Can a child not do the same? Do children not have imaginary friends and simplistic explanations for the things that happen around them?
What about lesser life forms?
I opened the door to a cabin last year and startled a snake. I closed the door. The door had a window. I observed the snake turn around and strike out at a nearby trash can. The snake was reacting to what it thought was a threat. In its limited capacity, it attacked an object that had nothing to do with anything. It did not understand what had just happened, yet formed a cognitive reaction to the situation.
The snake conceptualised in its most basic form.
True story.
This is a non sequitur. It has nothing to do with belief or non-belief, and belief in the absence of something, and a lack of belief are STILL distinct things.
Most certainly it does. If you weren't observing it, would it actually exist?
Some theories of quantum physics extrapolate just that: objects only exist if they are observed.
If no one in the world was looking at the moon, it wouldn't cease to exist. I don't feel like you're being very intellectually honest in this discussion.
You think, therefore you are. So what are you if you cannot think?
Then you're dead, but your body still exists or at least existed at one point. What does this have to do with belief or non-belief?
Putting aside the fact that this is not a new concept - space-time is ever-expanding at a rate faster than the speed of light (according to people much smarter than you and I) - you have just conceptualised the very things you said you couldn't!
What I am saying is, you can't even imagine the things your are trying to imagine. "10th dimension" is just a phrase.
The human mind is limited, I agree. Try to think of a new colour that you've never seen before.
Exactly what I've been saying all along.
You're trying to say that your imagination has an impact on the things
in the world, and I disagree.
"
Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." - Philip K. Dick
Nothing is "demonstrably not true". This is where the failings of the human condition - your conditioning - cloud the issue.
TONS of things are demonstrably not true. Are you being serious, or are you trolling? This type of comment makes me wonder. I can use a light meter to measure the nm frequency of light, and tell you what colours it ISN'T. If you said 'the gravity on earth makes things fly towards the sky', I could demonstrate how that is
not true by dropping an object.
You are arguing legal definitions - not concepts. What have legal definition got to do with beliefs?
I'm trying to show you how non-belief and not-guilty are not the same as belief, or innocent. You don't seem to be grasping this concept.
Have any of you actually been inside a court room and observed what happens there? Do you still want to argue that some jurors acquit those they believe are guilty and vice versa for their own personal reasons?
This has absolutely nothing to do with what we are discussing. The crown (government) has never found a person innocent in its existence. It has only failed to provide sufficient evidence to prove someone guilty. Likewise, people who do not have a belief in god do not necessarily believe god doesn't exist, only that they haven't seen the required evidence to form a belief.
Many people act in direct contradiction to their beliefs. It is very common. To argue otherwise is fallacious in the extreme.
It's called cognitive dissonance.
If everything in the word was an apple. If the world itself was an apple. If the universe was an apple. If it's creator was an apple. What would an apple be? It would be a non-apple - because it would be the same as everything else! In the same way that the concept of nothing is, in fact, something.
What the hell are you talking about? We would completely derail the entire concept of language if we were to do that. It's silly to even waste time pondering it. Language only works if there are rules to it, how would calling everything
an apple, facilitate the passing of knowledge from one person to another? It's ridiculous.
If we called everything an apple, an apple would no longer mean the same thing, but the actually physical object that we know as an apple would still exist (as an apple no less, as everything would be an apple) Non-apples wouldn't exist. Pointless.
This is precisely what I mean about limited understanding. You must take a concept to its enth degree to fully extrapolate it. Human beings are incapable of doing this. You only see what is in your own limited world: apples, jurors, whatever. You cannot think outside that.
And it is for that very reason that you cannot see that non-belief is and of itself a belief.
Right now you are arguing a non-belief. So what exactly are you arguing if not something you believe?
I actually
do believe that god doesn't exist. I'm arguing that atheisms default position is one of non-belief, not one of an active belief that god doesn't exist. Any atheist who has that belief, is formulating that belief outside of atheism.
You talk about limited understanding, but you're human too. This is a common tactic perpetuated by theists, that they have some higher understanding of existence because of some wishy-washy, pseudo-metaphysics.
Let me put it another way . . .
If you do not believe in your non-belief, what exactly is the argument?That you believe that non-belief is not a belief . . . purely because that's what you believe?
The argument is simple. Belief and non-belief are distinct. Not having a belief is not the same as belief that something doesn't exist. Why is this so difficult for you to grasp?
Let's just break this statement down further;
Human beings are incapable of doing this. You only see what is in your own limited world: apples, jurors, whatever. You cannot think outside that.
And it is for that very reason that you cannot see that non-belief is and of itself a belief.
I understand the English language quite well, and this, is a non-sequitur. How does it logically follow that because humans can only respond to reality within the limits of their own perception that someone who doesn't have a belief in something, actually believes in that something? It doesn't logically follow whatsoever, and if you're not going to use logic to formulate the basis for your arguments, then we cannot continue this discussion.
I don't have to 'believe' that non-belief isn't the same as belief, they are different fucking words with different definitions. If you want to change the definitions of words to suit your argument you're being intellectually dishonest.