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Elioenai26
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Which goes back to Hawisher's point that the cosmological argument is as good as the argument from squirrels.
For me, yes. For when I look at a squirrel, or any other created being, I see the awesomeness and creativity of the Creator who made the squirrel.
For you, or for anyone else, I cannot say what is a "good" argument at all. For I am not privy to how you make the determination of what is "good" or "bad". I am not privy to the inner workings and reasonings of your mind and heart.
How does one have an emotional resistance to a being they do not believe to exist?
An atheist is one who simply "lacks belief in God or gods", as so I have been repeatedly told, and therefore generally speaking, an atheist can have any number of psychological reasons for lacking belief in God. They may perceive God in any number of ways which precludes them from accepting the proposition: "God exists".
An atheist is not necessarily one who does not believe in God. In fact, a person may be an anti-theistic atheist, or an apatheistic atheist, or an agnostic atheist. None of the preceding entails necessarily the idea of not believing God exists. The anti-theistic atheist lacks belief in God because he is positively against the notion, the apatheistic atheist lacks belief because he is apathetic about the whole matter, the agnostic atheist lacks belief because he does not know if God exists or not. Some of them may not believe God exists, but most would tell you that they simply lack belief. They do make it a point to differentiate between the two notions. Which is what I have done, and which you have failed to to.
The emotion canard is convenient because it can be applied to just about anything. For example: "If you don't support clean coal then that must be because you have some emotional reason that prevents you from being convinced by the case for clean coal".
Whether it is convenient or not is not a matter that concerns me. All I have stated, and this without controversy, is that some atheists have emotional reasons for being atheists. I.e. the reasons for them being atheists has nothing to do with evidence or lack thereof for God's existence, but rather an emotional resistance to their perceived idea of who God is. They think the idea of God to be repugnant etc. etc. Or, they hate the idea of God holding them accountable for their very thoughts etc. etc. The words "repugnant", and "hate" connote emotion.
Or they have considered the arguments given and have concluded that they do not provide a good reason to believe by faith.
I am not speaking of all atheists, only those who have admitted to having misgivings about God not based on the lack of evidence, but rather, based on misgivings about who they perceive God to be or what He represents.
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