Immanuel Can wrote:Factually incorrect. OL has rightly asked us to distinguish between two different claims, both sometimes called "Atheism": disbelieve in God, and belief in no God. This we are doing.Hobbes' Choice wrote:There is no ambiguity.
You've missed the category that most accurately represents most Atheists, and the one not covered by either of your points.
I cannot "disbelieve" a thing that is not clearly defined, and there is not need to "believe in no God".
Simply enough I have not use for belief at all.
The definition "Supreme Being" will suffice for now. As I pointed out to OL, any claims about the Supreme Being's identity beyond that can, for the moment, remain undecided, for they are logically secondary to the question of whether any such Being can exist.If there is then it derives from the fact that "god" is meaningless if not defined, and as you have not yet had the balls to define, god this is going to remain a problem for you.
"Supreme Being" is no definition. I have no obligation to even consider such are risible invention.
As you can see above, this isn't so. For one may disbelieve in God because one does not personally know Him, or one may disbelieve because one imagines one has evidence that God does not -- or cannot -- exist.An atheist does not believe in god, needs no further explanation
As I can see You have not made any sort of case or argument. A two word epithet is not better than a one word epithet. What is 'supreme'?
Atheism survives only because it's never asked to define itself. If it ever did, its irrationality (or alternately, its triviality) would become so manifest that no one would ever be an Atheist...at least, no rational person would.
Atheism is a default position. It's just common sense. What is irrational is "GOD" and those that believe.