Inquirer wrote: ↑Mon Aug 29, 2022 12:54 pm
How about this as a much better definition of atheism:
"Atheism is not a disbelief in gods or a denial of gods; it is a lack of belief in gods and a lack of belief in no Gods".
Although this still begs the question how a disbelief is not the same as not a belief or not a disbelief differs from a belief and so on...
I mean do atheists know that they believe things or just believe that they believe them?
Nobody knows for sure, not even the Faithful who beliveethat they know. We are all 'agnostics' so the agnostic position is true, but unhelpful as a distinction point in believing.
That is based on the evidence and is what we debate here. Atheists who think about it appear to be convinced that the probability of any gods existing is small. Thus they may say 'does not exist'. I do myself, but I do not claim that I know, but I see see the possibility as unlikely. I take the possibility as not likely enough to believe until there is better evidence for it.
Upshot is, 'do not believe' is not the same as 'believe there is not' and the latter position cannot be forced on atheism.
To look at is another way, if atheism did claim to believe there are no gods, that this could not be a claim to know would soon become evident, so an agnostic based non belief would be logically forced on us, even if we believed there were no gods. We would have to revert to the logical position atheism in fact holds.
I needn't go into the rhetorical swindle of inviting atheists to regard 'do not believe' and 'believe there is not' as the same thing, and if they did so, the theist side would leap on them with 'you cannot know for sure so gocha, atheism' only to say that ploy don't work.