(September 23, 2019 at 8:03 pm)LadyForCamus Wrote:You can't dismiss it as a fallacy. Testimony of large numbers of people is evidence. According to the Me Too movement, it's enough to destroy people's lives.(September 23, 2019 at 7:31 pm)Lek Wrote: Well, if it was just me it would seem pretty weird, but in the company of billions of sane, educated people, I would be more prone to check it out.
Yet you and all those billions of people have “revelations” about gods that are entirely mutually exclusive. I just listened to a Christian describe a revelation by god who told him he was not omniscient, or omnipotent, so how do we figure out who’s right? Also, appealing to the number of people who believe something is a fallacy, which has been pointed out to you several times by several people.
As I stated before, people having different descriptions of an indescribable entity isn't strange. Our various ideas and images of God are vehicles that help us go to him. And no, God doesn't have to give us all the same image of him, since any image we have could not describe him.