I have to go to church this morning, so I'll address the rest when I have the time.
Starting from an arbitrary point, working back to front.
Right, when it's you that says, 'this is not a sociological debate, and I believe this is a sociological position, and hence not relevant'.
Bollocks! It is a major problem of determinism, to account for the retention of personal identity despite physical changes over time.
Why must God adhere to the conditions you have confined him to?
There have been many defenses already posted in the thread, including the one from St. Aquinas that you posted in the opening post.
You have not managed to knock down Aquinas' defense, so why do you ask me for another? You have not shown that you can have a infinite regress of causation within a finite universe.
For now, I use that as my defense for God, since you have chosen to use this defense.
I don't mind having the burden of truth. Just don't pretend that it's anything more than a burden game that many people are very fond of to shore up weaknesses in their own position.
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You know this is a perfect case of Reductio Ad Absurdum. Either stand by your arguments, or let them fall by the wayside. Don't try to prop them up through debating techniques to fudge the issue.
The fact is that if you believe we are always changing physically, you are left to show how personal identity can be retained over time.
I have a very good case for this, but of course, I assume existence to be a property and not contigent on others.
Starting from an arbitrary point, working back to front.
Attempt to save determinism? You’re attempting to plug a desperate form of objectivism without addressing the attacks that we have made upon it, nor adequately countering the defences of determinism in this case.
Bollocks! It is a major problem of determinism, to account for the retention of personal identity despite physical changes over time.
That is exactly what it boils down to. I have provided reason for that, the ball is now in your court to show me otherwise.
However, all of that aside, it would seem pertinent now that I ask you to clarify, explain, and qualify your argument for God’s existence, in an attempt to make you seem less oblique here. You never know, you might even get some concurrence!
You have not managed to knock down Aquinas' defense, so why do you ask me for another? You have not shown that you can have a infinite regress of causation within a finite universe.
For now, I use that as my defense for God, since you have chosen to use this defense.
You wouldn’t have to if you were prepared to operate within the critical rules of a debate, whereby you have to adequately support yourself instead of issuing profundities in an attempt to look clever and convert the heathens.
Within myself, I am the same person, hence I still have that same responsibility. Nonetheless, assuming that problems exist, their existence does not make their cause not so and fails to refute the argument. Reductio ad absurdium in this case would only work in a sociological debate, which I am not going to let this turn into.

You know this is a perfect case of Reductio Ad Absurdum. Either stand by your arguments, or let them fall by the wayside. Don't try to prop them up through debating techniques to fudge the issue.
The fact is that if you believe we are always changing physically, you are left to show how personal identity can be retained over time.
I have a very good case for this, but of course, I assume existence to be a property and not contigent on others.
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