I really don't understand why an atheist has to have a god concept in mind to reject it whether it is Yahweh, flying spaghetti monster, the universe or your left pinky toe.
You say atheists don't have to reject all concepts yet you are saying one concept has to be brought up and rejected to count as atheism. Somethings not right there.
What I feel is being said is that if I say evidence for God is the universe, and that we can call gravity gravity, or we can call gravity God, and that in everything we may name one way, we can also name it the other way (God).
The resistance to calling it God is because of the rejection of God.
Now that is point 1 of I don't know how many points in all, but is a plateau to pause at, reflect, and hold various debates.
Me, I don't think God is in the physical, even while I believe I am that which appears physical and in physical world. I instead believe God is the non-physical concepts we are sure exist, a la, Reason, Justice, Love, Method, Math, Life, etc. Rejection of any / all these concepts as God, is rejection of God. If one is past the basics of point one, then I think one might come upon realization that amounts to second point that says, resistance of calling non-physical items God is because of the rejection of God, as concept (or Thought).
This is where I like to 'hang out' in debates. And in response to the quote above that I'm responding to, it becomes clear, I think, that there are pre-conceived notions that atheists have with regard to concept of God, and are prepared to reject, when other concepts are being equated with God. And while there are some hairs to be split in this version of debating God, the point I wish to emphasize, for sake of what this thread is about (I think), is that we have all learned what amounts to preconceived notions about what God must be, and what God cannot be, or is 'completely different' from. Such that it is not that an atheist has to have a god concept in mind to reject it, but that this is observably the case, in most of these debates. You don't 'have to have the concept,' but you simply do, and show up this way, much of the time.
Theists don't have to have the concept either, but are granted the leeway to have it, since that is what theism is, (belief in existence). I believe (strongly, and rationally) that in order for atheist to maintain atheism, that it has to be rejection of concept as God, otherwise, atheist may cease to exist. If only for a few moments, and if only as part of discussion. At end of discussion, after thread debate is left, I think it quite plausible that self identified atheist returns to conviction that amounts to, "I know better than what that thread was saying, as I am still convinced that god doesn't exist and regardless of arguments in that thread, I reject that god, even still." If that were exact wording, I'd want a merit badge for nailing it exactly, but hopefully one can read between the lines of 'exact language' and understand the point.
Ultimately you are rejecting your preconceived notion of what God must be.
Guess what? Some theists are asked to go through this exercise, often, as there are many ways to put this. The one I'm using is: to really connect with God, one must set aside preconceived notion(s), if only for a few moments. Theist can come back after that, to ideas that God is male, with white beard, sitting on clouds, and yadda yadda yadda, but that preconceived notion will make it really hard to connect in experience. In what is truly an objective way.
Other variations on this are:
- kill the buddha
- God is not stranger than we think, God is stranger than we can think
- Judge not lest ye be judged
- there will never be an universal theology, but universal experience is not only necessary but inevitable
According to us, babies don't have preconceived notions of God / deities, and thus are implicit atheists (within context of this thread, for sure). You who are reading this do have preconceived notions of God / deities even if you want to attempt to convince 'others' that this is not so. Letting go of those preconceived notions will actually, believe it or not, get you closer to God. Rejecting them is actually, in a way, having them persist. But since that is perhaps deeper than you are willing to accept (right now), we'll just stay to the idea of rejecting them doesn't make you all that different than some of the theists in the room who also may have preconceived notions that are 'getting in the way.'