dwar0123, on 2012-December-19, 14:30, said:
It isn't what we can't understand that is causing awe, it is what we do understand. Part of what we understand is the many things that we don't understand; things which we will surely understand someday.
It is really, really sloppy thinking to deny a possibility based specifically on a lack of knowledge.
I don't deny the possibility of the existence of a god and I know no atheists who do, tho of course I don't pretend to know even a significant fraction of atheists around the world.
Your post reflects a common misconception about atheism, as I understand the notion. Atheists don't (generally) assert that there is no god, as a positive assertion. We state merely that on the available evidence there is no plausible reason to assert that god exists.
For all I know, compelling evidence for the existence of god has already been found and the paper is undergoing peer review as I write.
Given that the existence of god would be a very big deal, one would hope that the evidence and resulting arguments based thereon would be compelling, and unambiguous. In which case, I truly hope that I and other atheists would take a long, close look at the evidence and the arguments, and accept as true that which seems to have been objectively proven to be true.
You see, contrary to the position of most religious believers, atheists don't base their position on 'faith', which has to be the weakest argument of all time. "It's true because I believe it to be true". Were a 4 year old to spout that in defence of an assertion that there were monsters under his or her bed, we'd laugh. When an adult says it to defend the institutions of religion, we are supposed to show deference and tolerance.
Show me evidence that suggests the existence of god...evidence that positively points that way rather than simply idenitifying limits on our knowledge, and I'll look at it. Until then, I say there is no current justification for the existence of god.
In the meantime, to accuse someone of sloppy thinking for 'denying the possibility' shows that you don't actually understand the thinking that you criticize. My experience with reading interchanges between believers and atheists is that we see more strawman, and no true scotsman, arguments advanced by believers than in any other area of human discourse. The apparent need to resort to logical fallacies to bolster one's arguments seems to suggest a certain weakness in the position being advanced
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari