Highjohn wrote:RFC.
Your wrong about atheism. technically everyone who was alive before someone came up with the idea of god was an atheist.(Note I'm not saying all gods are fictional here, just that at some point all known religious did not exist, so someone must have had the made them up(maybe they were insane, or a con artist) or they had a divine revelation, like Saul is supposed to have had). However that is not really of any interest, I am an a-universe-creating-pink-polka-doted-turtle, but who cares. However as soon as someone said there was a god, someone said "I don't see this god of yours". Just because most people in a society did say the saw the god doesn't mean that there weren't people who didn't. You don't need science for that.
Also please rephrase this in the future:runsforcelery wrote:Atheism seems to me to result from a rejection of supernatural and divine forces because those forces are seen as having failed to accomplish what the proto-atheist views as their function, purpose, or responsibilities.
It implies that most atheists are atheists because they think god has failed them. This is in fact not true. Most atheist are atheist because they don't see evidence of a god. They might also be pissed off at what that god is supposed to have done but that isn't why they think the god didn't do that.
Most atheists are not 'angry at god' they don't think go exists. Yes there are some atheists who are atheists because of exactly that, but they are rare, not the majority
No, I'm not wrong about atheism in the anthropological sense. I will wager that from the very first moment the very first proto-human saw fire, he ascribed it to some mysterious power which he could not understand. Completely leaving aside whether or not God or those supernatural forces actually exist, every emerging society/civilization/tribal culture with which I am familiar ascribed the things it could not understand to supernatural and/or divine beings or forces. I am defining atheism as a disbelief in those beings or forces and arguing that it arises from a culture which is able to find other explanations for those events, occurrences and processes it could not previously account for. I speak here of the emergence of atheism qua atheism, not of any given individual who may have embraced atheism.
And I do not choose to modify the paragraph you quoted. "Indict" is not always a moral judgment. If you have always been an atheist, you cannot "indict" something in which you do not believe in the judicial sense of charging it with having failed in a moral obligation to you. You can, however --- and atheists do --- point out the many ways in which any truly divine being who might hypothetically existed has failed to manifest himself to you, failed to offer laboratory evidence of his existence, failed to discharge what they would consider to be the minimum moral obligations of such a being, etc. In that sense, in the sense of Christian apologia, for example, an atheist does, indeed, "indict" God. Nor does the use of the verb "indict" say anything at all about anger. It simply says that "this being or thing you theists call 'God' has never manifested to me, nor have I seen any evidence that it exists, because if it did exist, it would have done X, Y, or Z."
This is a case in which any term anyone cares to use can quickly become a loaded one. I have to agree with Drak to some extent, however. You have cheerfully and consistently rattled of what theists believe in, expressing yourself in your own terms, which is your right. It does not necessarily make you correct, but neither does it necessarily make you incorrect, and philosophically and morally you have every right to make your arguments as seems most accurate to you. As do I, and as does Drak. I have no way of knowing if you personally awoke one day with your atheism fully formed --- sprung (you should pardon the phrase) as Athena from the brow of Zeus --- or it you reached that view after actual long and careful study of opposing belief structures. Speaking as someone who, Like C.S. Lewis had his atheistic moments and who has looked at this question very carefully from both sides, however, I stand by my analysis of the emergence of atheism as a belief structure.
As for anger, the existence of God (or gods) is a question which it behooves all of us to approach with the awareness that it is a highly emotionally charged issue for many. I can't say whether or not it is in your own case. Anger -- or at least a sense that they have been failed or somehow "swindled" by people who told them they should believe in God --- is, however, a very active part of what seem to me to be the majority of the individual atheists with whom I have discussed the nature of belief. In fact, I personally know at least two atheists (both friends of mine) who wax positively rabid on the subject. I've known both of the people I have in mind for years and our friendship is close, but they regard anyone --- except me, for some reason --- who argues in favor of the existence of God, even if the anyone in question is not attempting to proselytize then in any way, as backward, medieval peasants who want to burn witches on the village green and who should be stamped out before they lure any right-thinking soul into a cultist village and feed them poisoned Kool-Aid. I don't say that this would reflect your own attitude, nor do I have any desire to tread on your beliefs or your sensitivities. I do, however, reserve the right to define what I understand in my own terms just as you do using your own terms. And if you wish to define what theists do/do not believe, then you had better be prepared for them to reciprocate.