrong and that Sky Daddy doesn't exist."
And it's not that I don't understand a concept of god. I was well on my way to becoming a pastor before I had a "crisis of faith" (actually, I decided that I could make a better life as an engineer, and that I really don't have the people skills to make it as a good pastor). I fully understand the concept of the Christian god, as well as most of the other deities (I wandered in my religious persuits before becoming an atheist), so it's NOT intellectual laziness on my part.
I ask you, how else are we to probe the universe except by a naturalistic POV? If there's no good evidence for anything violating the natural laws, why complicate matters? Could there be a deity that perfectly follows the laws? Sure, but how would we know and why add a layer of complexity? If it makes you feel better to do so, then fine, but don't expect me to agree just because you like a more baroque system. I, personally, don't really care if you accept my more simplistic POV whereas only things that are naturalistic exist. Now, if you want to step into a more bizare realm (e.g. faith healing) then I'll have to say that you're a nutter, but if we're just arguing over whether or not there's a conductor on this train, then we'll just have to agree to disagree.
Note: that last paragraph doesn't necessarily hold for others. I just don't see the need to throughly destroy religion, as I see that it still has a function. I mean, c'mon, I've read
The Prince.
