They certainly do if anyone outside of the discussion is to be compelled to accept them! There is not get-out-of-proof-free card.
I never said it was. Hypothetical arguments only imply you understand the other person's position as they adequately or inadequately explain it. Misunderstandings are not solely the fault of one person or the other, it's a shared responsibility when you're in a dialogue.
I don't need your advice on how to proceed. I doubt anyone does. You might do well to get around to my argument at some point.
You haven't made anything but a claim without evidence. Not all atheists believe this and you haven't even tried to rebut the argument by attacking the false premise. You insist that there's only one form, when even a cursory glance at a wikipedia page could demonstrate there are at least two forms. The fact that you deny it means you either simply didn't know or you're being willfully ignorant to try to skew the discussion your way, which won't fly.
Can you assign me a burden of proof merely by asking a question? Somehow I doubt it.
I can establish a burden of proof when you make a claim, which you have, implicitly. There are multiple formulations of the evidential problem of evil, which you seem to want to deny just because they aren't self evident enough for you.
Oh now it's all on me! Great trick. I must remember it sometime. Whose definition? Whose? I reject the scoffer's misdefinition. I also reject your attempt to put words in my mouth. I was very clear about what I reject and why, and I don't care what ''authority'' you imagine you can produce, the definition of 'good' which a scoffer must presuppose is bogus. It is obviously bogus, and it is trivial to dismiss it.
I would agree it is trivial to dismiss it, but I'd disagree that just because someone disagrees with you, that their definitions are automatically wrong. You haven't established any reason why, especially because you haven't even defended your own definition of good and why it's superior. Apart from the issues of compulsion, which one might admit are too myopic, you haven't even said why your definition of evil is more compelling. Nothing is obvious in an argument except to someone who refuses to look outside their own perspective.
Suggestion doesn't hold the power you suppose. You're the one bringing up this and that and the other thing. My position doesn't even get addressed.
You haven't made your position sufficiently evident, which is the problem. All you claim is that atheists misunderstand your idea of good and evil, which you haven't even enumerated.
So what's any of that? If you can bring a version of the ''problem'' that stands up, let's see it. Logical or emotional, both fail.
The two versions I enumerated were logical and evidential, neither of which rely on pathos rhetoric. You have consistently failed to defend this claim, only presuming it is true as if everyone sees the same way as you.
If you cannot defend that claim, this discussion is over, as you are apparently incapable of even establishing and defending the position you supposedly have enumerated, but evidently have failed to sufficiently accomplish.
I have brought up the evidential example, two in fact, and you rejected them without anything more than a rejection of the premises as not fitting into your personal views about God. If this is about faith, then you've already made the discussion moot, since I can't contend that your beliefs are wrong, you hold them by your own volition. If you won't discuss this philosophically, you aren't discussing this philosophical issue period, you are injecting theology and flawed meta-ethics into it to discredit it.