TS,
There is only one meaning.
This is bizarre. Try looking at a dictionary. Do you see the list of
different meanings for the word "god" it contains?
QED
Colloquial, informal or everyday mundane language doesn't imply belief or disbelief or lack of belief or anything else to do with belief. It's just informal.
Of course it does. No-one who says “Clapton is god” means by it that he’s supernatural.
Nor does the word god itself imply anything to do with belief.
It does if you’re attempting the religious meaning of that term.
Using the term God colloquially, which you incorrectly suggest, was used by the writers of the Bible in describing many gods, some who existed and some who didn't. Some who were mortal men and some who weren't.
I didn’t suggest that but, if they were describing both deities and mortals, then they were engaged in separate and different categories of meaning.
Jesus and Moses were gods according to the Bible. What is the difference between those two and any other gods as far as divinity or godliness goes? Nothing.
Everything: one was (supposedly) a man/god hybrid, the other was just a man.
The differences between the two and other gods may be remarkable but those differences aren't anything to do with what it means to be a god.
Of course they are. They’re fundamentally epistemically different categories of meaning.
And being a god isn't dependent upon belief by anyone than the one making them gods.
Describing how someone feels about someone else as a “god” (colloquial sense) doesn’t thereby by imbue them with the properties of a "god" (religious sense).
In other words it doesn't matter what atheists say about it. They are still gods.
In other words, it’s nothing to do with what atheists specifically think – it’s to do with what anyone with a grasp of the relationship between language and reality think.
Uh-huh. Present those.
1. God: a non-material deity outwith nature
2. God: a description sometimes applied to persons as a colloquial comment on their outstanding talent or ability
The only thing that makes anyone or anything a god is the might and or veneration attributed to them. It has nothing to do with material, qualities or function.
Bullshit. Buy yourself a freaking dictionary willya.
No. There is no such criteria. Jehovah and Jesus demonstrates that. One material the other non-material. Both gods in the religious sense. In fact, religious or non-religious sense has no bearing on deity.
Different religious senses – one is non-material (theological), the other isn’t (colloquial).
All of these things you are mentioning are only lame attempts to wriggle out of the definition of gods at the end of the definition of atheism so the only way you can justify that is to explain what those gods mean…
It's not my “lame” attempt at anything, nor is the lame attempt of atheists. If you don’t like that language sometimes uses the same terms with fundamentally different meanings then take it up with whoever decides these things. In the meantime though, if you want to make claims and assertions about “god”, then it’s your job to define first which meaning you intend.
… and how you suppose they don't exist as gods.
I don’t. Yet again, all I do is to determine that your reasons for thinking god(s) (religious sense) do exist are wrong – a trivially easy thing to do.
You can't do that because it doesn't make sense, so I'm done with this discussion unless you can do that. So far no one has been able to define god in any way shape or form that remotely resembles accuracy. It's very simple but you can't do it. It's like there's a wall built up in you. Built, I think, early on in school or after leaving a false religion.
Being American, I suppose I should forgive you for having little sense of irony. If you do buy a dictionary to look up the multiple meanings of the word “god” though, try looking up that word too. You clearly had a very bad idea a long time ago and are now so heavily invested in it that no amount of reason or evidence is allowed to talk you out of it. Why though are you wasting other peoples’ time with it?
That wall and what it does to the atheist, without their knowledge apparently, is what I find so fascinating (but simultaneously annoying) about atheists.
It’s your straw man. If you find it interesting nonetheless, that’s a matter only for you.
As for language, context and reality though…
…let’s say that you took a history class where the lecturer taught you about the kings of England, and for your assignment asked you to write about some other kings. And let’s say that you duly handed in your essay in which you talked about Clark Gable (“The King of Hollywood”), Elvis Presley ("The King of Rock and Roll") and Benny Goodman (“The King of Swing”).
And let’s say too that when your essay was marked “F” (as it surely would be) with the added comment, “TS – You clearly knew this course to be about royal heads of nations, not about popular nicknames for performers” would you tell him he was a “retard” in reply?
Why not?
See? Context and meaning is all. Context and meaning…
Try again.