W
wanstronian
Guest
I don’t think many atheists would make this argument. They might point out that with such a variety of religious beliefs worldwide, there’s no way of knowing which one is the correct one; and if you can’t know that, you can’t know whether any of them exist.I don’t think there is a philosophical argument good enough to convince a skeptic of the existence of God.
However, through the mist of the philosophical debate shines a far more simple argument, one that is often overlooked by the religious, and misinterpreted or ignored by the non-religious. It can be seen in this picture:
http://schools-wikipedia.org/images/785/78568.png
*source: Encyclopaedia Britannica, via schools-wikipedia.org/images/785/78568.png
It is the simple fact that less than 3% of the world population is atheistic, and there is no reason to assume that this number is higher than it was 50, 100 or even 800 years ago, nor is there reason to assume that it will be higher 20, 50 or 150 years from now.
Enlightenment theories of how religion would dissapear in the ‘age of reason’, of how people would come to a ‘more natural’ understanding of the world, how scientific knowledge would degrade religion to mere mythical fairytales, how the concept of God would die within the next centuries or even decades, along with the secularization thesis, all proved to be wrong. Organized religion may have declined in some parts of the world, it may have taken other forms, believe and religion itself is very much alive today. The number of atheists worldwide isn’t growing, as the New Atheist movement wants us to believe.
The only argument the atheist has to counter this more than obvious fact, is that since religious groups all believe in different gods there can’t be one true God.
I think it’s a bit of a stretch to state that since so many people believe in one god or another, that somehow constitutes evidence for a supernatural being. Once upon a time, virtually everybody believed the sun orbited the earth.But beside the fact that this logic is flawed since it is possible that one group believes in the true God while the others don’t, the argument doesn’t address the core of my argument, namely that the vast majority of the worldwide population somehow has evidence to believe in a supernatural Being.
It doesn’t counter the argument, because there’s not really an argument to counter! It’s the fallacious “Argumentum ad Populum.”The fact that different religious groups have different images of who and what this Being is, does not counter the argument itself.
Not at all - what makes you think that a majority belief gives a phenomenen dispensation from scientific enquiry? What an irrational view to hold!The question can now be raised: isn’t it a bit pretentious for such a small group to loudly demand scientific evidence for something that, even without direct scientific or even philosophical proof, seems so obvious to the rest of the world?