First a little reminder of the original words BT is now working so hard to distract from, before moving on to the distractions themselves:
...discarding atheism, for a larger, richer and much more meaningful worldview... rejecting scientific materialism and embracing spirituality... because the old worldview became too small... As for having a sense that life has meaning, atheists are hampered there. They may have some sense of it, but there is more to be had, much more.
Larger: feelingism
Richer: feelingism
More meaningful: feelingism
Materialism/spirituality: feelingism
Small worldview: feelingism
"Having a sense that ___": feelingism
Meaning (again): feelingism
Hampered: feelingism
More to be had: feelingism
Much more: feelingy feely feelingism
The whole thing consists entirely of "Here's how I feel, and here's how others simply must feel instead, so that means I'm right and they're wrong, which gives me these feelings and simply must leave other people stuck with those feelings"... right down the line, point for point, every step of the way: not a single attempt at even pretending to have anything other than feelingism anywhere in there for a moment.
Why in the world someone would lay it all right out like that so abundantly clearly and then act surprised that somebody might have noticed some feelingism somewhere in there, I don't get.
'feelingism', for which a better world would be 'emotionalism'.
I'm keeping it separate because it means something separate: making claims about reality with nothing but feelings behind those claims.
Now, on to the attempts at distraction from the above...
The only parts that could reasonably be connected with feelings are my statements that it bothers atheists (and it does) that there may be something beyond atheism, and that some theists have rejected atheism for spirituality.
Not the part I was talking about, but I'll go along on the subject for a moment... You're simply
making up feelings to claim atheists have (or parroting back feelingist nonsense that was made up by someone else).
But I also state that many of those theists had previously rejected Christianity for atheism! Unless you imagine they rejected the comforting certainties of fundamentalist Christianity for the astringent worldviews of naturalism and atheism for emotional reasons (maybe they fell out with their pastor?) I can't see the logic of equating that decision with feelings.
I didn't. I said nothing about converting from religion to no-religion at all. But, to just play along with it for a moment anyway, yes, it is possible to do so for irrational reasons.
Among those who do so (which I expect are a rather small but real number), I can see two broad categories of explanation that I suspect cover all examples. One of the favorites for some Christians to try to paint all atheists with is simply finding that God is evil and the only feelings to be had from following him or used as an incentive to follow him are bad ones, not the "comfort" you claim is somehow inherent in being subject to such a monster... which I'm sure has been true for some atheists somewhere. In other cases, it would be by falling for the flawed feelingist arguments presented by theists and failing to apply the logic to see through them. In fact, just a few days ago I saw a video clip from an atheism-themed talk show in which a caller described his own double-conversion, and the atheist host told him that he'd dropped Christianity "for bad reasons".
In both cases, I expect that such people, as opposed to those who reached atheism by reasoning, would be particularly easy to reconvert because that would just be asking them to repeat the same feelingist process again. If they'd gotten to atheism by reasoning instead, then reconverting would be a completely different thing because there's no reasoning by which it is possible so it must happen by some other feelingist process which such a person would already have rejected, and I have never heard of a single example of that happening.
No, it seems to me they outgrew fundamentalism. That's not feelings.
Of course it is. There's nothing else it possibly could be.
What I also state is that by the same process of growth, they moved beyond atheism and naturalism.
Using the words "growth" and "beyond" is also feelingism. It has the feely claim that theism is somehow bigger & better than atheism built in.
That only leaves us with the emotions some atheists have when they read that some theists have outgrown atheism.
...which you (or someone who was influential to you) made up. But no, that's not all that's left here. You're avoiding the one thing I was actually talking about, which was about your own argument for theism over atheism, not anybody else's conversion or double-conversion.