You misunderstand. I am not saying that we cannot reach a provisional conclusion based on the evidence.
Then I wonder what different thought processes are occurring between theistic sceptics and atheistic ones.
Because you can't disprove gods, exactly the same way you can't disprove invisible pink unicorns.
You are falling into the same trap as those who once claimed that rocks couldn't fall from the sky. Your mind is closed to the possibility of gods and unicorns.
My mind is closed? I haven't heard that from a sceptic before, thanks for the laugh. It's no more closed to this possibility than any other. However, my provisional conclusion is that neither exists. Why have theistic sceptics come to a different conclusion? On what basis do they choose to believe in gods over unicorns, or anything else?
If your criticism has to have any value, you have to point to some concrete example of a believer in god who claim that their unverified-and-unverifiable god is equally rational. Otherwise, you are simply erecting a strawman.
No, because I'm
asking whether they consider it rational or not, and if not, why they believe in it.
How do you tell if a mother loves her child? Can a mother abstain from hugging her child and still love it?
If she abstains from every display of affection, altruism, and anything else that might qualitively elevate her relationship with her child from mere acquaintance to anything that could be described love, then she doesn't love that child. She might imagine that she does, as a sceptic might imagine that there's a god, but neither act of imagination makes either idea true.
I'm not saying otherwise.
You're not, but frankly as you appear to be arguing devil's advocate, I'm not so interested in what you imagine theistic scepticism to be, as the theistic sceptics themselves. This is all very interesting, but I'm arguing more to the concept at hand than to you. I've established that
you think such beliefs are irrational and for comfort only, but I would like to hear why these sceptics believe this from the horses' mouth, as it were.
Have I said it will never be forthcoming? I have said the exact opposite.
I wasn't claiming that you had, sorry. I was assuming that as we were talking about an unverifiable untestable god, there would be no evidence. But it then occurred to me that we can't actually
know whether there might be evidence in future, making your claim that the god in question is unverifiable and untestable invalid. If god is notionally verifiable and testable, well then, so are psychics, and sceptics typically assume that psychics don't exist, despite it being possible that one day, evidence will emerge.
Which brings me back again to the same question. Why choose to believe in god, and not unicorns, or psychics, or anything else that (currently) lacks any evidence? Why make belief your provisional conclusion when non-belief makes more sense? You've answered that with "comfort". I find that disappointing, want to know if there's more to it.
That's what you don't get: Why do you expect an irrational belief to be rational?
Well, for one thing, although I saw it as irrational, I wasn't sure whether the believers at least, thought otherwise. To wilfully hold self-acknowledged irrational belief on such an important issue seemed strange and inconsistent to me, as I keep saying.
Besides, you only responded to part of my statement/question there. Are they not being
at least as unsceptical as me, by deciding that there
is a god?
Self-identified sceptics who believe in a god. There have been precious few posting here at all, but Cleon would be the one I had in mind, mostly because of his (understandable in the circumstances) outburst but his, and by implication any others, apparent unwillingness to discuss the issue.
Are they saying it is rational?
No, they aren't saying much of anything. Assuming they agree that it isn't rational, why hold a belief etc etc ad infinitum see above.
Try to understand that you can't apply rationality to irrational beliefs.
I understand that. WHY hold the irrational belief in the first place? Because it gives a warm fuzzy feeling doesn't seem to justify abandoning rationality (as far as this one issue goes) to me. If the god does nothing, says nothing, and influences nothing, it might as well
be nothing. In fact, it
is nothing. What does it
mean to say "I believe in god"? What are the implications? How does it affect anyone's life?
I have, with the Contact example. Also, see my reply to skeptigirl.
Both of which amount to "how can you disprove god?". To which the obvious answer is "I don't have to". The person stating belief in god is making a claim by implication. If they believe in god, they must think god exists. Otherwise they are not
believing in god, they are
pretending to do so. Therefore, as with any other extraordinary claim, the onus is on them to support that claim. If they don't want to, that's fine. But I don't have to do the opposite either, and the default position/provisional conclusion of "doesn't exist" holds true. If as you say they are being irrational with regard to god, then their belief is meaningless to anyone but them and open to criticism of the sort being levelled in this thread.
Discussion over then.
What is the difference in someone who believes in something he doesn't claim evidence of, and someone who disbelieves in something he doesn't claim evidence of?
Rationality. Which we've dealt with. And I see as a desirable thing to apply in as many areas of one's life as possible. But see my question above - in your own strict definition of the term scepticism (which I accept is valid), are the theistic sceptics not being
at least as unsceptical as me in siding with belief over non-belief before any evidence has come to light?
Have you read "Contact"? Not just seen the movie, but read the book?
No. I haven't seen the film either. I was aware of the dialogue you quoted, and had seen a similar philosophical "consider the lily" style retort elsewhere, and wasn't convinced by it there either. As another poster said, it smacks of cop-out and condescension on both sides, as I countered to you, the two concepts are not directly analogous. One is a measurable product of natural phenomena that has an imagined component, the other was once
thought to have measurable products but is now held despite discreditation as an entirely imaginary concept.