Sword,
That's fair enough enki. That said, I do not see you posting numerous times every day on threads like this., so there is a difference between someone in your position (which illustrates an absence of belief) and someone who makes positive claims against religious belief, but doesn't like it when the foundation for that claim comes under scrutiny.
I haven’t seen any examples of that here. Can you identify one please so we know that you’re not just trying a straw man argument?
This, in my opinion needs to be seen in context. I see it as being directed against those who are continually attacking religious belief.
I haven’t seen any examples of “attacking religious belief” here. I can think of plenty of example of falsifying the logic some religious people attempt for their beliefs, and I can think of plenty of examples of identifying disgusting behaviours done in the name of religion, but I can’t think of any examples of just “attacking religious belief”. Can you identify one please so we know that you’re not just trying a straw man argument?
I don't think Alan is expecting you to take his word for it.
Yes he is. When his attempts at logic collapse (as they always do) he resorts immediately to faith claims that he asserts to be true for the rest of us too (“god”, “soul” etc). That is Alan “expecting you to take his word for it”.
However, if you don't try something, how are you going to know whether it works or not?
What does “works” here mean please? If you mean by it something like, “make me feel good about myself” many beliefs in many gods have done that. If though you mean something like, “can be shown to be true” then to my knowledge even the most deliriously happy-clappy believer has no means to do that.
I do agree that the burden of proof lies with the one making the positive claim.
Well, that’s progress of a kind I guess. Let us know how you propose to go about it please re your various claims and assertions.
That said, positive claims can be made on both sides. An absence of belief position doesn't make positive claims about that with which it disagrees.
Depends what you mean by “positive claims”. My absence of belief in your (or in any other) god relies on “positive claims” as you put it that the arguments you attempt to validate your beliefs are false, but that’s because basic logic does the work for me.
Saying, "I don't see evidence for xxx" is not the same as saying, "There is no evidence for xxx"…
No it isn’t conceptually, but for practical purposes there’s not much between them. It’s just possible that someone has a cogent argument for “god” that’s so hidden that none of us have heard of it (and no theists who argue their case in the public domain have heard of it either for that matter) but it seems pretty unlikely I’d have thought.
…or "arguments for xxx are fallacious"
Ah, now you’ve fallen off the cliff again. “Arguments for X are fallacious” isn’t just a claim or an assertion. Logic stands on its own, and various constructions in logic are false. All that’s necessary therefore to justify “arguments for X are fallacious” is that those arguments align with logical fallacies. So far at least those for gods all do (
post hoc ergo propter hoc, argumetum ad consequentiam, argument from personal incredulity etc) but that’s not to say that one day someone somewhere won’t find one that isn’t demonstrably false.