I recently saw a clip of antitheist 'comedian' Ricky Gervais on the Stephen Colbert Show using the I believe in one less God' schtick. When he said it he made that 'laugh now' facial gesture at the audience.
I can't see the appeal of Gervais myself, either. In particular, for me the most irritating thing about this argument is that if the entire point is that you can count how many gods you do or don't believe in then surely it should be 'you just believe in one god fewer' not 'one god less' ... so irritating!
But the question is this....who is his audience since to a theist the statement is a) obvious and b) an unsophisticated and indeed ignorant statement about religion and comparative religion?
As a rhetorical device, the question is for everyone; the purpose is to get them to think about why they believe what they believe. For theists it's about them realising that their 'special' belief in a god is exactly the same as the special belief that other people have for their god that is so easily dismissed in your devotion to yours. For atheists it's about realising that they are closer to most believers than they probably realise.
Atheists though get moist about it so I would move that Gervais is playing to the gallery and making a horse laugh argument which as it seems passes as fair comment in the whacky world of Celebrity Atheism.
'Atheists get moist about it'? You're probably hanging around with the wrong atheists, then. Maybe you should try hanging around with some good old-fashioned anti-theists, then - I hear Jimmy Carr has an opening.
If any atheists here 'get it' would they please inform us how this is a 'devastating argument which reduces monotheists to gibbering wrecks' and atheists to gibbering post orgasmic wrecks.
I wasn't aware anyone though it was a 'devastating argument' - as an 'atheist argument' it's a cute rhetorical device to try to get believers to realise that their chosen belief system is exactly as valid as anyone else's, but it's not a standalone argument. As a social device, it's a way of showing that we aren't all that different, regardless of whether we believe in just one of the hundreds of possible gods or none of them. Probably doesn't work on the Shintoists or Hindus, though, they have way more than (n-1) gods to start with...
O.