Once someone has reached a conclusion about God's existence - whatever that conclusion may be - they are no longer being skeptical.
Maybe I'm being thick, but I just don't see the difference between your statement, and the Santa one after it, or even;
"Once someone has reached a conclusion about the Invisible Pink Unicorn's existence - whatever that conclusion may be - they are no longer being skeptical."
Why does the concept of god carry any more weight than literally anything else I, you, or anyone else could conceive of that have no evidence? We put aside suggestions that there might be such a unicorn, or out-of-body experiences, ghosts, whatever, on the basis that they have no evidence at all. They might exist, but we
assume that they don't for the time being, until some evidence comes to light (if ever).
Is it just that people personalyl like the idea of a god, so they keep it on their own mental back-burner in case some evidence turns up (i.e. they die and find out they were right)? Or is it literally, as Claus implies, a way of dealing with the more difficult to deal with aspects of life, without actually having it interfere in your everyday life by requiring any evidence for it?
In either case, what is it about not overtly making any claims (other than the implicit one that you think a god exists) that makes you any different from any other believer? Just because they may not appreciate that if you make testable claims, you need to back them up, doesn't mean that their personal belief in ghosts, alien visitors, psychic powers etc is any less valid, surely?
Imagine a believer in another immeasurable supernatural concept, instead of arguing the toss here on the forum because they don't grasp what constitutes quality evidence, instead said "well OK, my evidence isn't up to scratch, I accept that. But I'm still going to believe in ghosts regardless". Would you think that entirely reasonable? I think I'm getting closer to why I have trouble understanding the religion/scepticism compatibility issue. Like Fran, I certainly don't mean to demean any religious sceptics here, and I'm a bit nonplussed by Cleon's reaction in particular, which seemed to be along the lines of righteous indignation that his beliefs were being questioned i.e. not terribly justifiable. On the other hand, I realise he's not making any specific claims about it, nor is he co-opting science, trying to foist his beliefs on other people etc etc. That's great. I'm not saying he and others
shouldn't hold these unsupported beliefs, I'd just like to try to understand
why and how they do, because for me personally it would be a struggle to reconcile what I see as otherwise universally applicable scepticism. Yeah, sure, I often fail to apply it, but I try to recognise this and avoid it, because I like to be consistent. This is why I said religious scepticism was the "elephant in the living room", because it's not like a "universal" sceptic who happens to say, gamble, or be afraid of the dark. Tangible or not, god is an earth-shattering concept, and I would want to address its veracity using the same tool. And for me the inevitable conclusion of using that tool is that god is no more real than said unicorn.
I hope that makes my thoughts clearer rather than more confused
