You haven't provided any evidence for this assertion.
Nowhere does Paul suggest that the "foolish Galatians" did not have God in their hearts. That's more of your eisegesis. The Galatians were misled by people who thought that Gentiles needed to become culturally Jewish to be truly Christian. There was no circular reasoning involved.
That's hogwash. Circular reasoning has nothing to do with "perfect laws".
There is only one kind of circular reasoning, and it is always fallacious.
Since you continue to assert otherwise, perhaps you can provide independent sources where the phrase is defined and described in the way you mean it. Until you do, I will continue to believe that you are inventing a definition to avoid looking foolish.
I find very intresting the idea of "curcular Reasoning" over "circle of Context" and authorial intent . once you abandon the proper method of Biblical intrepretation you are heading into error:
1. must be born again
2. understand the word of God is inspired and without error
3. Authorial intent what was the author saying, who was he saying it to, what was the time frame he said it in, how did they apply then, and how do we apply it today.
4. Human reasoning from a mind that has not been Born again cannot understand spiritual truth.
those who read the Bible can get many thing from it and not be in a relationship with Christ
1. the Historial narrtitive : real people geographical locations , histroical data
2. a record of historial events