First, let me say, I shouldn't bother with this. You bring up not one single thing not already addressed in this thread. And your attitude that we haven't addressed your points is rather rude.
It was certainly not my intention to be rude. I thought I'd been extremely polite during this discussion despite the ad hom attacks against me.
My point is that I've not seen a valid definition of "skepticism" that would exclude theism but would include other opinions that you seem to be OK with. So far, references to definitions posted earlier in the thread seem to point to definitions such as "a skeptic is someone who practices the process of skepticism" but don't define the process. If you have a definition please post it (or if one has been posted, please repost it).
But because I would prefer any other lurkers late to the thread not be left with the false impression we haven't addressed your misguided concerns, I will address them.You ignored my post. This is a straw man argument. But since you won't name a god, allow me.
Studies show prayer doesn't do anything other than perhaps have some placebo effect.
Two points here. 1) I know of no religion that believes that God must grant prayers (in the affirmative) during studies. 2) Disproving a religion that believes that God must grant prayers during studies wouldn't disprove the existence of all gods.
Evidence doesn't support Bible Creation stories, there was no worldwide flood, and the Earth is not 6,000 years old. The Bible gets the Moon wrong, evolution wrong, the germ theory wrong, the existence of 90% of the world's populations wrong and that's only in the first couple chapters.
Many (probably most) Christians don't believe that the creation story in the Bible is meant to be taken literally. Even if it was to be taken literally (and granted, some Christians believe that it was), you'd be hard-pressed to find some passage that couldn't be interpreted in such a way that it might have occurred. Even if you could, it wouldn't disprove the Christian God (it would only prove that the Christian God didn't write the Bible). Finally, even if you could disprove the Christian God, it wouldn't disprove all gods. In other words, there is no evidence that all gods are impossible or don't exist.
I think the evidence is pretty conclusive that Coyote didn't steal fire from heaven, Pele isn't the reason for the Hawaiian Island formation, and it isn't turtles all the way down. The evidence is overwhelming Zeus and Thor are not in charge of lightning bolts.
Even if I were to agree with you that none of these gods can possibly exist based on conclusive evidence as you suggest, none is evidence against the existence of all conceivable gods.
There's no evidence hurricanes hit gay populations any more frequently than would be expected by random chance. One could go on with this silliness on countless page after page.
I'm not sure which god requires that hurricanes hit gay populations more frequently than would be expected by random chance, but I'll take your word for it that such a study has actually been done and is absolutely conclusive, and I'll therefore agree with you that such a god doesn't exist.
Once it's clear all the god beliefs you examine are made up beliefs, how many more do you need before you say the evidence is overwhelming that god beliefs are figments of human imagination?
There are plenty of stories of alien encounters, and there are explanations for nearly all of them. It would probably be possible to provide evidence against that guy Yahweh who claims to be able to summon aliens. Even if we could disprove every single claim of encounters with intelligent beings from outside of our solar system, I'm not sure it would count as evidence against the existence of intelligent life outside of the solar system. The only evidence that there is
no intelligent life outside of the solar system would be definitive proof that intelligent life outside the solar system either cannot or does not exist, and I'm not sure how you would go about proving something like that.
The only god you can claim cannot be disproved is one that does nothing. If you claim a god does something, that something can be tested.
What sort of a test do you propose to disprove the existence of an omnipotent, omniscient being who interacts with the world but doesn't want us to know of its existence?
If you have one of those tests that will show a god is actually doing what people believe gods do, then I suggest you go for Randi's million dollar challenge.
But of course I've never claimed to know of any god who must perform some testable action under examination, nor do I know of anybody who believes in such a god. But if they did, I'd grant you that the god could be proven not to exist. Unfortunately, that wouldn't be evidence that
no gods can or do exist.
I told you, name one that you think isn't a myth. Put up or shut up. All modern religions? What planet are you on?
Of course I never suggested that I knew of a god that I didn't think was a myth.
Hindu god statues are supposed to drink milk. Think that cannot be disproved?
If a Hindu believes that a god must ensure that a statue must drink milk while being observed, I would grant you that such a god can be tested and disproved.
The Biblical god is supposed to answer prayers.
If someone believes that a Biblical god must answer prayers (in the affirmative) while being observed, I would grant you that such a god can be tested and disproved.
It doesn't happen. The creation stories are myths. Just which religion are you referring to that makes no claims of the supposed actions of their gods?
Few religions that I know of make testable claims of the supposed actions of their gods.
Well if you know nothing about history, anthropology, sociology, psychology, geology, cosmology, astronomy, paleontology, biology, and physics, then I guess that would be where the missing evidence is you are not privy to.
As far as I know, those sciences provide evidence of things which can be tested.
You must have missed what I said. The fact we are here is irrefutable evidence intelligent life exists in the Universe. There is no evidence suggesting the Earth is unique in all the Universe. There is evidence once life takes hold, it rapidly evolves. Enough time has occurred for life to evolve on other planets.
You must have missed what I said. Evidence that intelligent life exists in the universe is not evidence that intelligent life exists
elsewhere in the universe. The fact that intelligent life is
possible elsewhere is not evidence that intelligent life actually exists elsewhere.
That's a wee bit more evidence for intelligent life elsewhere in the Universe than the evidence against it. I can't help it if you don't recognize life on Earth as evidence of life in the Universe. But I suggest you look to more modern thinking. We evolved, there is no reason to think we are 'special' and there is no reason to think the Earth is 'special'.
Again, please argue against something that I actually said rather than something you wish I had said. I never said that life on Earth as evidence of life in the universe. I said that life on Earth isn't evidence of life
elsewhere in the universe.
The fact that there is no reason to think that it is impossible for life to exist elsewhere is not evidence that life actually does exist elsewhere.
You have completely ignored the whole discussion here. If you have something to say about why we should define gods as outside of the natural world when the entire history of belief in gods has been that of people believing gods which affect their lives in good and bad ways, then by all means join the discussion. All you've done is brought up the old tired claims that gods are outside of the realm of science. The only gods outside of the realm of science are the ones scientists defined as untestable. No religion in history ever defined their god as having initiated the Big Bang then sat back to watch it unfold. That definition only came about when humans who couldn't let go of god beliefs started to adopt the skeptical/scientific philosophy about understanding the Universe. How about you address why it was necessary and why it is justifiable that scientists defined gods differently than historical definitions?
You seem to think that any being that interacts with the world is testable, and that the only untestable beings would be those that don't interact with the world at all. Unfortunately, that's not the case. Most theists don't make testable claims about the gods they believe in.
-Bri