Sovereign Dream
Member
Since strong atheism states a universal negative, I'll stick with the logical stance of weak atheism.
One can only wonder where this "you can't prove a negative" nonsense originates from...
If it is the case that you are ostensibly committing yourself to the supposition that you are a so-called "weak" atheist because so-called "strong" atheism involves something tantamount to proving a negative and that one cannot prove a negative, then consider the fact that one can, in fact, prove a negative. I can prove, for example, that a round square does not exist. I can prove to you that something that is at once all red-colored and at once all non-red colored does not exist. I can prove to you that a female president of the United States does not exist. And so on. Furthermore, supposing, for the sake of the argument, that it was, in fact, impossible to "prove a negative," then so-called "strong atheism" would be a rather philosophically futile position to hold to as its main claim, namely that God does not exist, would be an instance of seeking to "prove a negative" and thus would be impossible on this view (though as I stated above, it is not at all impossible to prove a negative). In order for the strong atheist to meet his burden of proof, he would have to show that the very concept of God entails a contradiction; in classical formal logic, this would amount to something like a conjunction of incoherent claims, e.g. A & -A.
This "you can't prove a negative" nonsense is just that and it only seems to be repeated on some obscure corners of the internet that provide a home to congeries of village atheists who, while they like to think themselves as knowledgeable on matter of philosophy, theology and so forth, don't know much about those subjects at all.