- Mar 24, 2012
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This is because christians put forth a positive argument about things, like 'X definitely happened' and then they are asked to support it. How do you know X happened? What is the evidence that X happened?
Atheists rarely put forth positive arguments about things they don't know. Consider the two statements.
"God created the universe."
"We don't yet know what created the universe or how."
Now, the first statement is an assertion of fact, like saying 'I bought a car' or 'That dog has rabies'. When you are asserting a fact, it is normal and expected for you to have something to back it up. I can show you the car, the title with my name on it, the bank account from which the money was taken, and introduce you to the salesman. I can show you the dog, the symptoms, the test results, and the documented history of the disease and its discovery.
Say god created the universe though, and that raises a lot of questions. How do you know that? How did it happen? Where is the evidence? What is 'god'? Who told you this? If it is a book, who wrote it? When did they write it, and what was the current state of scientific knowledge at the time? What other gods exist, and why is your god more likely to exist than other gods? What proof is there that any specific god exists?
Atheists find the offered answers to these questions unsatisfactory, as they only bring about more questions. We prefer a simple statement of honest ignorance. We don't know how it happened. We're trying to figure it out and as soon as we know something definite, we'll let everyone know. It could be awhile though, so in the meantime let's just admit there are some gaps in human knowledge and go on with our lives.
But this is my point. If we offer an HONEST "i dont know" answer dont reply that Im a joke for not knowing!
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