LuckyR wrote: ↑Thu Sep 14, 2023 11:21 pm
Well, despite your contrary opinion, many intersubjective entities are considered to be "real" and to exist in reality by standard folk, that is they aren't relegated to "delusions" as you defined them.
It's not about opinion, Lucky: it's about definitions.
Unfortunately for us, English has one word for "exists," where the situation really requires two concepts. There are things which exist in reality, and things that exist as fictions. Those are different uses of the word exists; and I suggest that we fix the confusion by distinguishing them this way:
- ExistsR = "exists in reality," and "exists factually," and "exists regardless of belief." (Things that fit into this category would be Germany, at present, rocks, hydrodynamics, the Eiffel Tower, flawed circles, and you.)
- ExistsM = "exists as myth," or "exists as a fiction," or "exists as a concept in the minds of people." (Things that fit into this category would be Cinderella, corporate entities, Socialism, Enron, the perfect circle, and the integrity of politicians.)

The question then becomes, which of the two is intended by Atheism?
You say it might be
existsM, or "intersubjectively" rather than "objectively." But if you ask an Atheist, what he or she means by "God does not exist," is he or she going to be happy with that?
I'm going to suggest no, for two obvious reasons. One is that it's flatly and obviously untrue: anybody can simply observe that religious figures and gods of various kinds
existM "intersubjectively" or "as fictions believed by some." But secondly, I don't think that's at all the claim Atheism wants to make. (Let the Atheists correct me, if I'm wrong; but I think this is one point on which they're bound to agree with me.) It wants to say, "God does not
existR." Atheism aims to convey that no God or gods
existR, and that we are better off to believe they do not persist beyond our belief systems, and that they are not ultimately real.
As to the beliefs of theists, you're right they all believe their god is the ONE, TRUE god.
Right. They mean
existR.
That's the thing with gods, they have a time of rising, then declining popularity. When the last believer stops believing in a god, that god no longer exists. Identical to when the last quorum of people believes the USSR or Enron exist, they cease to exist.
That's an
existM claim, and has two problems. One is that it's verifiably untrue that belief in God is declining at all. People today are more likely to believe in a God or gods than ever...everywhere outside of the affluent West, particularly Europe. So we must not mistakenly take our own observations about our own society as indicative of the whole world; it just isn't.
But more importantly, the belief of people is irrelevant to an
existR claim, which, as we have seen, is what both Atheists and the religious want to make. Nobody's very interested in
existM claims about God, since it's apparent that He always
existsM in that sense. It's not even worth debating. What is worth debating, as everybody knows, is whether or not God
existsR, exists
in reality.