Fine, let's go with the (standard) burden of proof lying with the person making the affirmative claim.
Yes, let's.
...I'm waiting.
In
my blog post, I cited examples of situations where intelligence was required for things to be established. That was my proof.
If you think that's a proof, then you have a lot to learn.
That isn't a proof. It doesn't even remotely resemble a proof. It's an inductive argument
at best, and a simple
non sequitur at worst. You say that intelligence is required for
anything. Great. Present your proof. Saying "Well,
these things require intelligence" is fine - they very well might - but it doesn't help you to establish that
everything requires a driving intelligence. Gravity and chemical reactions, for example, don't appear to.
Can you cite me examples (or provide some other evidence) where you can definitively say that intelligence is not required for things to be established?
Burden of proof fallacy. Again.
The Bible is regarded in many cultures (including in the U.S. and Europe) as a credible text
Sorry, no.
to the point where people swear to it in courts of law.
One, you are not required to swear on the Bible in a court of law. You are
allowed to, not
required. Two, even if this were true, it wouldn't mean that the Bible were accepted as a credible text, only that people were swearing on their religious faith that they would not lie.
Nope.
Of course it is. Show me how my proof is deficient. Merely saying that my proof is deficient, does not make it so.
Merely saying that it is a proof doesn't make it so, either. Yours isn't.
I offered proof of my claim.
No you didn't. You offered an inductive argument (again, at best). That's not a proof.
Also the Burden of Proof fallacy is clearly anti-religious, since it skews the burden of proof to the person making religious claims. It was almost certainly created by anti-religious folks.
It wasn't. The
burden of proof isn't anti-anything. It's simply the principle that, if you want to make a claim, you need to be able to back it up. It just so happens that, in the case of religion, they are unable to meet said burden.
By your logic, we can say that the burden of proof is anti-
any claim, since it requires that person to back it up. It's anti-"cancer exists". It's anti-"humans need to breathe to live". Whatever. The only reason you think that it is anti-religion (anti-"God exists") is because you are unable to meet the burden, and so your claim is rejected. In the same way, you are against the burden of proof because it is anti-"intelligences drive everything", and you are unable to meet it in that case either.
Any reasonable person can see that is enough to say that if you are making a claim for or against religious matters, you must provide sufficient proof for your case.
That's exactly what the burden of proof says. What's your issue with it, again?
Why do you say that something that is obviously true, is false?
Because it ain't obviously true, and it is false.