emilysmith wrote:The OP is terribly flawed for this reason...
Everyone is an atheist in regards to every God except their own.
That doesn’t even address the OP, so I don’t see how this reason exposes how the OP is flawed. Indeed, this seems like a very weird phrase. Atheism means there is no God. You imply that atheists include people who believe in God. That doesn’t even make any sense, if you ask me.
Does anyone bother making arguments as to why it is impossible for Zeus to exist? No, that would be stupid. MOST atheists don't engage in any kind of debate on the matter because it is just as stupid to argue against the existence of Zeus as it is to argue against the existence of the God of Abraham.
You say stupid, Shermer and myself say untenable. I suppose we aren’t as angry about it, perhaps.
Is it possible that some God in some form exists? Maybe, but the possibility is so remote or the idea of this imaginary God is so foreign that is serves no one any purpose of arguing for His/Her/Its existence.
Indeed. That is an agnostic, or skeptic position. That is how Shermer describes his position.
We don't believe in the God of Abraham because the Bible is fiction. the Israelites were never enslaved as an entire race in Egypt, there was never a global flood, and most that follows is irrelevant... including the New Testament and the Book of Mormon.
So. That’s really not much of a point in regards to the point of this thread. Sure people don’t believe some religious propositions. Cool. It’d be nice if we could all maintain that stand. The point here is can you prove the position of atheism? That there is no God? It’s a difficult thing to undertake proving a negative. But some maintain its possible.
If the Old Testament isn't true, then neither is the New Testament, then neither is the Book of Mormon. That is, generally, the premise "atheists" on this and similar forums are working on.
Could be. But that doesn’t matter, really. Also, the propositions here lack definition. What does it mean to say the New Testament isn’t true? That nothing in it can be verified? That nothing in it resonates as teaching with you? Or what exactly? I can’t tell if you’re trying to suggest the scriptures aren’t true in your estimation or if you think the scriptures have been proven untrue, whatever that would mean.
We don't have to prove that there is no such thing as God. We only have to show that the reasonable position is that YOUR God is a cultural construct. Easy enough, too.
Proving that isn’t really doing much of anything in light of the context here though. The position here, generally, is that the Church is not true. I’m not here trying to prove the Church true. I accept that its just as untenable to say the Church is true as to say the Church is not true. Defending really is just holding the position that the critiques aren’t very valid or don’t hold much water. The critical position is holding the position that the Church is not true. If this is not so, then what’s the point of this “discussion” board? For LDS to come here and prove that their spiritual experiences really occurred? I don’t see LDS claiming they can prove that at all.
The only fall back position, when all arguments are said and done, for anyone who believes in the God of Abraham is that they "feel" that they know it is true. They don't actually know.
How do you even know what they know? That just seems like a silly claim. This highlights the point in the OP. Generally what happens here is some critic takes the position that belief is wrong because the believer’s position is unverified. That doesn’t mean the believer is wrong so much as that the believer’s position is still in question, or untenable. The problem that persists though, is the critics position too is untenable. You don’t know what others know, but yet you claim you know they don’t know because they can’t show you how or why they know. It amounts to silliness and is not logical.
Obviously, the argument that "you can't prove it" works both ways since no one can be 100% certain of anything, but scientific method and empiricism have provided us with the tools and processes to generate what is most probable... the result being a blurry version of reality that transcends culture and anecdotal experience and has real world applications that can be and are used every day, reliably, to accomplish tasks in every facet of modern civilization.
That’s fine, but going that route comes off more as an agnostic position and, if you notice the tiny little nuanced phrasing you used its faith to believe the tools you do have are the tools most reliable and generates what is most probable.
Sorry, the OP fails. Claiming there is no God is a more reasonable and logical explanation than something primitive people made up thousands of years ago, then reinvented because the other gods of the era proved to be more powerful.
Clearly you misunderstood the point of the OP. You didn’t really address why it fails at all.