NS,
There are plenty of things that I've heard arguments on that I didn't think were hopeless and yet weren't convincing to me. So I don't see why you want to say anything about arguments being hopeless,.
You’re struggling now. We can discuss the difference between “hopeless” and “not persuasive” if you like, but the principle is the same: if you haven’t found an argument for “god” to be correct then you’re an atheist. That’s true whether you’ve seen lots of arguments for theism or none – you’re still in that category.
Again as I pointed out I'm not an atheist because I find arguments to be hopeless, I just don't believe in what people talk about when they talk about gods. I'm not sure why you think you know more about how I think than I do but it's lead you to fall back on your argument by incredulity again - you just cannot believe there are any atheists who don't fit your description even If an atheists says to you 'I don't fit your description'.
No doubt you are, but it’s irrelevant for the reason I explained. You’re still an atheist because you haven’t been persuaded by an argument for theism. If you
had been persuaded by an argument for theism
then you wouldn’t be an atheist. QED
I don't see it as misrepresentation, I may be misreading you but when you wrote 'they/we haven’t been presented with an argument for theism that isn’t hopeless', then surely that isn't just saying that someone finds an argument unconvincing but that it is actually hopeless and I don't see how you get there. That's the elision that I was referring to so are you saying that isn't what you meant to say?
I meant to say what I said. Either someone finds an argument for god(s) to be correct or to be incorrect – there aren’t gradations of correctness that would lead him to think there are gods but only on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, or that there is a god but only from the waist down or some such. You can quibble about the use of “hopeless” rather than “incorrect” or “wrong” if you like, but it’s a secondary matter at best.
And I don't suggest that finding an argument to be hopeless did mean it was arbitrary opinion, just that you cannot assume as your post seemed to that it was actually correct that the argument was hopeless. And I'm perfectly happy to think that you weren't misrepresenting me there, just that you fell into the trap of using a false dichotomy
Then why did you use the phrase “And I still don't see how you get to the statement that the arguments are hopeless
simply because someone finds them to be so”? (emphasis added). I didn’t misrepresent you and there was no false dichotomy – you just assumed that I’d said or implied the “simply because someone finds them to be so” bit when I did no such thing.
There are good reasons for finding an argument to be hopeless/incorrect/wrong/whatever and there bad reasons for reaching the same conclusion (see Vlad’s confusion about the fallacious and non-fallacious use of the argument from authority a while back for example). There may also be no arguments for theism available at all. In all three cases though the atheist still hasn’t been presented with an argument for theism that’s persuaded him – which is all I was saying.