The above are not widely held beliefs by sane adults, so they do NOT qualify as reasonable by the criteria we've discussed.
Oh really? You don't think that there are sane people out there who are superstitious and believe in vampires and werewolves? Or witches?
What about fairies? You don't think that sane people can believe in fairies?
Except for maybe Yahweh, if by that you mean the jewish name for god.
I was unaware that there was any other Yahweh.
There is objective evidence against these claims so they do NOT qualify as reasonable by the criteria we've discussed.
Objective evidence against these claims? Beth, if you can do that you will revolutionise skepticism - or have you forgotten that absence of evidence is not evidence of absence? We don't have proof against the existence of these phenomena, we have evidence in favour of alternate hypotheses. You cannot prove a negative - that's why the burden of proof falls on the claimant to prove existence and not the opposite.
These are, if I'm not mistaken, Hindu religious beliefs, so it seems appropriate to say that, yes, they may be considered reasonable by the critiera we've been discussing.
Reincarnation is an aspect of many religions aside from Hinduism, Buddhist and certain members of the Jewish faith for example.
I suppose at least you are consistent.
I'm often wrong. But you haven't convinced me that this is one of those occasions yet.
Well there's your first issue - you think I'm trying to convince you that you are wrong. Beth, if that were to happen it would be an added bonus - I'm not arguing for your sake, I'm arguing for the sake of anyone else reading this discussion, so that they won't fall into the same logical flaws and fallacies as you do.
I must disagree. While not as good as objective repeatible evidence, I think it's better than making blind guesses, which is what you are claiming here.
It doesn't matter what you think because the evidence is against you.
It depends on the situation as to whether a blind guess will be as good as the testimony - if we are discussing the properties of a object known to exist then a large number of witnesses would likely converge upon a reasonable description of the object, though still unlikely to be entirely accurate and certainly far less useful than the actual prescence of the object. If we are discussing the existence of an object then anecdotal evidence is entirely useless. In our present discussion we are discussing the existence of god, not the colour of his beard - guess which category this falls under.
We discussed anecdotal evidence earlier in this thread. I provided several examples, which you rejected for various reasons. I didn't dispute your reasoning as I am not interested in discussing the various pros and cons of the use of anecdotal evidence right now. I think we'll just have to agree to disagree on the value of anecdotal evidence. My point is only that it's reasonable for people to make use of such evidence when nothing else is available. You make a subjective assessment of the value of such evidence as near zero. A reasonable person can disagree with that assessment and thus, arrive at a different conclusion.
No, a reasonable person cannot disagree with that assessment, because time and again anecdotal evidence has been shown to be unreliable. Homeopathy, bigfoot, acupuncture - you name it, the anecdotes still don't add up to data.
I phrased that badly. I'm trying to get across the idea that middle ground exists. One need not have blind faith OR reject entirely. I can listen and decide to withhold judgement until I feel more comfortable making a decision.
And how does one arrive at this middle ground from the skeptical null hypothesis (which is really all that atheism is)? What evidence, yes actual reliable evidence, have you personally seen that could shift you from that position?
That conclusion is an unverifiable probability estimate made based on a subjective evaluation of the evidence (you are giving anecdotal or testimonial evidence a weight of near zero) to conclude that the probability of the non-existance of god is 99.9999%. When you proclaim it as fact you are as arrogant as the theist who claims as fact the existance of god.
Arrogant? What is arrogant about saying, "I can't be 100% accurate, but in the absence of any reliable evidence and without the need for god as an explanatory hypothesis, I do not believe god exists."? Or, "Until such time as evidence is presented for the existence of god, I refuse to move from the null hypothesis?"
Suggesting that one should take the middle ground in the absence of any evidence is to commit the fallacy of the golden mean.
Not quite. I'm not saying you must accept such anecdotal evidence of god. I'm saying that it is a reasonable and rational choice to do so, and therefore, a skeptic can examine the evidence critically and rationally conclude something other than atheism.
And I'm saying that it is not reasonable and rational to do so. The difference is that I back up my claims with more than meaningless rhetoric and hand waving away examples I don't like.
We don't know whether god does or does not exist. Until we have established one conclusion or the other as fact, we have to go by some other criteria to decide whether testimony for the existance of god seems credible.
What do you think a fact is, Beth? Is there a requirement for 100% certainty for something to be a fact?
Multiple sane adults testifing to the similar experiences is not an unreasonable critiera for deciding their stories have some credibility. You may certainly argue for some other critiera if you like. But dismissing the testimony because you don't believe in god doesn't seem like an unbiased assessment of the evidence to me.
Beth, do you know what begging the question is?
You can't say that the adults are sane (or more accurately, that they can properly separate fantasy from reality) unless you know that god exists. If god exists then the adults are sane - which still doesn't mean we should accept their testimony, but is irrelevant because we already know that god exists anyway. If god doesn't exist then the adults do have trouble separating fantasy from reality and we definitely shouldn't accept their testimony.
Do you understand?