Joe,
You got it wrong.
TOM WROTE: 3. What you offer in support of your position is a series of questions. How convincing is this: Is not Mark Campbell capable of shoplifting? Does he not regularly enter stores? Does he not have many of the things found in those stores in his possession?
This is, of course, absurd. No one would accept this as any indication of Mark's purported guilt at all. What would be necessary is positive evidence that he had actually stolen something.
I RESPONDED: Since you admit that your analogy is absurd, I don’t think it warrants any further comment
Chuck
Chuck,
The point of my example was that to list a series of questions, and then to draw a conclusion from the questions as if you had established a factual basis is absurd.
I was pointing out that you were "reasoning" in this manner. "Could not God..."
Tom Maddux