Does it matter if atheism has any 'positive' claims to make or not? It is simply the refusal to believe in a supernatural entity. End of story. How come this is never enough for theists?
Oh, believe me...that's enough for me...because if it's true, then in means that Atheism is just a negation, and not a worldview.
Of course, as a mere negation, it doesn't amount to much at all: simply "I don't believe." Okay, fine. But that puts absolutely no responsibility on anyone to agree, and it doesn't even rule out the possibility that someone *knows* otherwise. So it's very weak, even when stridently worded. It does no work in questions of origins, ontology, phenomena, science, ethics...in fact, that's what the article at the head of this strand insists: that "Atheists" can believe all sorts of things.
Would that all Atheists were so modest and ineffectual.
Besides, many atheists do make 'positive' claims: that the world came into being through chemical interactions; that life has evolved from this primitive chemistry into more complex forms. Is this positive enough or does it not conform to a theist's definition of positive?
Ah. So on the other hand, you're saying that Atheism has to be backed by Materialist or Naturalist claims about things like origins, destiny, phenomena, ontology, and so on? If so, that makes it a much more impressive, or at least more ambitious. But it does so at the cost of falsifying the article at the header of this strand, and also your claim above, since it essentially makes Atheism into a worldview. It turns out to be about more than mere disbelief, and instead makes all sorts of worldview claims.
So I must ask which is it? Is Atheism a minimal claim to "not knowing," (which makes it a slender target but also rather extremely slender in importance as well), or is it a maximal set of commitments in areas like ontology, origins, science, etc. (by which point it appears to possess all that's needed to call it a worldview)?