How do you convince yourself that your opting for for no God is the correct one?
It seems to me that the possibility of God should elicit some exploration, however I find none since there is no awareness, no insights for full atheism to share
I simply have found and find no reason to believe in any god and therefore live my life accordingly, no momentous 'opting' involved. I'm not in the business of trying to convince others so the last part of your above quote holds no significance for me.
That could be a text book case of empiricism, Aside from that I can't gleam much from your statement.
Then you'll understand just how vague and even recursive I found your original statement, "I believe that things can evidence themselves,"
I find logical reason for it in the argument from necessity and the argument from morality so called refutations end in scientism or the repudiation of cause and effect
All I gleaned from the extensive rebuttals to your point of view on these matters was that the idea of a god remained only a possibility, even if one allowed for the ultimate original cause idea, a possibility which I have already accepted in defining my agnosticism.
I find no empirical evidence for empiricism but that doesn't seem to worry empiricists
As the statement that God exists is assumed to be an objective fact then I simply choose to use empiricism and rationality as the most reliable approaches to the subject. For me, therefore, I find the statement that God exists to be not proved. Hence I have no reason to believe that God exists. If you can suggest more reliable methods or approaches then please tell me and if I find them worthwhile then I will happily consider them.
Do you mean an atheist's mind?
Perhaps when you respond to what I said, you could have the good grace to complete my quote in full, which was "and as I try to employ an inquiring, rational and skeptical mind I would say that I am also not bound by empirical evidence."
So, I would say that I try to employ all of the above and, rather than starting from an atheist's position, it is where I end up.
We might want it to be a personal matter but it doesn't quite sit comfortably just as a personal thing
For you, it seems. But there again, you have some sort of allegiance to your selected Biblical morals, so that would be understandable.
But it's a personal matter, isn't it? How would you know conscience has been blunted? You are saying that there is the unblunted conscience and the blunted one and it shows up in groups of people particularly christians as if they have fallen below a standard....which completely goes against personal morality.
My own morality can be blunted by attaching too much importance to selfish reasons, for instance, which may(and has) made me act in a way that I later have regretted. I would submit that groups of Christians have been shown to have had their sense of morality blunted and often it is they who accept they have fallen below their own standards.