Just as an aside, how would you be proven wrong? I mean, if you held such a concept of God which is a "rocky body orbiting too far out ...".
Good point, but see below...
I don't believe that you don't believe in any kind of God that has been described to you so far. I at least have run into plenty of people who are pantheists, or deists with a jolly watered down version of God. Sometimes there is just the attempt at selling a cause, any cause, for the universe as God. Heck, there are even people who seem to think that metaphors make the cut. For instance, science, money, power, or anything greater than man are Gods.
Your call.
You're right. I have heard of Gods that aren't as distasteful to me. But they fail in the same ways when they are explored in any depth. I find explanations that satisfy me without the woo, and names for the same things they are talking about -- nouns that fit better than God.
But your point about proof is where it is really interesting. The philosophical question is whether or not my satisfaction with some understanding (or bias, if you will) -- my internal 'knowing' -- should generate a proof that can be communicated to another person, or even whether that has meaning.
First, I'd like to point out that the notion of 'evidence' does not help as much as we would like. Facts do not come with evidential meanings attached. Significance and meaning are imposed.
For instance, the fact is that you have a gun under your seat in your car. To me, this is evidence that you had criminal intent. Your story is that you put the gun under there last year and simply forgot about it -- it is unrelated to the current crime, and knowing your car was liable to being searched, having the gun there actually supports your contention.
Same fact -- the gun. Different interpretations of the evidential value, or meaning.
With that as a background, proving something to another person is an exercise in getting them to agree that the facts you propose mean what you say they mean. If they do, and the person agrees, you can say you have proven your point. If the person disagrees as to either the significance or the meaning of those facts (provided they even agree the facts exist) then the evidence doesn't serve its purpose -- from their point of view, it is no evidence at all.
You will notice this going on all the time here in JREF.
My real point here is that "proving" this or that is really something that happens in my own head. If I have considered something and come to a conclusion, it has been proved. So, when I honestly proclaim my belief or non-belief, I am only stating something about how I view the world. It is not a comment about the world so much as a comment about me.
This is why I dismiss the argument in the OP. What is being asked of me is a step removed from what is really going on. I am asked to logically and rationally lay out a chain of reasoning and evidences that will convince someone else I have made a reasonable choice between two beliefs. But this isn't what I did. What I did was believe first and then, through introspection, discover my belief, and only after all that would I take a shot at making it fit a logical and rational framework. Hence my claim that it is arational or pre-rational.
On the surface this sounds good. But in the end, if there is just no way your status might change, at least not change in any meaningful way, then I would rather think it as intellectually honest to accept that there is just no way your (or my) status might change.
I think it might, actually. I base this on how I remember changing over the course of my lifetime and the examples of others who have 'switched teams'. I can think of the very first time I had the experience, when I realized that the Bohr atom was just a teaching model and that 'atoms aren't really like that'.
I will agree that I have had several experiences that might have changed my views on God and the supernatural and have not changed so far. I have mellowed out a bit on the whole subject though.