Evidence for some things is evident to the senses, but evidence for God will never be evident to the senses.
If it's not evident to the senses, it's not evidence. Evidence is the noun form of evident. That which is evident (adjective) is evidence (noun), just as that which is sweet (adjective) contains sweetness (noun), darkness contains dark things, honesty (noun) refers to honest (adjective) things.
Evidence for God must be evident to the mind, which is the essential quality of the soul.
It's not evidence if it doesn't arrive via the senses. The mind also generates ideas de novo through intuition and imagination. These should not be mistaken for evidence of anything other than the fact that the mind can generate these states. You're probably familiar with the muses, the imaginary Greek gods who were the source of inspiration in man devised before man had a concept of creativity. New ideas were seen as received from outside intelligence rather than generated from within. This still goes on today as people still consider dreams and intuitions messages from beyond. This is what you are calling evidence for a deity - an intuition of your own creation, not evidence.
Why would one wish to deny others that help just because he thinks he doesn't need any help, himself?
Malevolence? I don't know? Why do you ask? Do you think that's my position? I'm not trying to deny you or anybody else whatever comfort they need and find through religious beliefs. I'm telling you that people can learn to transcend belief by faith. I'm telling you that that requires learning and applying a strict program for deciding what is true about the world, one which is designed to exclude faith. I'm telling you how much better that is that relying on faith for answers. And you demean all of that. Why would one wish to deny others that help just because he thinks he needs faith, himself? You make it personal and become emotional as we'll see in the next two comments. And you demean with words like materialist and scientism, calling it myopia, while falsely accusing others of being demeaning.
I think you aren't as perfect and self-sufficient as you think you are.
And here it is.
Demonstrating correctness seems to be quite the obsession of yours.
And again. Tellme again who's being demeaning here? What you call an obsession is a valuable skill many years in the learning. It's what keeps me from believing false and "not even wrong" ideas. It's how I tunneled out of religion - how I knew that I should, how to do it, and what to replace it with.
It's sad that 'comfort' (which I'm sure you consider weakness)
And here you are being demeaning again with a character barb, impugning my motives. It's not a good look for anybody. You seem angry, defensive, and bitter.
Many, many choices and decisions in life, with serious consequences, come to us lacking proper evidentiary support for making critically adept choices.
That's not an argument for acquiring wrong beliefs or to act on them.
So the arrogant assumption that we shouldn't need faith to make decisions and move forward in life is quite unwarranted in a great many instances.
More personal attack. And you are wrong. One NEVER needs unjustified belief, however little he knows. Of course, he probably can't avoid it if he hasn't learned how to avoid it, but that's also true of HIV.
It takes a lifetime, and then a few more for good measure.
To learn faith? Au contraire. That's where we start before we learn to do better. It takes much of a lifetime to learn to recognize and avoid belief by faith.
Yes, it is.
Faith is how we deal with the lack of sufficient evidence (information).
Not we, you. I don't need or want faith, and I have learned how to avoid it. Look at the damage faith does to many people. All of the dead at Jonestown, Heaven's Gate, and Waco had faith in their leaders. Everybody who died or was damaged physically or financially by Covid because they believed by faith that the vaccine was more dangerous believed that by faith. Every J6 defendant in prison or facing prison is there because of faith in Trump's proclamations. It's a terrible way to think if you can learn to do better.