Sword,
I’ve stepped away from the mb in part because you and others persist with hopeless reasoning of this kind despite having it undone many times. As you seem to have forgotten (again) the rebuttals though, briefly:
The statement There is no evidence to support the existence of any gods is an argument against belief in gods.
No it isn’t. It’s an “argument” (actually just a finding) that, so far at least, those who claim evidence for their god(s) are wrong to do so. There may or may not be good
other reasons to believe in gods, but fallacious reasoning doesn’t do the job.
Such a statement presupposes that the person making it knows what evidence would convince them otherwise,…
No it doesn’t. It just presupposes that, if discourse is to be possible, then common understandings of the terms used are essential. “Evidence” has a meaning that, if you corrupt it also to mean, “well it’s evidence enough for me” nullifies it because anyone could claim thereby that anything is evidence enough for their belief in anything at all.
…otherwise how do they know that there is no evidence?
Because, according to the standard definitions of the term, the facts and reasoning marshalled so far at least to argue “God” are not evidence at all. Strong opinion or personal faith they may be, but evidence they are not.
To press the individual on this seems to invite claims of shifting the burden of proof this, fallacy that, etc., and this is why I see it as someone putting their faith in argument(s) against something.
It seems that way to you because you don’t understand how the burden of proof works. I may well claim that wearing my lucky pants caused my favourite tea to be waiting for me when I got home (see, evidence!), but there’s no obligation on you to prove otherwise. All you have to do is to point out that lucky pants wearing fails any meaningful test of the term “evidence”. QED.