No, that's not how logic works. You're trying to make "distort" the same thing as "ignore" because your theory says "ignore" but the evidence says "distort." Your best effort seems to be to be a series of cherry-picked skips through the thesaurus. We already demonstrated how that cannot lead to equivalence of meaning.
You’ve mixed up the telephone lines there, JayUtah! In
my post that you quote, it was PGJ I was addressing, not you. I’d quoted your post there (which PGJ had been replying to) as context for PGJ’s reply, to highlight the absurdity of his word games.
PGJ’s line of reasoning, as regards word meanings, is interesting. Taking two different words, mining synonyms to find similar-sounding synonyms for those two different words, and using that to arrive at a position that the two original words themselves are synonyms: that is patently absurd.
In fact, like I mentioned in my comment, there is a children’s game that is similar to this : where you try to “prove” that two wholly dissimilar objects are similar. (Like : your friend XYZ has legs, and tables have legs, so your friend XYZ = table ; a table’s made of wood, wood comes from trees, fruit come from trees, so a table comes from trees ; and since your friend = table, therefore your friend XYZ is a fruit. And so on and on, as far as childish fancy and childish logic can take you.)
You’re right, that’s not how logic works. Not even children, playing at this game, would actually believe that their friend is actually a fruit. Not even children would reason in this manner. But amazingly, PGJ apparently does.
No, the error lies in how you are interpreting general reference books.
Especially in this second part of your post, I’m afraid you’ve been responding without first understanding what it is you were replying to, or perhaps without taking the time at all to read the original comment (which had been short enough) fully! No problem, I don’t mind, prolonged exposure to PGJ’s thought processes may well have that effect! We entertain ourselves with this amazing thread and indulge it by giving it our attention, but it seems we do that at our own peril!
This whole conversation, this whole thread, is not really a serious discussion, just a joke that has probably gone on too long to even be funny any more, and what one says here probably does not really matter at all one way or the other. But still, just to clarify :
If you go back and re-read
my post, you’ll find that in this case I’d been responding to PGJ’s use of the table with those statistics, which shows that an overwhelmingly large number of people are believers in some religion or the other.
In the first part of my comment, you were (indirectly) involved since it was in response to you that PGJ unleashed his amazing synonym-logic (to which I’d responded). To this second part of my original response, where I quote PGJ’s table, you are nowhere in the picture, at all.
I was, basically, trying to point out to PGJ (God knows why I was doing that, since we all know by now that it isn’t possible to point anything out to him), by use of the Pastafarianism reference (and further by pointing him to
Abaddon’s comment), that not everyone who ticks a particular religion box in a census form actually believes in that religion. It is often just a cultural thing, or simply a matter of not caring enough to correct an inherited label despite that label no longer really applying, or perhaps in some cases a pretend-conformity to protect oneself and protect one’s interests, etc. While the numbers of religious believers are still alarmingly large, they are probably nowhere as huge as that table of PGJ’s seems to indicate.