Personal incredulity is a logical fallacy where one asserts that a claim or theory is false due to their own lack of belief or asserts that a claim is true due to their own belief. Examples include asserting that the Big Bang theory is made up because it does not account for a time before the event, or that the complexity of the human mind proves there must be a soul released after death due to one's own conviction rather than evidence.
Personal incredulity is a logical fallacy where one asserts that a claim or theory is false due to their own lack of belief or asserts that a claim is true due to their own belief. Examples include asserting that the Big Bang theory is made up because it does not account for a time before the event, or that the complexity of the human mind proves there must be a soul released after death due to one's own conviction rather than evidence.
Personal incredulity is a logical fallacy where one asserts that a claim or theory is false due to their own lack of belief or asserts that a claim is true due to their own belief. Examples include asserting that the Big Bang theory is made up because it does not account for a time before the event, or that the complexity of the human mind proves there must be a soul released after death due to one's own conviction rather than evidence.