dartagnan wrote:The atheist position is, "I have heard the argument for your God, evaluated your evidence and or Holy books, and decided it's bogus."
That's just another atheistic creedal statement that avoids having to deal with evidence that challenges one's asumptions. The evidence is illustrated in the analogy above, which I believe is referring to matter that existed before the big bang. According to the general atheistic assumption, "In the beginning" there was matter. That's all science can prove, so that is all they accept. Matter existed, nothing else. As the theory goes, for some reason or another, matter became so dense and hot that a massive explosion took place, which created the universe we see around us. All planets, moons, galaxies, stars etc., exploded from the same clunk of matter that existed "in the beginning." Thus, I think the marble table is analogous to this event.
It is difficult to continue with any kind of dialogue when the most prolific poster gives us stuff like this. A poster says that, for her, the essence of being an atheist is simply that she is not convinced by the arguments, evidence, and scriptures adduced in favour of theism. By implication, her atheism is simply an absence of assent to theist arguments, and does not imply any positive assertion apart from the fact that she can see no convincing reason for supposing that a deity exists.
One is then told by dartagnan that there are atheist 'creedal statements', and that this is one of them. He does not deal at all with the fact that his interlocutor has carefully avoided making any positive statements of belief in any proposition, but just drags the discussion back to the lines he wants to follow by the bald assertion that it is the essence of atheism, as he sees it, to have certain beliefs. Then we are given a critique of a supposed 'atheist assumption' about the origins of the universe, and pulled back to the 'marble table' trope.
The poor old atheist has already tried to make it clear that her non-belief in deities is not dependent on some particular cosmogony:
We don't have to explain how the universe happened, how tables become aware of themselves, or even offer a hypothesis in order to reject creation myths.
Of course the reference to 'creation myths' lets dartagnan in under her guard, by making it seem that, in contrast to her earlier statement, she is not simply saying that she is not obliged to put forward a cosmogony in order to decline to accept theism, but is instead only committed to rejecting (e.g.) the first chapter of Genesis.
dartagnan then moves back to the position that suggests that atheists are committed to some particular explanation of the origin of the universe:
I'm not talking about creation myths. I'm talking about evidence for God via inference; by realizing the impossibility of the alternative explanation.
But then GoodK's text makes this impossible to maintain:
It seems like you are saying that in order for someone to not believe in God, they have to explain the creation of the cosmos and its contents.
and he concedes the essential point for GoodK, for me, and, I think, quite a few others on this board:
As far as I'm concerned, you don't have to explain anything.
So what HAS he been going on about? Here at last we have it:
I can tolerate disbelief, even if atheists here cannot tolerate belief. But if you want to keep pounding me with these gauntlet challenges to prove something, there is nothing wrong with me poiting out that science cannot prove the atheistic assumptions either.
Note by the way that we are back again with the claim that atheists have 'assumptions' whereas GoodK, and myself, and others have repeatedly pointed out that our kind of atheism at least simply consists of a lack of assent to theist arguments and evidence. But the real point is that if we want dartagnan to stop talking about atheists in his own special way (which for a significant group of us misrepresents the way we think), we have to stop 'pounding' him with 'challenges to prove something'.
And what does our 'pounding' consists of? For my part, it just consists of the quite reasonable request that, since he has made the statement that he 'knows' that the Abrahamic deity exists, he should tell us how he 'knows' that. As I have said before, since this is a discussion board a good way to avoid being 'pounded' would be to stop making the claim - or even, who knows, to withdraw it. But trying to insist, as a kind of retaliation, and in face of repeated atheist disclaimers, that the atheists he is arguing with have 'assumptions' that are just as devoid of justification as his so far unsupported knowledge claim does not seem to me to be a proper way of conducting a discussion.