Jan Ardena:
I'm not concerned with existence. You are.
I believe in God.
You
assume existence. I am concerned that you have no good grounds for making that assumption.
I've made no such claim. It doesn't work like that.
You "believe in God", but you're not concerned about whether God actually exists. And your belief in God doesn't in any way follow from God being real. That's really quite irrational, Jan. But I understand that it's not about rationality for you.
Is this how you thought you were theist?
What? You want to talk about me again? When I was a theist I was pretty much like you. I just assumed that God existed, took it for granted and was convinced that I knew that God was real. But at some point my education and intellect got in the way of blind faith.
But God does not currently exist, as far as you can tell, which I suspect is the reason why you are an atheist.
The absence of a convincing argument or evidence for God's existence is rather a barrier to my signing up (again) as a theist, I admit.
Note that I didn't say you assert that God doesn't exist, but God doesn't actually exist, as far as you're aware.
You're stuck in that binary thinking mode again: either one asserts that God exists, or one asserts that God does not exist. But there is a middle ground: one can keep an open mind about the possibility of God. It's called agnosticism, and I'm an agnostic atheist.
You're the one who is making that mistake. I've implied no such thing.
I am a theist, a person who believes in God. That's all there is to it.
This is silly.
You'll have me believe that you live your live with faith in this God of yours, trust in Him, try to follow His teachings, venerate His sacred scriptures and on on, yet you have no belief regarding whether this God exists in reality or not.
Sorry, Jan, but I'm not buying it. If you believe in God, you also believe that your God is real. You can't have your "belief in" without the basic "belief that".
As an atheist, you are without God. That means you cannot really know anything about God.
If that's what it means, then it's a useless definition. I suggest you try to find a better one.
No evidence will suffice, simply because you are without God.
Well, at least that follows from your faulty claim that I can't know anything about God. The problem is, it is a conclusion that follows from a false premise.
You cannot commit to believing God exists, because, God doesn't exist as far as you're aware, and as such you are what is termed ''atheist''.
You're
still trying to import the idea that God exists as an
a priori assumption. You need to stop that if you want an honest discussion.
I cannot commit to believing that God exists because there's no good argument or evidence that God exists. The label "atheist" comes after that, not before.
If you don't believe that God doesn't exist, then explain what it is you believe.
I already laid it all out for your in detail in previous posts to this very thread. I see no need to repeat myself just because you like repeating yourself. The executive summary is this: maybe God exists; maybe it doesn't. I don't believe that God exists; I don't believe that God doesn't exist. This is because there's no conclusive evidence either way. I believe there are no good grounds for "believing in" God in the way you "believe in" God.
Or are you going to say you have no belief, that you simply allow the evidence to dictate what you believe?
I've already talked about that in a previous post, too. In the absence of conclusive evidence, I make an estimate of likelihood. I weigh up the strengths and weaknesses of arguments put by both sides, and reach a tentative conclusion or "belief", always keeping open the possibility that my own knowledge might change or that new evidence will come to light that makes it justifiable to revise my opinion.
If that is the case, then you should believe that God doesn't exist, because for you there is no evidence that God currently exists.
I've also talked about the state of the evidence before. It's not that there is no evidence that God is real. It's more that the evidence that has been offered is weak and unpersuasive. Moreover, there is a rather a lot of countering evidence that tends to point to the opposite conclusion.
Where have I equated belief with knowledge?
It's implicit in every statement you make about your belief. You say you aren't concerned about the question of existence. That can only be because you believe so strongly that the possibility of non-existence doesn't occur to you. In other words, you think you already
know that God exists. You think that believing really hard is the same as knowing. But it really isn't.
So we can choose what we accept as evidence of something. Not very reliable.
You speak as if it's an individual choice as to what amounts to good evidence or flawed evidence of a thing. In fact, there was been a lot of discussion about what is and isn't good evidence. But even if you're not aware of scholarly discussion on the matter, a lot of people still manage to reach a reasonable group consensus on the matter of evidence.
The essence of "evidence" is that it is objective. There's no "evidence for you" vs "evidence for me". (Now I'm reminded of our previous discussion where you insisted that God can "exist for me" and yet "not for you", and I'm thinking you probably still haven't really grasped the problem there.)
From the perspective of a theist.
Another empty, repetitive truism from you. Very enlightening, Jan.
You don't think my belief in God has good justification. Right?
I think you purposely reject/deny God.
We both believe things about the others position. Just deal with it.
I know what you think. And I'm dealing with it!
I don't cry into my beer about what you think about my position. Why should you?
Don't worry about me, Jan. I'm not shedding tears over you. I completely understand your position. You have yet to come to grips with mine. I'm just trying to help you.
What does an atheist approval have to do with defining atheism?
Nothing. You are quite free to define the term incorrectly if you wish. Atheists will simply dismiss your definition as ill-informed, at best.
Especially when it is not simply coming from my own mind.
It's your mind doing the cherry picking.
One doesn't have to assert there is no God, for the situation of 'no God' to be apparent in their lives. You seem to be of the opinion that it only counts if you assert it.
What is apparent in atheist lives is no belief in God.
No doubt you imagine a kind of atheist shield barrier against God, kind of like somebody presenting a cross to a vampire. "Don't come near me, O God that I know exists but refuse to acknowledge! Begone!"
Your attempt again to import the idea that God exists has failed again.
As for your hair-splitting point about "assert", put it this way: I do not believe that God exists. I do not believe that God does not exist. I make no "assertions" about whether God exists or does not exist, because the evidence is inconclusive.