Atheists don't withhold belief because spirits can't be proven. We withhold belief because there's no evidence they exist.
We withhold belief for the same reason we withhold belief in unicorns and gryphons.
You deny the evidence that there is for spirits and God. Isn't that confirmation bias.
Wouldn't faith be the opposite of knowledge?
Knowledge is belief supported by evidence. Faith is belief without evidence, ie: fantasy.
No, evidence does not prove things but causes belief in things.
Are you serious? First believe, then look for evidence?
How is that in any way reasonable? How can any reliable knowledge come from such a topsy-turvy methodology?
You should really look at the question I was answering.
Do you gain knowledge about something usually before you believe it exists? It is possible but it is not really knowledge about a particular thing before you believe that thing exists.
No. You're still seeing God as axiomatic. You're still beginning with the concept as a premise.
It is not testable by science because there's no evidence to test. It's not within the purview of science, or even epistomology.
We don't hide from things that don't exist, and the assumption of non-existence is the reasonable default. Do you hide from wyverns? Why not? -- because there's no evidence they exist? You've already stated that you begin with belief, and then look for evidence, so belief in wyverns has the same truth-value as belief in God, does it not?
You are just denying that there is evidence for God when there is. What we do with that evidence is another thing, but the evidence is there.
OK, so belief without evidence -- fantasy -- can affect one's afterlife? I see two completely unsupported premises here.
You're accepting the Christian narrative as the starting point of your argument; as a premise. This is not reasonable. You seem to expect others to accept your apologetics based on a presupposed narrative.
You just reject evidence when evidence exists.
How is it ever "reasonable" to believe in something without evidence? I see no reasonable arguments for unevidenced belief. You have a bizarre understanding of "reasonable."
Lack of need is a criterion for scientific investigation. If A, B, and C explain a phenomenon, why would it be reasonable to propose D as an additional criterion?
Science will consider D when there's either evidence of or need for an additional cause, till then, there is not.
No science won't consider D because science does not have evidence for D that it can use in science, so science just plods on presuming it is correct that A,B and C explain a phenomenon,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, even if it is unverifiable that this is the case.
It is the theists who seem to be exhibiting poor thinking.
Please explain this poor scientific thinking that atheists, logicians and scientists seem to exhibit. I see nothing pointing to the existence of God except the initial, unevidenced presumption you advocated above.
Science knows that certain things can be used
in science as evidence and can be verified and falsified and so leaves out God.
It is atheists who are the ones who claim that evidence for God does not exist because it cannot be used by science. So atheists are the stupid ones, not logicians or scientists necessarily.
OK. Explain the need. Explain why it's reasonable to propose a magical personage involved. Explain why your magical God is more likely than known, physical mechanisms.
How would I do that? All I am doing is pointing out that there IS evidence for a God in the Bible and history and nature and experiences of people,,,,,,,,,,,, and that what God in the Bible tells us that He did has NOT been shown to have happened naturally and never will be,,,,,,,,,,, it is unverifiable, just as the existence of God is unverifiable.
You are the one who denies there is evidence for God and maybe that is the reason you probably have so much faith that nature could do the things that need an intelligence to do.
That's why science tests hypotheses, so they become more than guesses.
They become more likely guesses.
Even if the science is spot on in how it would have had to have happened if it happened naturally, it cannot be said that the science could have happened naturally and it cannot be said that it did not happen another way.
So I change the highlighted word to make it make sense.
You're presuming Christian mythology, again. God did not plainly say anything. You haven't even established He exists. You could just as well state that Vishnu plainly said something.
How is science stepping into theology? Science ignores theology, it investigates evidence of observable phenomena.
You're presuming that what science says about something is in the purview of science.
You're presuming that God cannot have done it because you say there is no evidence for God.
You never seem to realise that if science says things happened in the past, it cannot be verified and in that way it is not real science.
Science is a dumb tool with big feet and tromps all over theology flowers because it does not know any better and is blind.
Scientists keep travelling where science leads and tromp all over the same flowers in their quest for knowledge within the rules of science.
So science can only use material evidence and so can claim that life is chemical based when that is no more than where the naturalistic scientific evidence leads and which ignores God.
But here is where the thinkers and philosophers and theologians step in and say,,,,,,,,,"You can't do that, it's BS"
Origin is a real, evidenced phenomenon.
Why do you say it can never b more than an educated guess? Haven't people been saying that about the cutting edge of science for centuries? Is heliocentrism an educated guess? the germ theory? techtonic plates?
Why do you insist in trying to wedge a magical personage into every current area of study?
Current areas of study are pushing against the area that God said He did. So what do you expect.
Why do you say that origin is a real, evidence phenomenon.
How can any conclusions of science in this area be seen as legitimate science when all it can be is educated guesses? How is it even possible that I need to explain this?
It's by far the most productive tool ever invented. Human knowledge has taken off like a rocket since science became the gold standard. Noting even compares. Certainly not religious mythology; that never got us anywhere.
So? Theology is not there to give us scientific knowledge and science is not there to give us theological knowledge.
Science knows its limitations. Religion, apparently, does not.
I challenge you: Explain how science is exceeding its limitations, being irrational, and making logical errors.. I think you're projecting.
Science is being rational and logical given the bounderies it can work within.
It is not rational and logical if it claims to have knowledge of everything in the past when all it has is educated guesses about what MUST have happened given only natural processes.