And I assumed that the atheist claim is certainty that there is no God.
A strange assumption for you to make, given that many people have noted in this very thread that they consider themselves atheists but do not claim certainty.
I should have qualified my statement by saying that some atheists are semi atheists hovering in the never-never land between atheist and agnostic and that my opinion only was to be applied to those who claim absolute certainty.
Could you give some examples of atheists who claim certainty? I'm sure there must be some out there, but I'm not aware of any.
Of course I was guided by my penchant for considering people who ridicule the ID idea as claiming certainty. Otherwise, why would they ridicule?
One can acknowledge that absolute certainty does not exist without agreeing that all possibilities are equally likely. Some ideas are absurd and deserving of ridicule. Just because we don't know for certain exactly what "caused" the Big Bang doesn't mean that someone who seriously claims the universe was sneezed out of the nose of the Great Green Arkleseizure can't be laughed at.
But considering the human penchant and predisposition for semantic vagueness as a patina for profundity I guess I might have jumped the gun. Does gloating and ridiculing those who postulate an ID indicate certainty? Perhaps I take it to indicate certainty since that's what it conveys.
I don't why it conveys that to you. Essentially what you're saying is that ridicule is never appropriate, because one cannot be certain of anything. I think that's an uncommon position to take.
BTW
Your response about doctors family and all the other balogna you mentioned to my original post I found irrelevant and unintelligible. Thought about asking for a clarification but let it go.
Actually, you didn't let it go. Letting it go would mean just ignoring it and not making a comment. What you did is just passive-aggressive.
The point was this: None of us can know with absolute certainty who our biological father is. Even DNA tests have a non-zero margin of error, and most of us don't even have the benefit of such a test. But, unless they have some specific reason to question their paternity, practically no one goes around making all the absurd qualifiers about who their father is in my mock dialogue, even in a doctor's office where the conversation is confidential and it's medically important to be accurate. And certainly no one would jump on the assertion "X is my father" with a critique about "you're claiming certainty, and that's impossible!" Everyone understands that it's impossible to know such a thing with absolute certainty, and nobody feels the need to create a special word for "person who is absolutely positively my father."
Yet people apply a completely different standard when it comes to god claims, and accuse atheists of claiming absolute 100% certainty. I don't see why we need a special word "atheist" to connote "one who claims to know with certainty that there is no god," since (a) we don't do it for any other assertion I can think of;* and (b) such people (the certain ones, I mean) seem to be incredibly rare. Whereas we do need a word to describe the comparatively large group of people who do not believe in the existence of a god, but do not necessarily claim certainty on that (or any other) point; "agnostic" doesn't suffice, in my opinion, because it seems to be working overtime covering those who haven't reached even a provisional opinion on the subject, as well as those who claim it is impossible to know, and all the other definitions given in this thread and others like it.
*-indeed, we don't even have a parallel word for someone who claims the existence of god with absolute certainty. When a theist admits that "yes, I could be wrong, it could be that my god doesn't exist," I've seen people exclaim "aha! So you're an agnostic!" But perhaps that kind of thing does go on at other forums.
Well, sorry but I find the atheistic stance far more worthy of marveling at. Similar to a perverse convenient sort of self-inflicted blindness.
Well, we all get to choose at what we will marvel.