Vlad,
No that is the point you want. I have never held the position you are applying to here.
Yes it is the point. You think a resurrection actually happened as described, and you do so on the basis of an evidential bar you don’t accept when set just as low by other faith traditions.
QED
With most miracles you can have use the comment ''so what'', even if they happened. In my opinion more so in other faith traditions. It is the theology and one's own experience which I think is crucial. In other words you misrepresent me.
In other words, you just tried an
argumentum ad consequentiam (again). The “theology and one’s own experience†adds nothing to the credibility or otherwise of the story. Either it happened or it didn’t – how you’d feel about it if it did tells you nothing at all about that.
Your objections can be summarised as the exercise of philosophical naturalism overlaid by some hurt inflicted in a religious setting and/or some the taking out of some hangup one has on other people.
No, they can be characterised as having a better grasp of argument than you do. By all means try again though with some reasoning of your own that isn’t hopeless if you have any.
I would also like to disagree that History is a subset of science. That is a positive assertion which nobody has apparently justified.
Or said. What
has been said though is that the tests of historicity rely on various principles and rules. They have to if any or every document or claim isn’t to be accepted as historically accurate just at face value.