I can acknowledge that one can never know for certain that a god can exist, but also firmly believe that one doesn't. Because if a god does exist, I think it would logically follow that one could know for certain that it did. Otherwise what does "exist" even mean? A god that one cannot know whether it exists or not is fundamentally, logically, and philosophically indistinguishable from one that doesn't exist.
Hence, I think that atheism is the logical conclusion of agnosticism.
Close to my POV, maybe just worded differently.
A god one cannot detect the existence of is no different from a god that doesn't exist. Consider the failure of researchers to find any effect of prayer unless it is a placebo effect when the person being prayed over or doing the praying is aware of the intervention.
I've posted my position before: the only evidence gods exist comes from people's imagination they do. No actual evidence exists that gods exist.
So we have a good explanation for god beliefs: the evidence supports the conclusion people made gods up. And we have no evidence supporting the conclusion gods do exist. Have some evidence, go for the MDC even though I believe the cash reward has been suspended.
So what are people basing their god beliefs on? Childhood indoctrination and related situations.
My brother, a serious god believer though I don't know if he attended church regularly in the last decade or so, died last Jan. He had a serious illness that came on rapidly and killed him unexpectedly less than 2 months later. It was a shock given he was the youngest of we 3 siblings and as my older brother noted, the only one that didn't partake in all the damaging drug behaviors the other 2 of us did.
But I digress. After he died my sister-in-law said, "He was good with his God," by which I think she meant he was off to heaven and we shouldn't be that sad. Totally weird concept in my mind. I'm happy the folks on that side of his life find comfort in that.
If you believe then maybe it comforts you as you are dying. If your loved ones believe I'm sure it comforts them. But me, I just find it weird. Maybe at the end believing in life after death is comforting. I doubt sincerely that it comforts a person's sadness/devastation with the loss of a loved one. I can't see that being convinced you'll see the person in the afterlife actually dampens the pain of loss by much. It didn't help me decades ago when I lost the person I loved very much in a car accident.
And what about the decades of life before that, what did you give up nurturing that belief? And one might have to overcome some manufactured guilt if one goes on to love again if the person lost was one's partner.
I'm fine with the fantasy my molecules will be recycled into the Universe.
