Which illustrates the one and only point that I myself want to make in this thread -- that while Atheists routinely rag on Theists for believing in something they cannot prove, they themselves have assumptions they cannot prove.
Which are what?
Atheists “routinely rag” on Theists for
believing in something they have no credible evidence to believe, and therefore lack a rational reason to believe it.
The “cannot prove” bit generally comes from the Theists saying “you cannot
prove that God doesn’t exist”,……
to which admittedly some atheists then reply “and you cannot
prove that God exists” as an example of the unreasonableness of their (what seems to them is an insurmountable) defense of why they feel justified in their beliefs.
Much as it appears you are attempting to do here.
While atheists generally say things more along the lines of;
“Since all the known objective, demonstrable, repeatable, data or proposed models we have fail to indicate that there is any reason to assume there is, or even may be any sort of god, yet still describe to the best of current knowledge, how the universe works without invoking anything other than known, or at least predictably understood, natural physical laws and processes.
And, by using this methodology continue to gain more and better understanding of the workings within the universe why would we not expect that the scientific method would continue to produce positive results?”
While Theists on the other hand generally rely on often ancient texts from dubious sources, intuition, “revelation”, heresay, unverifiable testimony, likely misconstrued confirmation biased interpretation of personal experience, (all of which are always subjective), and logical fallacies.
Actually, if anyone makes the positive claim that ONLY the natural world exists, then yes, they do indeed have a burden of proof.
The problem is that only
you have made that claim.
“Holding to naturalism” and agreeing that so far as is known “the natural world is all that exists”,
Is
not synonymous with “ONLY the natural world exists”.
You have repeatedly said
I provided the source for these tenets of secular humanism, meeting my obligation. If you disagree with that, your beef is not with me but with the Atheist who created the video.
The attempt to pass the buck falls flat.
The problem being that you apparently misconstrued and in turn misrepresented what was actually in the video.
The video plainly states that not very many atheists fall into the “positive” (“hard”:”strong”) category — those that make a positive claim — and that in fact most atheists fall within the “negative” (“soft”/“weak”) category of atheism where there is in fact no positive claim.
Due to the fact that because of this atheism cannot be considered as a worldview (which you correctly stated in your OP), the
video’s author then instead divides atheists into 2 different categories — implicit and explicit — and chose to focus his research on “explicit” because he
felt that “seemed just about right”, not too broad (by including those that were deemed to not have put sufficient thought into their position) and not too narrow (because he realized the “positive” atheism would be “too narrow”).
Here is where he made a serious category error;
(and you fell for it)
Like you in an attempt to derive a worldview in order to have what he deemed would be a positive claim (to counterpose to a theistic worldview’s positive claim) and since he (and you) acknowledge that atheism doesn’t hold such a positive claim, endeavored to find a proxy for atheism that he deemed to hold a positive claim and chose Humanism…..
Herein lies the category error.
By his own numbers Humanists only accounted for 9% of atheists.
So under 10% of atheists consider themselves Humanist;….
while the great majority of Humanists are in fact
atheists.
So it would be correct to conclude that Humanists in general share similar attitudes as atheists …..since they
are atheists.
However, it would be incorrect to conclude that atheists in general share similar attitudes as Humanists…. since only a
small fraction of them (less than 10%) are Humanists.
An equivalent:
Most Japanese have dark hair…..
Does
not equate to:……
Most people who have dark hair are Japanese.
Thus one cannot presume because someone has dark hair…they are Japanese.
What you have done is attempt to erroneously use Humanism as a proxy for atheism in order to claim that atheists are making a positive claim.
Granted, in your OP you stipulated “secular humanist” in your challenge to defend their position….
If you are a secular humanist, I am interested to see you defend your positions, specifically
1. That the natural world is all that exists
2. That the universe is self existing (needs no creation by a deity)
3. That the only way to know things is through science and reasoning
Unfortunately you also misrepresented the Humanist position.
Of course you cite “the tenants of secular humanism” and claim this “meets your obligation”.
I checked out those “tenants of secular humanism” and, unfortunately failed to see anything about science and reasoning being “
the only way to know things”.
Perhaps you could point me to exactly where in
“A Secular Humanist Declaration”,
“The Amsterdam Declaration”,
Or “The Humanist Manifesto iii”
It says this?
You did however, confess your
true intent with:
the one and only point that I myself want to make in this thread -- that while Atheists routinely rag on Theists for believing in something they cannot prove, they themselves have assumptions they cannot prove.
claiming atheists (notice
not Humanists) “make assumption they cannot prove”.
Yet, you plainly understand this is not true with statements such as…..
Atheism is simply the lack of belief in God/gods, no more, no less. This lacks the necessary elements (ontology, epistimology, and axiology) of a world view.