For instance, lucaspa thinks that atheism is a faith and a belief. In a way, he is correct. After all, we have faith that our ideas or beliefs regarding the claims of theists are correct. HOWEVER, I believe this dilutes many words in the process of coming to this definition of the word "atheist." For instance, it uses the word "faith" differently than one normally does in a religious context
Only because faith in a religious context refers to God. However, if you use the appropriate definition of faith for the context -- "
b (1) : firm belief in something for which there is no proof", then atheism is a faith.
I'll do this example again. You noted that we can't put God in a lab. Well, we can't put Him in a test tube, or keep Him out of one, either. That means we can't do a control where we know God is absent. Thus, we cannot prove that "natural" processes happen on their own. Do they require God? To be an atheist, one
must have faith that "natural" processes happen on their own. There is no proof.
So, when examined closely, atheism does involve numerous statements of faith -- things an atheist firmly believes but for which there is no proof.
I think the reason that many theists use this definition is because they believe that some or most atheists think they're taking a neutral stance or no stance at all in the question of the existence of a god.
Many theists
know that many atheists try to portray atheism this way. But what you have described is agnosticism, not atheism.
So, this is their way for them to try to put us on a level playing field, in their eyes and while I do agree that atheism requires a belief that your knowledge is more accurate than the accounts of theists, atheism remains the most reasonable stance to take when you lack the alleged personal evidence and experience that theists say they posses.
AH!
There it is. Now, what does that "lack the alleged personal evidence" really mean? It means that atheists personal experience is of no experience of deity. You are pitting your personal experience (no experience) vs the personal experience of theists. First, yes, that is reasonable. After all, it is what we all do. Second, it is a level playing field! Thank you, Sandwiches, for pointing out that the faith of theists and the faith of atheists are based upon the same thing: personal experience.
The problem is atheists trying to pretend that atheism has a higher epistemological value than theism. But they are based upon the same thing.
Having said that, even with a personal experience, I'd have to wonder how I'd be able to tell whether my experience is associated to something outside my mind.
The same way you test anything to determine whether an experience is associated with something outside your mind. Love is obviously
within your mind, but you (hopefully) still test it to see whether it is love instead of lust, need, loneliness, etc.
There are questions to ask: am I sick? Have I eaten any strange food lately (like those funny looking mushrooms)? Is what I am experiencing just a projection of my inner desires? Am I sleeping and in a dream state? Etc.
However, theists claim that their personal experience is more than just a feeling, that it's the result of some kind of interaction between them and an external conscious entity.
Yes, they do. Not all of them probably experience something outside themselves. But I'll put down the description again. Note the testing involved:
"Therefore, before proceeding further, we shall give the floor temporarily to those who claim they have experiential evidence of God, and allow them to clarify what they mean by such evidence. ... However, when it comes to the nature of experience of the presence of God, there is an astounding degree of consensus. The following statements, in order to keep us as close to the source as possible, come not from the past but from our contemporaries, from persons with whom I have spoken directly. They are, however, echoed throughout the history and literature of religion.
"The experience is usually not 'spooky'. It sometimes, though definitely not always, might be termed 'mystical'. It doesn't for the most part consist of events which by their nature overturn or challenge the laws of science. (I've heard only one first-hand account of an event which, if it really happened, would be very difficult to explain by any process presently known to science.) The experience doesn't establish a hot-line to God, by which all questions are answered, all doubts set aside, and complete understanding is reached. ... People are quick to point out that, though they think their experience really is of God, it is, even at its clearest and best, only a partial, human, inadequate view of what God really is and what God is really doing. Experiential evidence sometimes comes in a flash, but it's more often the accumulation of more subtle experiences over a period of time.
"John S. Spong .... 'I do not mean to suggest that I have arrived at some mystical plateau where my search has ended, where doubts are no more, or that I now possess some unearthly peace of mind. Nothing could be further from the truth. I have only arrived at a point where the search has a validity because I have tasted the reality of this presence, if ever so slightly.'
"As to finding God initially, some say they came rather gradually to a realization that the God they'd learned about in books, songs, and from other people, is real. Others on the contrary battered the gates of heaven .. with very sceptical demands for answers, IF such a heaven existed. Their uncompromising intellectuality led them to try to pin God to the wall in ways that might be expected to elicit a lightning bolt rather than blessing. Their requirements for evidence and proofs were seldom met exactly as specified, but there was a moment in the process when they realized to their astonishment that they were wrestling with a real being who couldn't be contained in human descriptions or standards, not a concept or an abstraction. This God was something out of their control, something not fashioned in the image they had formed in their mind ...
"The testimony is of God's leadership being requested and and received at turning points where human foresight and knowledge were inadequate, and of God's leadership turning out to be exactly on target, though perhaps not in the direction one would have preferred. ... God has stopped some persons dead, when they did not want to be stopped, on the brink of serious mistakes. God has changes some in ways human beings can't change themselves even with allthe help of psychotherapy. God has made it possible for them to love the unlovable, forgive the unforgiveable. ... Has all this been 'spritual' help? Not according to these witnesses. God is a powerful and active God, interveining wherever, whenever, and through whatever avenue he pleases. The phrase 'the insidiousness of God' comes from a woman Episcopal priest. God's intervention is not always kind, gentle, or pleasurable. He refuses to play by human rules or indulge our desire to plan ahead. ... God does not always come at our calling, give us what we want, or even shield us from terrible pain or grief ... but God's forgiveness and love know no limits whatsoever.
"Some direct quotes: 'My relationship with God has been by far and away the most demanding relationship in my life." "The Lord has been my strongest support, but also my most frustrating opponent." 'If I didn't absolutely know this is the only game in town, I'd sure as hell get out of it!' "The best evidence isn't some 'wonder' or 'miracle', and it certainly isn't success, happiness, or the peace of having my prayers answered in ways which suit me. It's the extraordinary, topsy-turvy, interesting course my life has taken since I've engaged in this -- once begun, virtually inescapable -- dialogue with God." Kitty Ferguson's The Fire in the Equations, pp 248- 251