God is still a belief that has zero proof. Even a theist doesn't believe their own thesism. All they do is believe a belief, they cannot know their belief is an absolute truth when there is no image of the thing they believe exists.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 07, 2023 3:00 pmThank you for that. It's a very interesting point.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Fri Apr 07, 2023 11:39 am It's part of looking at, fairly or not, the psychology of atheists.The truth is that the atmosphere of excitement, by which the atheist lived, was an atmosphere of thrilled and shuddering theism, and not of atheism at all; it was an atmosphere of defiance and not of denial.
I have often marvelled that, for being those at such pains to deny the existence of something, Atheists are so obsessed with it. It is, indeed, as if nothing else matters so much to them, as that the denial of God's existence should stand -- and should be prostelytized for, to the ends of the Earth.
But there are no comparable factions devoted to the denial of any other beings. There are no Antifairyists or Antiunicornists. There aren't really any factions passionate about the denial of anything -- except for God.
But why would there be a faction for the passionate denial of that which simply could not and does not exist, as they insist is true of God? The thought makes no sense. And yet, there they are, the Atheists, passionate to convince us all that no rational, scientific, moral or modern person could possibly believe in God. They are continually fighting a battle they insist is already won: reality, truth, science, facts, history, certainty -- all are on their side, they think, and inevitably, belief in God must perish like any belief in a myth. And yet, there they are, fighting the battle again.
Where is their Enemy? Is He not already vanquished, the fact of the defeat only remaining to reach the ears of the still-believing? Why not, then, sit back and relax. Time and "progress" will achieve total victory for the cause, you would think they would think.
But no. For them the battle is very much alive. The ramparts must continually be reinforced against the incursions of faith. The message of our cosmic orphanship must still be broadcasted, and urgently so, so that all may disbelieve. And the reason, they'll tell you, is simple: belief in God is a scourge, a blight, an inhibitor on the greatness of mankind, they'll say; the urgency comes from the need to expunge it from human thought altogether. But again, it's very hard to believe that's the reason; for the very belief they claim to want to expunge is also the greatest source of mankind's greatest art, music, educational endeavours, science, literature, invention, law, welfare and other social improvement, and a great boost to things like exploration, medicine and above all, to morality. Their characterization of what "religion" does is, itself, so onesided that again, one cannot miss that they are disproportionately passionate against it, and so fanatical about getting rid of God that they are quite happy to eliminate all the good that belief in God has done, and even to deny that any of it has been done at all. Something unbalanced, if not outright deranged, is involved, clearly.
Theirs is clearly a posture of "defiance," just as Chesterton says. The very passion with which they engage in it shows it is much more than mere "denial." Atheism has an urgency that mere denial lacks. But I love Chesterton's phrase, "shuddering theism." It's quite right. The Atheist knows God exists; he just hates Him. He wants to "pay God back" so to speak, by refusing to allow himself and others even to acknowledge God's existence. But his revenge-motive betrays his duplicity; he hates, because he believes. He senses, in the deepest recesses of his heart, that God does exist, and so he makes God the object of his revolt rather than a mere matter-of-no-consequence. He says that belief in God will perish naturally, with time; but he does not believe it, for he feels quite urgently that without his contribution, such belief will not fade at all. Indeed, he fears it may actually grow, unless he renews his efforts to defeat it. Perhaps he even suspects it would grow in himself, if he did not, by vigorous exertion, keep up the effort to disbelieve, to fortify his cynicism against the creeping suspicion that he is simply wrong about all he thinks about that.
That's too much effort for something that is a done deal. Atheists don't really believe their own Atheism. Rather, like the Bible says of demons, they "believe and shudder."
No one is anti-fairy like you say...even though a fairy has an image, something that can be known to exist simply by knowing the image alone. So no one that has seen the image of a fairy can deny or be anti-fairy, because it exists as an image known. But what about God's image?
If God had an image the way a fairy does then no one would be anti-God. God would simply be known in it's image alone. God would be self-evident.
This is not about defiance.
Or else you can say that a theist is defiant in their deep knowing that not-knowing is all they have. They do not really believe in their indoctrinated belief there is a God, they only think they do. Because life would seem meaningless and pointless and lawless without their belief in God.
To know there is a God, or to advise and council someone else to seek relationship with God is a pretense from the start. Because the alternative is just too bleak and depressing. So lets invent a cure for this aching longing to know, and just pretend our not-knowing is a lie, by pretending we do know.
When in reality, nothing can ever know itself. And that's the only intelligence here, that is the only real intelligence at work, when the consciousness fully understands and realises that it cannot see or know itself. No one or thing who is conscious can know what consciousness is IC...just as a fish does not know the water in which it swims, so what hope of knowing what God is.
The atheist does not know God, nor does the atheist hate a god it does not know. Atheists simply get caught up in the fictional mythical character that is God, wanting to play along with it just like the theist does, it's the human nature to invent characters, just as your parents invented you by giving you a christian name. You were nobody before you were given a title.
This authoring the unknowable is an unavoidable human behaviour to believe in an author.
In reality, no created thing can ever know it's author. Even a theist can accept that.
It's the theists that think atheists hate and reject a God because the theist hates the idea of no God.