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Notes -
I mean, this is a part of it. They generally have significantly more at the core. It takes about two questions of asking "why is that" to get to it. (Hint, they're usually appealing to methodological constraints, which they're sneakily confusing for a metaphysical theory.)
Actually, he didn't. Not a word about making decisions. Just about Christians being Christians in general.
You keep citing a difference between "methodological" and "metaphysical." I get that atheists tend to attack Christianity on methodological grounds, like citing the "absence of evidence." I also understand that this doesn't disprove the spiritual claims of afterlife, souls, et cetera. But Christianity does make material claims, too! I don't see the problem with atheists using Christianity's failure to deliver on such claims as evidence--not proof!--against the unfalsifiable spiritual claims.
What are the two questions you have in mind? If I'm understanding your dichotomy right, I think I can probably give answers that don't run afoul.
As for Goodguy--you are correct, and he didn't make it about decisions. I think it would have been a better argument if he had.
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