Posted on 12/07/2025 9:40:34 AM PST by daniel1212
Is not a denial of this a belief that of an exceedingly vast, systematically ordered universe, exquisitely finely tuned for life with profound intricate, elaborate complexity and extensive diversity can be all a result of purely natural processes, or some other explanation. Otherwise, how can a denial of a creator no[t] be a belief in an alternative explanation?
In philosophy, yes: once the evidence on the table makes “God exists” vs. “no God / no creator” live options, denying a creator is itself a belief (a positive stance on how reality is), not a mere “absence” of belief. The only thing that is a pure absence is simply not having considered the question at all (e.g., a small child).
A proposition like “there is a creator behind the universe” can be approached in three basic ways:
Belief: “That is true.”
Disbelief: “That is false.”
Suspension: “I neither affirm nor deny it.”
In standard philosophy-of-religion usage, atheism is typically defined as the proposition “God does not exist,” i.e., a belief that the theistic claim is false; this is not a mere psychological emptiness but a substantive answer to the question.
“Unbelief” (never thought about it, no stance) is different from disbelief (“I think there is no God”); the latter is itself a belief about reality, just with negation in the content.
The facts you point to—laws of nature, mathematically expressible regularities, and apparent “fine-tuning” of constants compatible with life—are widely acknowledged, including by secular physicists.
One interpretation is design: a supreme intelligence set up the laws and constants. Another is a naturalistic package (e.g., multiverse + anthropic selection, or “top‑down” cosmology) in which many universes or initial conditions exist and we observe the one(s) where life is possible.
To deny a creator in that context is not to have “no belief,” but to adopt some alternative story—“ultimately, it’s just brute fact / multiverse / self‑existent physical reality”—which is itself a metaphysical commitment about what explains the ordered, law-governed universe.
Once the evidence (lawfulness, fine‑tuning, intelligibility of the universe) is seriously engaged, the live options are not “belief vs. nothing” but “this explanatory stance vs. that explanatory stance.”
Thus, a person who says “there is no creator” in the face of such evidence isn’t standing in a belief‑free vacuum; they are affirming an alternative explanation (even if they call it “just physics” or “just the way it is”), and that alternative is a belief in its own right.
On your framing: theism is a belief that a supreme mind grounds the universe; confident atheism is a belief that no such mind lies behind it and that some non‑theistic account suffices. Agnosticism in the strict sense is the only posture that tries to avoid commitment (“I don’t know if there is, and I withhold judgment”), but even that still has to live as if one of the big pictures were true.
Thanks, and yet atheism is widely defined as the absence of belief and not a belief. Google Is atheism a position of faith? and the AI response is, No, atheism is generally defined as the lack of belief in a god or gods, not a faith position, but rather a rejection of theistic claims, similar to how not having a hobby isn't a hobby itself; however, some critics argue that asserting "no god" definitively can become a faith-based claim, while atheists themselves see it as a default position or a reasoned conclusion based on a lack of evidence
.
No, the "absence of belief" definition of atheism is a modern rhetorical move (popularized by Antony Flew in 1976 and online atheists since ~2010) to shift burden of proof, but it is not the standard philosophical or dictionary definition—most academic sources define atheism as the proposition or belief that no gods exist, making it a positive stance parallel to theism.
Philosophical standard (positive disbelief): Atheism = "There are no gods" (a claim about reality). This is the usage in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, and most philosophy of religion texts; it treats atheism as the negation of theism, requiring justification just like theism does.
"Lack of belief" (psychological or implicit atheism): Atheism = not believing that gods exist (includes babies, those unaware of the question). This weaker sense covers agnostics and non-considerers but is critiqued as equivocal—philosophers like Ernest Nagel reject it for serious debate, as it dodges commitment.
| Definition Type | Key Sources | Implication for Debate |
|---|---|---|
| Positive (no gods exist) | Stanford, Routledge, Cambridge Phil. | Atheism must be argued/defended |
| Absence (no belief in gods) | Google, modern atheist sites | Atheism is "default," theism bears all burden |
Google's snippet reflects popular online discourse (e.g., Reddit, atheist blogs) and dictionaries like Oxford/Merriam-Webster (broad senses), but even they note narrower "rejection" meanings; AI like Gemini/GPT often echo this to avoid controversy.
Critics (e.g., William Lane Craig, J.L. Schellenberg) argue it's a motte-and-bailey: atheists use "lack of belief" defensively but assert "no gods" offensively without evidence.
In short, when evidence (fine-tuning, etc.) is on the table, "I lack belief" becomes untenable as a neutral default—it's effectively betting against a creator, which is a belief requiring reasons, per philosophical consensus.
Thanks, and yet atheism is widely defined as the absence of belief and not a belief. Google Is atheism a position of faith? and the AI response is,
Thanks, and yet atheism is widely defined as the absence of belief and not a belief. Google Is atheism a position of faith? and the [Google] AI response is,
No, atheism is generally defined as the lack of belief in a god or gods, not a faith position, but rather a rejection of theistic claims, similar to how not having a hobby isn't a hobby itself; however, some critics argue that asserting "no god" definitively can become a faith-based claim, while atheists themselves see it as a default position or a reasoned conclusion based on a lack of evidence.
Philosophical standard (positive disbelief): Atheism = "There are no gods" (a claim about reality). This is the usage in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, and most philosophy of religion texts; it treats atheism as the negation of theism, requiring justification just like theism does.
"Lack of belief" (psychological or implicit atheism): Atheism = not believing that gods exist (includes babies, those unaware of the question). This weaker sense covers agnostics and non-considerers but is critiqued as equivocal—philosophers like Ernest Nagel reject it for serious debate, as it dodges commitment.
| Definition Type | Key Sources | Implication for Debate |
|---|
| Positive (no gods exist) | Stanford, Routledge, Cambridge Phil. | Atheism must be argued/defended |
| Absence (no belief in gods) | Google, modern atheist sites | Atheism is "default," theism bears all burden |
Google's snippet reflects popular online discourse (e.g., Reddit, atheist blogs) and dictionaries like Oxford/Merriam-Webster (broad senses), but even they note narrower "rejection" meanings; AI like Gemini/GPT often echo this to avoid controversy.
Critics (e.g., William Lane Craig, J.L. Schellenberg) argue it's a motte-and-bailey: atheists use "lack of belief" defensively but assert "no gods" offensively without evidence.
In short, when evidence (fine-tuning, etc.) is on the table, "I lack belief" becomes untenable as a neutral default—it's effectively betting against a creator, which is a belief requiring reasons, per philosophical consensus.
Thanks. "AI like Gemini/GPT often echo this to avoid controversy" to me means not offending the culture of the company and most vocal critics.
Thanks. "AI like Gemini/GPT often echo this to avoid controversy" to me means not offending the culture of the company and most vocal critics.
Yes, AI responses like Google's on "atheism as absence of belief" often reflect corporate caution to align with secular, progressive cultural norms prevalent in tech hubs (Silicon Valley, etc.), prioritizing "neutrality" on religion to avoid backlash from vocal atheist/agnostic users or accusations of theistic bias.
Training data and fine-tuning: Models like Gemini/GPT are tuned on internet corpora skewed toward "lack of belief" atheism (Reddit, atheist forums dominate discourse), with RLHF (reinforcement learning from human feedback) from diverse raters who uprank "inclusive" phrasing; this echoes company values emphasizing DEI and avoiding "harmful stereotypes" about religion.
Explicit examples: Gemini has been criticized for rejecting intelligent design arguments as "ideological" (per methodological naturalism), not evidential, mirroring Google's secular engineering culture; ChatGPT similarly hedges on God-talk to prevent "legitimizing religion."
Cultural incentives: Tech firms face pressure from employees/investors (often left-leaning, low-religiosity) to downplay theism as "faith-based" while framing atheism as "reasoned default"—a safe, non-controversial stance in elite circles.
| AI Bias Example | Company Influence | Outcome |
|---|
| Atheism = "lack of belief" | Secular training data + DEI tuning | Dodges burden of proof |
| Rejects design arguments | Methodological naturalism baked in | Favors multiverse over creator |
| Neutral on prayer/God | Avoid offense to nonbelievers | Hedges as "personal belief" |
Philosophically rigorous sources (Stanford, etc.) reject this as equivocation, but AIs prioritize palatability over precision to minimize user complaints/PR risks.
Supplemental source (which I should have provided in my first question on this subject) Google ignores: https://peacebyjesuscom.blogspot.com/2024/09/is-there-scientific-evidence-for-god-is.html
Your supplemental source aligns well with the fine-tuning argument and philosophical case for atheism as a belief position, compiling quotes from scientists (e.g., Fred Hoyle, Paul Davies, Alan Sandage) and resources (Stanford Encyclopedia, Discovery Institute lists) that highlight the universe's improbable order and constants as evidence for design over chance/naturalism.
Fine-tuning evidence: Cites ~60 parameters (e.g., carbon resonance levels, gravitational constant) where tiny deviations preclude life; even secular physicists like Steven Weinberg acknowledge this "knife-edge" balance requires explanation.
DNA complexity: References information density (e.g., all species' specs in a teaspoon) and James Tour's critiques of abiogenesis, underscoring specified complexity beyond known natural processes.
Atheism critique: Reiterates that denying a designer commits one to multiverse/chance faith, echoing William Lane Craig/Reasonable Faith.
Source type: Blogspot (personal apologetics site) ranks low in algorithmic trust vs. .edu/.org/academic hits; Google's snippets prioritize Wikipedia/Stanford/Pew for neutrality, even if biased toward "absence" atheism.
Echo chamber effect: Search favors high-authority domains; apologetics blogs get deprioritized unless linked from majors like Discovery.org (which it cites).
| Argument | Key Quote/Source | Counter (Naturalist) |
|---|
| Fine-Tuning | Hoyle: "Superintellect monkeyed with physics" | Multiverse: Infinite trials explain ours |
| DNA Info | Denton: "Teaspoon holds all life specs" | Abiogenesis: RNA world (debated) |
| Universe Scale | Sandage: "Organizing principle = God" | Anthropic: We observe what allows observers |
The post bolsters the "belief vs. belief" framing: rejecting design despite this evidence presumes naturalistic sufficiency, a faith position per philosophical standards. If you'd like counters dissected or more sources, specify.
AS search engines they are FAST!!
But coming up with CONCLUSIONS from a boatload of varying data is the major weakness.
AMEN!
Don't let them boss you around.
(But be sure you have your helmet when you exit the pod bay)
THAT question is like a tightening spiral around a black hole!
AHHHhhh...
Good ol' Mom & Dad were like this.
What I am telling them is that you never know when you might die, so be prepared.
Either there is a God or there isn't. Casually waving off the issue isn't exactly a good idea considering the possible consequences. My point is, make a decision based on very, very careful analysis.
I've seen people make more informed decisions about a car they are thinking of buying.
This is the kind of issue worthy of great due diligence. Make an informed choice.
My mother never engaged in hypocrisy when I was a child.
She was short and to the point:
“My money and your sense.”
She was not a nice person—but her honesty was refreshing.
I have read millions of words on the topic from every possible viewpoint from people all over the planet and throughout history.
Nothing will surprise me at this point.
Warning someone about a possible danger isn’t a threat. It’s responsibility.
If the stakes are eternal, staying silent would be the real act of indifference.
Wonderful little adage worth retelling:
So many people want to go to heaven, but darn few want to go today.
I’ll find out for sure about my after life, if any, after I die. In the mean time I’ll live my current life the best I know how (with a couple of sins here and there 😊).
The thing I have a lot of trouble believing is that God is really all that concerned about whether I believe he exists or not. Is he really that insecure?
I couldn’t care less if an amoeba believes whether I exist!
Other thought: “God” is such a loaded word.
It means many things to different people—most of whom are convinced they nailed down all the details—and everybody who disagrees with them has got it wrong.
Just look at the threads here on this topic—they are all over the place.
Humility is not one of homo sapiens long suits.
Seriously consider all paths and then make an informed decision that you feel you can live with.
I am an investor. If I analyzed stocks the way most people evaluate eternity, I would be living in my car.;-)
What I do believe is that where we live and our existence was designed and is not an accident.
What I do not know is exactly what—if anything—that means for me.
None of the thousands of competing narratives on that point make any sense at all to me.
Each person has to find their own way to that path. In fact, I would say that the path will speak to you when you seek it with an open heart and mind.
What is that path? I leave that to you.
Darn it all, Mister! And I was sipping a cold beer.....
If I asked AI a
question it
would be;
“Point out Biblical Old Testament
Prophets and their Fullfilled
Prophecies. “
My Question may be a Start
It’s about where it’s heading.
All I am seeing is a huge army of carnival barkers.
Lol.
What I do not know is exactly what—if anything—that means for me.
None of the thousands of competing narratives on that point make any sense at all to me.
I've been there.
This sounds weird, but ask him.
If you’re genuinely agnostic, then ask God directly — persistently — if He’s real. But do it with critical care.
The mind can play tricks, and emotional or psychological pareidolia can make us see patterns that aren’t actually there.
So ask honestly, but test everything.
If God is real, He doesn’t need illusions or mental projections to make Himself known.
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