I will assume for the moment that there is no evidence for the trumpet aside from my mother's say so, and my own vague memory...
ETA - Of course, this is a pretty trivial matter anyway.
It's also not an extraordinary claim and doesn't presume that something not known to exist exists.
Yes, your ownership and her memory are in question--but memories and toys and mothers exist. Everything about god's involves something not known to exist--consciousness absent a brain. If such things are not detectable by any means... then how can one get enough knowledge about it so they they can say they "believe in it."-- only through hearsay-- presumption-- the same methods that all people use to believe in and prop up the gods and entities that the believer
doesn't believe in-- they can only get belief in their god the same way people get belief in demons or satan or the power of witchdoctors-- and that is fallaciously.
And yet they assert belief while knowing that such things can only be affirmed through fallacious reasoning. Their sources can only have access to the same "non evidence" that they are using. They know that people believe very strongly in entities that don't exist with similar or different or more or less nebulous definitions than their own "god"-- but there is no source or means or evidence or
anything to suggest that their belief could be more valid. If there isn't evidence that a god exists... then they've trusted a source who can not know such a god exists to inform them of that gods existence. And yet they've rejected other beliefs arrived at via identical fallacious means.
I think this is inherent in culture molded by religion through the eons--It's the meme that god is just presumed to exist (because otherwise how to explain all this?) and questioning god is seen as "arrogant"-- demonic-- or at least unseemly...like a"doubting Thomas". Whereas, faith is seen as good--necessary for morality... a sign of moral strength and humility. But these are all presumptions not based in truth and they shore up the false presumption of a god.
As a kid I believed because everyone did... I figured it must be based in something somewhere along the line... and besides, I was afraid not to... so at least I said I did. And I know most people were raised with similar cultural input. The nice people I knew and trusted were all believers--surely they couldn't be mistaken?
But now I want to know how a skeptic can be skeptical of whatever it is they are skeptical about while believing something exists which cannot be shown to exist. Everything else in our world that exists-- appears to be measurable and verifiable. But theistic skeptics make an exception for god but not all the other entities, forces, and woo not known to exist. And they give no reason why. They probably don't know why. But they are presuming to have some sort of "divine" insight... and I think skeptics should be very skeptical that any divine anything exists.
What I want to know is how do believers distinguish the likelihood of their god from "demons" or whatever it is they are certain doesn't exist or woo? Because I can't think of a logical way to convince myself that a god I might believe in is any more likely to be true than all the woo and nonexistent things I don't believe in. I expect skeptics to not believe in the supernatural and not to believe in things for which there is no evidence. A mother's memory may constitute evidence for something-- but how can you substantiate a belief in a god for which there is no evidence? How did you come to know about this god to believe in him if there was no evidence? Magic? Or myth propped up by fallacious means of supporting that myth?
I just wish they could give me a logical reason why skeptics should not be atheists to the same extent that they are a-demonists. Or is demon belief perfectly acceptable to those who believe in a god? Are those "on the fence", on the fence about all demons? Or at least the "non-evidentiary" ones. If not--how can they maintain that they are on the fence about some gods? If so, then what exactly are they skeptical about? Why isn't god belief treated with the same skeptical eye as the things they don't believe in? Can't the same lack of evidence be proffered for everything they DON'T believe exists.
Skeptics who aren't atheists sound so illogical to me when trying to explain their rationale. It's woo rationale. They ask tangential questions to keep from having to answer any. They get mad and defensive because inside they know it's woo. Sure, a skeptic can be a believer, but I'd keep it in the closet if you don't want to be prodded about it. For me, I want to understand, and I end up feeling like they have no reason... and they get mad at me for threatening what they want to believe.
What don't theistic skeptics believe in? What are they skeptical about? What is woo? And how do they keep god out of that category except by semantics, tangential questions, hand waving, ire, ad homs, and fallacious reasoning. The apologists here seem to want skeptics to prove that the woo isn't true instead of giving any reason for thinking that it has any basis in logic. It's the woo argumentation strategy. "prove me wrong".
I suspect Randi thinks that all gods are imaginary. I suspect most skeptics do. I think that is where the evidence lies. We can't test all gods... but we can recognize the pattern. We can't prove there are no real psychics, but we can demonstrate the pattern. We can't prove that pi doesn't randomly change in it's further most digits when we aren't looking-- but that is no reason to even posit that it does.
Bri posits the equivalent of that. So does Claus. And Egg. All those arguing for some god existing are. It's a non argument that can't mean anything except as an exercise in people using semantics to prop up their beliefs and pretend that they are making sense to someone other than themselves or those who want to shore up similar nuttiness.
Everyone thinks their woo is true.
Bri, you can't prove pi doesn't change when you aren't looking. And there's no evidence... I'm talking about the numbers just past the millionth place after the decimal. It's amazing. It's a code from god. You are on the fence about that like you are about gods, right?