"Acts very specifically indicates that Paul went three days without drinking. Three days without drinking, especially in an arid climate, is considered being at deaths door.
I have heard this argument before and it is historically bewildering to me. Critics point to the fasting first, and THEN to what prompted the fasting. That is, they think taking the sequence out of order tells all. I can't quite figure this out. Here is the argument as they SHOULD but DON'T present it:
"Paul went to Damascus without any incidents;and randomly (that is KEY, RANDOMLY) he decided to fast for three days; after this period he had delusions, one of which was a foggy memory about his trip to Damascus. From this delusion he became a Christian. The argument here seems to rely on Paul randomly (WHY WAS HE SUDDENLY FASTING FOR THREE DAYS?) deciding to fast. That is, historically speaking, he traveled to Damascus as he planned. He had no incidents along the way. He gets to Damascus all ready to arrest wayward Jews and the first thing he decides to do is...fast?! And for three days???
It is far more historically plausible that Paul fasted BECAUSE he had an inexplicable occurrence on the way to Damascus. That is, he was on his way to Damascus; he had an experience which led him to believe that he was in the wrong regarding Christians. He gets to Damascus understandably bewildered. He is a Pharisee. Fasting was a typical reaction to unusual circumstances in Judaism.
I suspect, however, that the argument of the OP is not historical but juridical. That is, in a courtroom, it doesn't matter what happened to Paul along the way to Damascus. The fact that he decided to fast afterwards negates any testimony he might have.
This argument is of course not historical. And no one here would stand by it absolutely.
"We today have every reason to DOUBT, however, that during his incapacitation Paul actually met with and spoke with AN INDIVIDUAL WHO HAD BEEN DEAD FOR SEVERAL YEARS. Such a claim is NOT historical, since it contradicts all common experience, and common sense."
First of all, very bold for quoting yourself. I am not even sure Trump has done that.
Your statement needs so much refining that I apologize to other readers for my inability to do so, but I give my best
I first of all ignore capitalization, which is of course emotional but not an argument. This is not criticism of the OP, I do it to; I just know that indicates emphasis, not argument.
The OP here says that we have every reason to doubt that Paul met someone "who had been dead for several years."
This obviously is ridiculous. Christians claim that the person in question was NOT dead for many years. I understand that the OP thinks he was, but surely the OP should present the situation in at least a semi-non biased way...? The OP has failed to represent the actual argument of Christians. As far as arguments go, this is a cardinal sin. The hardest work in attacking a position should be spent in understanding the position.
Such a claim is NOT historical, since it contradicts all common experience, and common sense."
Well, of course it "contradicts" common experience. The records all present it as a miracle, a term which by definition is something outside of common experience. If it didn't contradict common experience, those who witnessed it wouldn't be amazed. Those who wrote about it would have no reason to write. They wrote about it BECAUSE it wasn't common experience.
The argument here is really an assumption, not an argument: it asserts, "no God can introduce an event into nature which does not interlock with nature's past".
(I understand that was a hard statement to understand. I am rather tired due to this whole Corona stuff. If any wish, I will explain that comment)
This argument was established by Hume and I cannot understand why it continues since it is nothing more than a word-game: Everyone knows that a miracle is an exception to common experience; Hume simply declared that exceptions to common experience cannot exist, and so he ruled out miracles. But he gave only a declaration, no argument. There was NO REASONING behind it.
Christianity is founded on the premise that Jesus died but arose again on the third day. Would anyone like to discuss (disparage or defend) the plausibility of the claim that a corpse ACTUALLY returned to life and subsequently flew away? 
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I would love to. However, I find that discussing on the public forum gets jumbled with all the contributions; within an hour one can't even find one's correspondence as some people start talking about matters that barely have a tangential contact with the OP.
This is the most frustrating part of this forum; good conversations get derailed in a minute or less.
I would also love to discuss it on a one-on-one, but I also know (from experience) that the typical response of skeptics and atheists to one on one invitations by Christians is, in effect, "I don't engage with Christian opponents who....blah blah blah". The reasons are all the same.
So then, where am I left? I cannot discuss it on the public domain, because the public will drown it out. I cannot discuss it one on one, because you will not engage me one on one. Where does that leave me?