Atheists seem to hear the explanation and dismiss it as if there is a better or more logical alternative.
That is why I wrote that atheists generally have no problem with the statement "I don't know", because we don't dismiss theist's explanations simply because they are founded in religion. The same holds true for natural explanations when scientists talk about the multiverse as a possible explanation, we look at this the same way, it is a theory for which we have no proof. Therefore the answer to whether that is true or not is "We don't know". Where most atheists will object in regards to religion, compared to a scientific theory such as the multiverse is because religious claims often come with a lot of rules and truth claims, whereas the multiverse theory doesn't have any impact on people and the scientists are open in regards to it simply being a theory and nothing else.
If atheists are still able to believe in something based on logic, and theism was born from making logical sense of this world, I personally don't see how atheism can operate cognitively. If it is simply disagreeing with others of who or what god is out there based on what make sense to you or the facts presented, that isn't atheism, that is just another form of theism. Right?
Well, this is where the big difference is because I don't think theists apply the same logical rules to their belief in God as they do other things. For instance, a Christian will have no issue dismissing Odin and Thor as being made up, whereas God and Jesus are definitely true. For atheists, there is no difference. Jesus might have existed which is no issue for most atheists, the issue occurs the moment it is claimed that he rose from the dead and all the other supernatural things he did, for which there is absolutely no evidence. Therefore from a logical point of view to the atheist, it is equally likely that Jesus is the son of God that did these things as Odin and Thor exist, the proof for these things is equally weak.
To me, this is the double standard or dilemma that religious people do not seem to apply when it comes to their beliefs compared to what atheists do. So it's not another form of theism, the rules are the same regardless of the claim being made, whether it's scientific or religious, that doesn't mean that we can't hold the position that we believe something is more likely than something else, but I doubt you will find an atheist claiming that for instance, the multiverse is true.
I know tons of Christians that don't believe I believe in the same Jesus as they do because of evidences in the Bible, just because they don't call me Christian doesn't change what I feel is more logical to believe.
That is fairly common for religious discussions and illustrates my point above fine I think. Where Christians, Muslims and JW can argue whether Jesus was a prophet, God, or simply the son of God, atheists ask for evidence for him even being divine in the first place, because it doesn't really matter whether he is one or the other, if he hasn't been proven to be divine in the first place.
Atheists can give their opinion about it, purely based on what the scriptures say, but doesn't really change anything for us, because we again see no evidence for him being what he claimed to begin with. So in that case, I would probably say that you would get the most neutral opinion from an atheist because we have nothing invested in it.
It is that there is no way of disproving God, but there is a way to explain the universe outside of a book where people claimed to see God.
It doesn't really make sense to disprove anything. It's about a lack of evidence. Meaning the burden of proof is on the person making the claim. And you can find atheists that will claim that God doesn't exist and the burden of proof is on them, but for most atheists (including myself), my claim is simply that I don't see any proof of God from the evidence that theists present.
So one has to be careful which type of atheist one speaks with and whether they make the claim or not. Because I think most atheists hold the same position as I do. Because disproving God is nearly impossible and is simply not worth trying. It would be like me asking you to disprove that unicorns don't exist. Unless you made the claim that they do, there is no burden of proof on you, so simply saying that you are not convinced by the evidence that they do is a perfectly rational position.
Whether God exists or not, I'm going with the logically better explanation. I don't know how one could justify that being atheism?
Not 100% sure what you mean, if you mean that God exists is the most logical explanation? If that is the case, then compare it to my example above with the unicorn, why would you assume unicorns exist if you have not been presented with proof of them, in which case the most rational position you can take is that they do most likely not exist until such proof has been presented to you.