Continuing:
...
Right. And I'm saying religions don't fall into quite that category. (That is, I believe religions are fictions, but we can't reject them -- that is, some/many of them, and therefore religions in general -- quite as easily, and certainly not using the exact same reasoning, that we might for Hogwarts, or for cargo cults.)
You can say whatever you want, doesn't make it evidence supported.
I have no issue with the assertion religious mythology and novel fiction are qualitatively different. But both are fiction, nonetheless. You seem to want to put Cargo Cults, religious mythology, in the category of novel fiction. That's absurd. It certainly isn't a novel based story, it is god mythology in every way.
... People often ask this, rhetorically as it were. I think this is a valid question, one that comes with a very reasonable answer.
We've discussed this already, 3point14 and I, but since that was in a different thread, here's the gist of what I'd said there:
Yes, I agree this is a double standard. But no, I don't agree that simply pointing out that this is a double standard is a valid argument. I think, in this instance, the double standard is perfectly apt.
And you support this based on what? That you believe one and not the other?
You have already shown your mistake by not recognizing the Cargo cults as religious mythology.
...We treat religions differently than other fictions, simply because vast numbers of people believe in the former.
That holds no evidentiary weight.
... Like I said in the post that you've quoted: Think of a post-apocalyptic world, where much of our knowledge has been wiped out, and some tattered copies of Rowling's works have survived. And large numbers of people start actually believing that all of that is based on truth.
How would you treat the Potter books, in that scenario? Surely one would be justified, in that scenario, in analyzing it in all earnestness, and painstakingly working out why it is (or isn't) 'true'.
It's equally possible some religious texts began as fiction. So what? People in the future build their god mythology based on a fictional book, it be comes religious mythology. I'm not seeing whatever significance you believe you are relating.
...But that stands to reason. Any claim you make, you must be prepared to defend. (Provided you care to be rational, that is.)
The fact that negatives are difficult to prove -- and sometimes impossible to prove -- does not take away the burden of proof. It only means that you must not make claims that you cannot back up.
Yeah well, I'm perfectly rational. It's useless to disprove gods that there is zero evidence for just because a lot of people believe. Of all the reasons, majority fantasy is one of the weakest.
Try shifting your paradigm otherwise we'll just be talking past each other.
You can say you don't agree with my premise, but trying to put it back into your unshifted POV is silly. You can't. It does not fit.
... You personally? Sure, I agree. If you don't wish to engage with this any further -- because you believe you've already presented overwhelming evidence against religions in general, or for any other reason -- then absolutely, you are under no compulsion. Sure, you don't need to prove anything unless you want to.
But if you make a statement basis something that you haven't backed up, then I'm afraid that won't be quite ... well, reasonable, rational. ...
There are two ways to approach the god hypothesis.
1) Prove they don't exist because someone said they do.
There is zero evidence gods exist. And there are many other fictional beings no one asks anyone to disprove when there is no evidence.
So ignore both of those premises and assert based on no evidence whatsoever that no one can prove gods don't exist, ergo they deserve some special pleading because so many people believe.
Or,
2) What conclusions can you draw about god beliefs based on the evidence we do have?
That is what I asked and that is where I stand. Gods are fiction. Got one shred of evidence they aren't?