Yes you do, I have no idea what pagination you're using on your browser so "page 2" could be anywhere.
Whilst I'm waiting - is it an accepted definition within the English language or is it one you've made up? I've given you the English definition and you've dismissed it so who's definition are you using?
Infinite Stop;1388944 wrote: You say that a "truth can exist outside mass acceptance where it is a statement of the real world that exists outside of the accepted perception of reality." Well, what would you call a revelation of God? To a non-believer, that's exactly what a statement proclaiming a revelation of God is! You are burying yourself here.

Think Galileo. When Galileo supported Copernicus's theory that the sun was at the centre of the solar system the accepted perception of reality was that the Earth was at the centre of the universe. Despite the fact that his statements were outside of mass acceptance they were true because they mapped to reality whereas accepted perception did not.
For the sin of stating the truth the Church killed him, that did not make his statements any the less true - truth exists outside of belief and is based in reality.
Infinite Stop;1388944 wrote: You then say that "subjective truth" is merely an opinion. Really? To all people, ALL truth is subjective truth. In the end, it is your personal perception that determines the quality and veracity of all truth. You can label it whatever you like, opinion or otherwise, it's still truth as conceived to the best of your ability. You then say that subjective truth is mere opinion and has no "universal applicability." On the contrary, the subjective truth of God is arguably the only truth that has universal applicability, as it pertains God, our very existence, and ultimately all existence. More than any event or law, the truth of God, whether subjective opinion or not, would be universally applicable to all that was, is, and ever will be.
Totally untrue. The measure of truth is how closely a statement mirrors reality. That exists outside of personal perception.
An individual can have a distorted perception and firmly believe the most unlikely things - that does not make them true. They have no universal applicability, they are an artefact of the distorted perception of the individual.
If you do not understand this then take a visit to your local psychiatric unit and take some time trying to reconcile the beliefs of the patients. If your personal perception determines the quality and veracity of all truth you will need to spend some time explaining how the disparate truths expressed can be true simultaneously.
Infinite Stop;1388944 wrote: Of course within the scientific paradigm that works. Unfortunately, since science is incapable of proving God, scientific methodology does not apply. A true, living sentient creator being cannot be deduced, or reduced to some equation. Any scientific or logical proof of God must necessarily rely very much on the presumption of that being's existence. Presumption is not proof. The best science can do is attempt to define God, and then attempt prove that God as defined. With such an approach we merely construe the data to see what we want to see (in this case God), and in the process commit the fallacy of circular reasoning. We could write an incredibly inspiring "proof" of God and then parade it down 5th Avenue. In the end it's nothing more than facts and figures on glossy pages. I describe such a "proof" as this as nothing more than a stillborn hope. In such a proof we declare, "We have found God!" However, all it would take is the innocence of a child to ask, "But where is He, Mommy; I don't see Him," and the proof goes in the garbage.
You are speaking English. Within English certain words have certain meanings. It is not a case of within the scientific paradigm or outside it, the word proof has a meaning.
We have agreed that science cannot prove or disprove the existence of God. What you are trying to show is that revelation to an individual constitutes proof that God exists - I maintain that it does not and cannot. What does the above line of argument do to show that it does?
Infinite Stop;1388944 wrote: Science will never prove God. Revelation is the only way.
There is not proof of God, revelation might convince an individual but cannot constitute proof outside of that individual.