No. We're simply pointing out that the claimant hasn't met his burden of proof. We're not addressing a reality claim, we're pointing out an error in logic.
Yet you make a positive assertion that reality has no God. That's not asking for a burden of proof. That's stating a belief that you hold about reality, and seeking for proof to challenge that positive assertion. Again, an agnostic can say "I don't see a reason to believe", but the atheist will say, "No God". It's not simple lack of belief. That's agnosticism.
This is not an argument. We don't need an argument. The burden of proof is not on us, it's on you. We're arguing nothing, just pointing out that your argument is flawed.
You assume my beliefs here. I'm not making an argument about proofs for God. I'm only saying that saying atheism is just a lack of belief, is a bogus claim. It is a positive statement that no God exists. That moves squarely out of simply not believing in something, not having proof or evidence to lead you to believe, to outright declaring "No-God", as the very name itself spells that exactly, "A-Theism" No-God. "I do not believe in God", is not one bit different than saying" I believe (in the affirmative) that God does not exist". That is a statement of belief, not "not knowing".
Logically, until you can make a convincing, well-evidenced argument for your claim, it's assumed to be false.
Falsity is the default, not an assertion.
You automatically assume that any claim is false that you don't have evidence for? That goes beyond mere atheism, that's cynicism. Cynicism is irrational. Again though, it's not "my claim". I haven't asserted what it is I believe, other than to allude I favor the mystical insight, which goes beyond the dualistic theist/atheist coinage. Atheism is forever wedded to theism. It's in the name.
It is? Female is male? Orange is green? Why do we have different words for these then?
This is the definition of agnosticism:
a person who believes that nothing is known or can be known of the existence or nature of God or of anything beyond material phenomena; a person who claims neither faith nor disbelief in God.
Contrast this with atheism:
disbelief or lack of belief in the existence of God or gods
The first is saying it's a person who does not claim disbelief in God. The 2nd definition say the atheist claims disbelief in God. There is the big difference. Are you saying that we should just get rid of agnosticism, and say anyone who is not a traditional theist is an atheist? Just get rid of the distinction of atheism, and say everyone is an atheist, including babies, until they become a theist? Atheism rules, in other words?
True, there are atheists who assert God doesn't exist. In these cases they assume a burden, but the single feature common to all flavors of atheism is lack of belief. It is definitive.
I am familiar with the weak/strong distinctions of atheism. The "weak" atheist, will say they simply lack belief in God, whereas the strong atheism denies the existence of God. The latter is very much making a statement of faith, and they are not few in number. In my experience, most Ex-believers are of the strong atheist flavor. The 'weak' atheist, I would say is maybe more agnostic. Whereas the strong atheist is a believer in no-God as a matter of faith. If we mean agnosticism, then that is the word we should use.
No, it's not.
A definition involves a feature unique to the thing defined. The single thing common to all varieties of atheism is lack of belief. Lack of belief is definitive of atheism.
No it's not. What defines atheism is in the name itself "No-God". By saying God does not exist, you affirm a belief. A child of 2 has a lack of belief about God, but that certainly does NOT mean that child should be identified as an atheist! That's absurd. Theism and atheism are by definition,
beliefs about God.
A child of 2 neither believes nor disbelieves. They are neutral, or 'agnostic' at best, neither affirming nor denying, but simply "not knowing". It's simply not a question yet in their minds. The best word for a "lack of belief" either way, is just simply "open", not any isms whatsoever, neither affirming (theism) nor denying (atheism). If it's not even examined, it's nothing, not even any 'ism' yet.
How is it about not-knowing? Mysticism is God-perspective. It's expanded consciousness; total knowledge; total comprehension.
Wrong. Comprehension is something that you mentally comprehend, like being able to explain how something works. No mystic will claim a comprehension of God, that they "understand God". If they claim that, they haven't got off the launching pad of the ego yet. They will however claim an apprehension of the Divine, which is to say they understand the reality of the Divine, but they are unable to fully understand it. Comprehension means you full understand it.
Does anyone, other than fundamentalists, claim to fully understand God? Do you claim to comprehend God? I hope you don't.
Check here what the difference is between Comprehension and Apprehension. It's a good explanation:
Difference Between Apprehension and Comprehension | Difference Between
What does an expanded consciousness not know?
Everything beyond its own level. Pretty much 99% of the Universe, or the Divine itself, is utterly beyond knowing. The mystical approach is to rest in the Unknown. There is a reason mystics use the term the Unknown, or the Void, or the Abyss, or the Mystery as metaphors to describe that experience of the Ineffable. All of these words mean they are utterly beyond the human mind to grasp or comprehend.
What an expanded consciousness, or these higher levels of consciousness do, is help to break the illusion of Maya, or mistaking our thoughts and ideas about reality with reality itself. The mystical experience breaks the ceiling, allowing us to peer into the Infinite, and realize that we in fact know nothing at all! It doesn't give you all knowledge. The human brain cannot contain it. You would have to be bigger than God, to comprehend God.
Yes, out there are different realities, and each seems "objective" to the one perceiving it.
Dreaming seems real and objective to the dreamer. Waking-state seems real and objective to those living it, but both are, in actuality, subjective. Neither conforms to the reality described by modern physics.
When one wakes from a dream, the unreality of the dream becomes obvious. When one wakes from waking-state, the unreality of waking-state becomes obvious. Waking to the ultimate reality; directly grokking the reality described by theoretical physics is what mysticism is all about.
I would disagree that they are actually truly seeing beyond the veil of the material reality to the non-material or spiritual reality. They are brushing up against it, to be sure, but quantum mechanics is not the secret doorway to the Divine. Everything is the Divine, and all sciences tells us about is the exterior material world. They aren't going to one day find God back there, considering it's all been God all along.
Science is our most accurate description of 3rd state, though some of it's ventures into quantum reality do seem to describe a mystical state.
Quantum reality exposes the interconnectedness of all things, and that does mirror better what the mystical experience has been saying all along. But as I said, they aren't peering into the Kingdom of Heaven or some such thing when looking at strings and whatnot. It's still the material world, but a different perspective of that Creation of the Divine. I appreciate what it says, but don't mistake it as the key to unlocking God.
One uses fantasy and folklore. The other uses evidence and tests it.
That's unfair, and untrue. One uses mystical symbolism and mythologies, the other technical language. They are both still using a language as a metaphor to describe something beyond the words themselves. As far as evidence and tests, you don't think that religious systems of mythologies are not tested and have evidence supporting them? Maybe not to scientific standards, of course not.
But people do not adopt systems like these if they have no utility. If it doesn't prove practical worth and value, it would be discarded. YET, these mythologies, like the Garden of Eden myth, endure generation after generation! There has to be truth-value there for it to endure like that, right? Joseph Campbell certainly argued that about what makes a good myth.
Science isn't about sociology. It's not meant to promote human happiness or comfort. It's a stark description of a reality. People are free to make of it what they will.
It is not a stark description of reality. It's a way of talking about reality, and concluding it as either good or bad, stark or harsh truth, etc, is purely philosophical and not scientific. Society interprets science through the lens of whatever current philosophy is prevalent. So science gets sadly entwined with materialistic philosophies, that say no God, only nature. That is not science. That's belief.
Yes, science is traditionally dualistic. It describes waking-state reality. I don't see it as much concerned with metaphysics.
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I'm really not sure I agree it describes a waking state realty. I don't attach it in any way to the different states of consciousness, other than just dualistic consciousness.