okay. Anyway, atheists who reject the claim that 'God exists' arguing that this claim is unsupported is fine. What I still don't understand is the position of the atheists who go on to make the claim that God doesn't exist and who moreover don't fall in any of the following categories:
1. They have personal reasons due to which they don't feel that God doesn't exist.
2. They feel that they are knowledgeable enough so that if there was a God they would have known about it.
I think the natural position for those who haven't got any extra knowledge which the rest are unaware of, or who are not guided by gut-feelings etc should be agnosticism; that is leaving open the possibility of God and not saying that God doesn't exist for sure.
So you're agnostic toward polytheism, then?
Here's my take on the issue:
- I see strong reasons to believe that religious beliefs can arise from things like human psychogy, not from the actions of any god(s)... and hopefully you can agree witb this, since the vast majority of the world's religions disagree with yours (and with each other), and they had to come from somewhere.
- My mental model of the world includes no gods at all, and it agrees remarkably well with my observations of the real world. When I look at the world and think "no gods exist", the world makes sense. At the same time, when I look at the world trying to imagine that a god (or many gods) existed, it would make much less sense.
- I recognize that theists tell me that belief in God lets their worldview make more sense, not less (how this could be I have no idea, but I recognize that this is what they say). However, a general principle of models is that when two models are equally good at making predictions, the difference between them is irrelevant. The difference between my view and a theist's view is God. Since my godless mental model works very well, if a theist's mental model worked just as well, then we could conclude that God doesn't matter... and since the God they're positing is (usually) a relevant god, we can reject that god as false.
That's my reasoning in a nutshell.
But I should also note something: part of what you said raises huge red flags for me: when you say that a person has to live as a Muslim before the truth of Islam will be revealed to him, I can't help but interpreting this as you saying that a person has to be trained and primed to believe in Islam before they'll find it believable. In my experience, things that are true don't work that way. I mean, I don't have to spend half an hour meditating on how hot it is before I'll notice the temperature outside, you know?