W
Windfish
Guest
Typically, the atheist resorts to comparisons to fairies, leprechauns, unicorns, etc. when the tenability of their position (i.e., there is no God) is challenged: unlike God, no one seriously thinks that they exist. Setting aside that this appeal does nothing to support their affirmative claim, how does one effectively respond to it?
The appeal is somewhat of a colloquial rearrangement of Russell’s teapot. I think the comparisons are faulty for several reasons. Except in folklore and legends, no one has ever seriously believed in such entities. Asserting otherwise, then, would be just that, an arbitrary and contrived assertion, and there could only ever be arbitrary and contrived reasoning to support it. The same can be said of other atheist standbys like the Greek and Viking gods/goddesses. By contrast, the existence of the Judeo-Christian God, in principle, would not be arbitrary, but necessary. Epistemologically, the comparisons are nonsensical.
Perhaps some of you will disagree with me, but I think I have shown, if only briefly, that the comparisons fail.
Atheists also bring these comparisons up to show that a negative cannot proven. If this is the case, why make a positive claim denying the existence of God? But is it true that a negative cannot be proven? If I say that there are no mints in pockets, I can empty my pockets and show you that there are no mints in them. Boom, negative proven. So how about the claim that unicorns don’t exist? Can that be proven?
Back to my original question: how does one effectively respond to the fairy, leprechaun, unicorn, etc. comparison?
The appeal is somewhat of a colloquial rearrangement of Russell’s teapot. I think the comparisons are faulty for several reasons. Except in folklore and legends, no one has ever seriously believed in such entities. Asserting otherwise, then, would be just that, an arbitrary and contrived assertion, and there could only ever be arbitrary and contrived reasoning to support it. The same can be said of other atheist standbys like the Greek and Viking gods/goddesses. By contrast, the existence of the Judeo-Christian God, in principle, would not be arbitrary, but necessary. Epistemologically, the comparisons are nonsensical.
Perhaps some of you will disagree with me, but I think I have shown, if only briefly, that the comparisons fail.
Atheists also bring these comparisons up to show that a negative cannot proven. If this is the case, why make a positive claim denying the existence of God? But is it true that a negative cannot be proven? If I say that there are no mints in pockets, I can empty my pockets and show you that there are no mints in them. Boom, negative proven. So how about the claim that unicorns don’t exist? Can that be proven?
Back to my original question: how does one effectively respond to the fairy, leprechaun, unicorn, etc. comparison?