A claim is a claim whether it is positive or not and requires justification if it is intelligible and not obviously false.
I don’t believe there is a God. I don’t care if I’m the only person on Earth who does not believe there is a God, I still wouldn’t believe it.
In other words you have no respect for the opinion of the vast majority of those who have lived on this earth…
That position needs no defence.
So say you
dogmatically - without giving any reason! That’s a return to the usual refrain…
I don’t believe that aliens are being held prisoner in Nevada by the US Government either, I don’t believe that the world is going to end in two years, I don’t believe there is a tea pot in orbit around Neptune and I don’t believe that there are fairies at the bottom of my garden.
The difference between all these fantasies and belief in God is substantial:
- They have not been held by the vast majority of people since time immemorial.
- They are not based on any evidence whatsoever.
- They serve no useful purpose.
- They have nothing to do with truth, goodness, justice, freedom, beauty or love.
- They do not correspond to spiritual experience.
- They have not inspired great works of art, science and literature.
The idea that a person should have to justify everything they don’t believe in comes from the false contention on the part of superstitious people the belief is the same as knowledge.
That is a false assumption. You are equating belief in God as superstition even though you have** no convincing evidence **that God does not exist.
I don’t believe in God and I know there is no God are two completely different statements. Their meanings are not even similar.
You should have taken that into account when you made your derogatory statement about “superstitious people”. It is far more plausible that those who attribute the existence of the order, magnificence and beauty of the universe to **blind, purposeless processes **are the ones who are superstitious…