Scalpel out
Hi there,
So this is something of a curiosity to me: atheism adopts the opinion that "there is no god" but basically stops there.
Partially correct. You need to differentiate between two assertions here, one of knowledge and one of belief.
Theism addresses belief, specifically belief in a god or gods.
Agnosticism addresses knowledge ('knowledge that', rather than 'knowledge of', which is awarness of a concept).
Thus, you can have the following:
Theist gnostic - "I believe and I know that a god/gods exists"
Theist agnostic - "I believe a god exists, but I don't know if a god exists or not"
Atheist agnostic - "I don't believe a god exists, but I don't know if a god existis or not"
Atheist gnostic - "I don't believe and I know that no god/gods exists"
With theism, there are only two possibilities: either you believe, or you don't. Think about a jar of coins. There is either an even or an odd number of coins in the jar, just two possibilities.
The theist position is one of a positive claim, such as: "There is an even number of coins in the jar". This is analogous to the claims "There is a god/gods".
The atheist agnostic response is one of skepticism. The response is: "No evidence has been given to support the claim that there is an even number of coins, therefore I don't believe it".
Note that this is
not a positive claim, as you have made in your opening sentence.
The atheist is not rejecting the possibility of there being an even number of coins ("A god existis"), nor are they asserting that there is an odd number of coins ("No god exisits"). All they are asserting is that the positive claim has
not meet its burden of proof and been substantiated and thus they see no rational reason to believe it.
Now granted people take all sorts of tangents, pastafarianism for example, and there are many gods to which they object, but fundamentally atheism is not a multivalent approach to belief at all. By multivalent, I mean that it doesn't attempt to construct a belief system that accounts for multiple points of view, people don't say "I believe in the atheist way of life" they just say "I am an atheist". I understand that the latter is simpler, but the fact that the former is not present at all is rather spurious I think.
Correct. Atheism addresses a single claim - the claim that god or gods exists. This is all it addresses
Atheists could easily adopt the attitude that "there is no God, the Universe cannot be interacted with from the outside, the future is at no point going to revolve around God, the Name of God itself will meet the same fate of entropy as everything else".
Incorrect. These are not atheist ideas, as atheism is merely the rejection of the god claim(s)/
These are atheist ideas that flesh out the nature of the atheism and give structure to the expectations and understandings of atheism, such that should they get in a debate, for example, they would have such beliefs to negotiate with and through and around. Otherwise you end up just revolving around the one concept that there is no god, which is not healthy.
Incorrect. You're labouring under a fundamental misapprehension of what atheism is.
Atheism has no nature. It addresses a single claim (the number of coins is even/there is a god) and only that.
The fallout from this is that atheists frequently obsess over religion and religious stupidity.
If you reject the claim that a supernatural entity exists, why should you then put up with all the associated stupidity?
In debates they frequently call religious people out for their unthinkingness and their lack of critical perspective, when this is completely unwarranted and unconstructive.
Actually, it often is warrented and can be constructive. Never be absolutist in your statements
If atheists actually had beliefs themselves
Error! Atheists do have beliefs.
Being an atheist means you reject the god claim. It does not mean you cannont adopt particular outlooks on life, including belief sets.
Atheism is typically associated with skepticism, humanism and liberalism (not the US type, the Renaissance type), all of which have deep philosophical implications.
You could even be an atheist and adopt a Christian belief system, sans the supernatural stuff.
then it would be clear when they were thinking about the future, for example and not merely dwelling on the past failings of the human race to live a religion that is pure and unspotted. This actually leads to the idea that atheists are not merely unregenerate, but are objectionable and unkind and therefore ultimately lacking in knowledge, be it of themselves.
As Atheists have nothing to be repentant for, i'm not sure that being unregenerate is an issue.
Similarly, atheists don't solely dwell on the past failings of religion. It just that thery're kind of an easy target, particularly so when theists make fanciful and unsubstantitated claims about the past.
Being objectionable and unkind does not mean you can't be correct or posses knowledge, it just makes the pill a bitter one to swallow for some people
Call me crazy, but if atheists actually believed in atheism systematically, it could actually do some benefit.
Athesim is a rejection of a singlar claim. How do you believe in a negation? How do you form a systematic belief system from "I don't believe the number of coins is even, because you haven't proved it"?
Intellectual rigour doesn't have to revolve around praising a God you can't see, so that your problems are projected onto a future you can deal with; instead, you can have ideas about the future and reasoned arguments about what your attitude will be
once you reach that future. To my mind, there is nothing easier than talking about the hope I have in the future, but for atheists it seems as if they are scared of the work that will mean.
To be fair, multivalency opens up the possibility of disagreement. Not everyone will want to dwell on the entropy of the Universe, but that is rather the point. Ultimately, atheists think they "agree" on there being "no God" but if they can't even sustain a handful of beliefs that they agree on as well, how much could their agreement possibly be worth. I'm not saying it would be worth
that much more if they did have multivalency, but at least you
would know that it was
worth something.
Life is too short, not to have believed something that made it possible to be aware of it ending.


Look up the following:
Atheism plus
Secular humanism and the humanist manifesto
Renaissance humanism
Rational skepticism
Philosophical naturalism
Then come back to me and try to argue again that people who have taken the atheist position can't sustain a handful of beliefs.