Tricky
Briefly immortal
One obvious reason is that an instinct might be called an innate belief. In any semantic squabble like this, contextual definitions can lead to great fuzziness of lines. Surely you realize that.Why?
I've said from the beginning (post #10) that you may be technically correct. Thanks to Mercutio, I now can say that your definition is correct in a "privative" sense. It should have been obvious from the very beginning that my objection to your definition was because it is unclear and misleading in normal conversation. Had you said from the beginning that your argument was based on context, we probably could have avoided much of this discussion. But you played games like "go look up post lebentysix" and refused to answer clearly asked questions. In short, you debate like a True Believer. I am disinclined to make it easy for you when you do this.If it is a semantic squabble, and you argue that babies only might think of their parents as gods, why do you keep saying that I am wrong?
It clarifies only if you are speaking in a specific context, a context that should be well defined. Since you tend to give short answers and decline to provide context, it is not clarified at all. I will maintain that it is usually silly or even misleading to call a baby "atheist". I will concede, though, that there are exceptions to this case. You have Mercutio to thank for this concession. He patiently explains what you arrogantly assert.No, it clarifies. Atheists are not just someone opposing religious beliefs, people start as atheists.
Who has said anything about throwing that meaning away?
As you have already indicated, the meaning of "atheist" is contextual. The "C & R" meaning of atheist is in wide use and is generally understood, even if it does not stand up to dissection by professors of philosophy. I find that "widely used and generally understood" are good enough reasons to keep the "C & R" meaning of "atheist", and indeed, to make it the meaning most commonly employed. Overwhelmingly.