You're right, but I did say the ''current' definition ''atheism is the lack of belief in Gods' is an attempt to strip off any philosophical attachments.
I'd say it's applying the time-honoured philosophical idea of stripping a notion back to its most basic element, to eliminate those extraneous 'philosophical attachments' which bring their own baggage to the discussion.
I say attempt because it can't quite escape the raising of questions or motivations,
I'd say that, by and large, we atheists don't struggle at all. You seem to, but that's a you thing, not an atheism thing.
firstly are we to treat the term ''lack'' as fortunate, neutral or unfortunate?
That's an argument from consequences, which is a fallacy. After you've determined if you're an atheist, you can assess your own life and what meaning you have and where it comes from (you don't have to, I suppose) and you can decide as an individual whether you consider not believing to be a 'lack' or a 'boon'.
Are there elements of loss about it, is it a virtue or a vice, a gift or a pathology. Most atheists err to a positive view, that it isn't a lack of anything more of a completeness or whatever.......so even this apparently philosophy free definition gives rise to something else.
Any philosophy has consequences. Once you've decided that you believe you have to determine if any sect of any particular creed of any particular religion is close enough to your own personal philosophy to sign up to, and the penalties, consequences, benefits and rewards that purportedly come along with that.
Were atheism really mere lack of belief in Gods the majority here could have stated that and buggered off years ago so we know there's more meat on the bones....antireligion, antitheism etc.
Religion and belief are not synonyms. There are any number of religious people who also have a problem with elements of organised religion trying to enforce and legislate their beliefs on people outside of their 'church', whether believers or not. If that agitating, expansionist segment of theists would stop trying to spread their beliefs by the power of law the resistance would not be necessary. Overwhelmingly, in my experience, atheists could not find two shits to put together about whether or not you believe, but along with any number of theists they have a problem when certain believers start saying that because they believe something that women should be denied education, or that gay people should not be allowed to marry or adopt, or that abortion should be restricted. There can be valid arguments for some of these points, arguably, but 'my holy book says...' is not one of those valid arguments.
O.