Skip wrote:So, here's a thing:
There is no evidence for a god. Any god.
Thats clearly far too much for you to conclude. You would have to know all that other people knew or had experienced to make such a statement, at least if you were to advance it as a rational postulate rather than a personal wish.
Each god whose advocates claim that he, she or it exists, have specific and and particular descriptions of his her or its attributes, powers and preferences, right down to their taste in female attire.
If one examined the evidence presented...
Wait a minute...above you said there WAS no "evidence" did you not? It would seem so...
More importantly, the multiplicity of wrong answers does not make a rational argument regarding the existence or non-existence of a right one. It's a non-sequitur, rationally speaking. If it were not, then by the same logic the plethora of conceivable wrong answers to the equation 2+2 would count as an argument that there was no such thing as 4.
If one were to subject any particular god's exercise of any single one his or its purported powers in any single instance to a controlled scientific test, it would fail.
That might be the same as to say that God doesn't agree to be placed in a beaker, measured with a yardstick, peeped at with a telescope or pinched in vernier callipers. It argues only that God, if He exists, transcends the human desire to subject Him to scientific control...hardly surprising, for a Supreme Being.
Nevertheless, you are quite wrong as to evidence, scientific or otherwise. If design is discernible in the universe at all, then it posits a Designer, for one thing. However, most Atheists simply refuse to see that
as evidence, even if, like Arising (see above) they admit to seeing the design. And there is, of course, no way to respond to a disposition that
sees the evidence but refuses to recognize it
as evidence. No further evidentiary arguments are left thereafter.
However: There is no conclusive evidence that zero gods of any kind can possibly exist.
The theist equate those two facts, call it a stalemate and go on to say:
"Unbelief is a belief."
I have not met a Theist who makes the argument the way you state it, but perhaps you have. As you frame it, it's not logically sound. Nevertheless, there are better arguments to be had.