NS,
Sorry I ducked out last night – last minute call offering Mrs B and me corporate tickets for the Rolling Stones at the Olympic Park. Bloody magnificent – my god for a bunch of pensioners they can really rip it up still. Anyways…
I know you like to split posts up but it leads to you, as here asking questions that are addressed in the rest of the post. So The reason that I suspect I might be a god dodger in the circumstance is covered in the rest of the post but you ask why because you are treating things out of context. There are tons of arguments that I cannot falsify it doesn't necessarily mean that I can claim that they are insurmountable, or cogent, or cast iron or whatever description you want to use without defining.
You seem to be getting confused with what might in a very narrow circumstance be defined as rationality, and ignoring how I, to me, would seem to come to beliefs. Now since you are the one making the objective claim here, whereas all I am saying is that it doesn't fit with my experience, I will need a bit more than your ongoing argument by incredulity and simple assertion to see your argument in any way as sound, never mind any other desperately reaching description you might want to apply to it.
I make no comment at all on how you came to your (non-)beliefs. I merely say that, if you found an argument for “god” that you couldn’t unravel then logically at least you’d have no choice but to abandon your atheism.
So all non falsifiable arguments are sound, cogent, cast iron and insurmountable? I thinkyou didn't really mean to suggest that.
Because I suggested no such thing. You’ve fallen into a pit of Vladian absolutism there, and here’s why: Consider Fred. Fred is an atheist. Maybe he’s an atheist because he’s never felt he experienced a god, maybe he read up on theism and found the arguments for it unpersuasive. Whatever.
Then one day Fred comes across an argument for theism that he can’t unravel. Try as he might, he can see no way to falsify it. Now you might find a way to falsify it.
I might find a way to falsify it. It might be an utterly shit argument in fact. Doesn’t matter. All that matters is that Fred can’t unpick it so
from his perspective he has a problem – should he retain his atheism and try to forget the argument he’s found to detonate it, or should he abandon his atheism in light of the argument he’s found undoes him?
Do you see it now? It’s a reference point issue – no-one (least of all me) suggests an argument that’s cast iron etc in some sort of absolute way (surely you know me well enough by now to know that I see no way to be certain about
anything – unknown unknowns and all that). All I need for the point to stand is an argument
that just seems certain enough to Fred. That was the "because" I referred to earlier: logically at least you can be an atheist by any means you like; find an argument for theism you can't undo though and retaining the atheism is akin to a professor of geology holding on to the notion that the earth is made of cream cheese.